
Biography of John Donne
A Jacobean poet and preacher/churchman famous for his spellbinding sermons, the most outstanding of the English Metaphysical Poets.
He is known as the founder of the Metaphysical Poets, a term created by Samuel Johnson, an eighteenth-century English essayist, poet, and philosopher. The loosely associated group also includes George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, Andrew Marvell, and John Cleveland. The Metaphysical Poets are known for their ability to startle the reader and coax new perspective through paradoxical images, subtle argument, inventive syntax, and imagery from art, philosophy, and religion using an extended metaphor known as a conceit. Donne reached beyond the rational and hierarchical structures of the 17th century with his exacting and ingenious conceits, advancing the exploratory spirit of his time.
Donne's poetry embraces a wide range of secular and religious subjects. He wrote cynical verse about inconstancy, poems about true love, Neoplatonic lyrics on the mystical union of lovers' souls and bodies and brilliant satires and hymns depicting his own spiritual struggles. The two "Anniversaries" - "An Anatomy of the World" (1611) and "Of the Progress of the Soul" (1612)--are elegies for 15-year-old Elizabeth Drury.
Whatever the subject, Donne's poems reveal the same characteristics that typified the work of the metaphysical poets: dazzling wordplay, often explicitly sexual; paradox; subtle argumentation; surprising contrasts; intricate psychological analysis; and striking imagery selected from nontraditional areas such as law, physiology, scholastic philosophy, and mathematics.
Poems by John Donne
- A Burnt Ship
- A Hymn to God the Father
- A Lame Begger
- A Lecture upon the Shadow
- A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy's Day
- A Valediction of the Book
- A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
- A Valediction: of Weeping
- Air and Angels
- An Anatomy of the World
- Break of Day
- Elegy IX: The Autumnal
- Elegy V: His Picture
- Elegy VII: Nature’s lay idiot, I taught thee to love
- Good Friday, 1613. Riding Westward
- Holy Sonnets: At the round earth's imagin'd corners, blow
- Holy Sonnets: Batter my heart, three-person'd God
- Holy Sonnets: Death, be not proud
- Holy Sonnets: I am a little world made cunningly
- Holy Sonnets: If poisonous minerals, and if that tree
- Holy Sonnets: Show me dear Christ, thy spouse so bright and clear
- Holy Sonnets: Since she whom I lov'd hath paid her last debt
- Holy Sonnets: This is my play's last scene
- Holy Sonnets: Thou hast made me, and shall thy work decay?
- Hymn to God, My God, in My Sickness
- Love's Alchemy
- Love's Deity
- Love's Growth
- Lovers' Infiniteness
- Of the Progress of the Soul: The Second Anniversary
- Satire III
- Song: Go and catch a falling star
- Song: Sweetest love, I do not go
- The Anniversary
- The Apparition
- The Bait
- The Calm
- The Canonization
- The Dream
- The Ecstasy
- The Expiration
- The Flea
- The Funeral
- The Good-Morrow
- The Indifferent
- The Legacy
- The Relic
- The Sun Rising
- The Triple Fool
- To His Mistress Going to Bed
- Twicknam Garden
- Woman's Constancy