Thursday, September 19, 2019
Vulnerability in the Works of John Donne :: Biography Biographies Essays
Free Essay on John Donne - A Journey Through Vulnerability       John Donne uses poetry to explore his own identity, express his feelings, and  most of all, he uses it to deal with the personal experiences occurring in his  life. Donne's poetry is a confrontation or struggle to find a place in this  world, or rather, a role to play in a society from which he often finds himself  detached or withdrawn. This essay will discuss Donne's states of mind, his views  on love, women, religion, his relationship with God; and finally how the use of  poetic form plays a part in his exploration for an identity and salvation.     The speaker in Donne's poetry is a theatrical character, constantly in  different situations, and using different roles to suit the action. He can take  on the role of the womanizer, as in "The Indifferent," or the faithful lover  from "Lover's Infiniteness," but the speaker in each of these poems is always  John Donne himself. Each poem contains a strong sense of Donne's own  self-interest. According to Professor J. Crofts, Donne:      Throughout his life... was a man self-haunted, unable to escape from his own  drama, unable to find any window that would not give him back the image of  himself. Even the mistress of his most passionate love-verses, who must (one  supposes) have been a real person, remains for him a mere abstraction of sex: a  thing given. He does not see her --does not apparently want to see her; for it  is not of her that he writes, but of his relation to her; not of love, but of  himself loving.     In "Elegy XIX [To His Mistress Going to Bed]," we are confronted with one of  Donne's personalities. The poem begins abruptly: Come, Madam, come! All rest my  powers defy;/ Until I labour, I in l abour lie. The reader is immediately thrust  into the middle of a private scene in which Donne attempts to convince his lover  to undress and come to bed. There is only one speaker in this poem, Donne, we do  not hear the voice or a description of the feelings of another person, but she  is always present. If Samuel Johnson was correct when he made the statement that  "the metaphysical poets were men of learning, and to show their learning was  their whole endeavour.  					    
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