Major Themes
Paradoxes
Nowhere
is Donne's love of paradox more apparent than in the closing couplet of Holy
Sonnet 14:
Except you enthrall me, never shall be free,
Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.
Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.
Here he
sums up the conflict raging within himself as well as the only means of
resolving this conflict he can determine. The sonnet describes a man given over
completely to God's enemy, Satan. The man is portrayed successively as a
damaged pot, a captured town, and a bride engaged to her lover's enemy. The
speaker cannot free himself from Satan's influence, and so must rely on God to
do the work. Although he sees himself as trapped by Satan, he prefers thralldom
to God, for only this will make hiim (morally, spiritually) free, just as the
paradox works in Christianity. Similarly, Donne plays upon the image of the
chaste bride to say he will only be pure and virginal (again, spiritually) if
God ravishes (perhaps metaphorically rapes) him.
Paradox
is important to Donne because in it he sees the resolution of the problem of
man: we live in a world wholly given over to evil, so much so that goodness and
holiness are considered deviant from the norm. Donne uses paradoxical
statements to get his reader's minds to jump from their usual tracks to
consider the lies we believe to be true, while offering us truths we we would
tend to dismiss as false.
Belittling
cosmic forces
Donne's poetry sometimes seems to relish in
belittling great or cosmic forces. "Death be not proud," for example,
shows how the poet feels about death: it is to be neither loathed nor feared,
as it is simply the gateway to another life. "The Sunne Rising"
denigrates the sun as simply a lesser light compared to his lover, and their
love is portrayed as more important than the whole world. These extravagant
takedowns are in keeping with his extreme comparisons and sometimes strange
metaphors. In so many things, Donne's work pushes the boundaries of comparison
and logic, creating poetic figures that are unique and memorable.
Religion
A great deal of Donne's poetry is exclusively
divine, and even the more secular poems often contain a heavy dose of religious
thought and meaning. Donne saw his Creator as central to his world, and thus he
had no good reason to escape the influence of the Divine on his work. His love
poetry moves from physical attraction to spiritual unity most of the time. To
Donne, religion was not a separate part of life, but the wellspring from which
one's every day drew sustenance.
Death and
the Hereafter
Death is
a common image in Donne's poetry. However, for Donne death is not so much a
somber subject producing gloomy thoughts, but a transition moment--often a
climax--denoting a change of state. In "The Flea," for example, the
woman's killing of the flea ostensibly ruins his argument for their physical
intimacy, but from this death he is able to form a positive proof that their
union would not have any greater effect than the loss of the blood she has just
obliterated. In "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," Donne refers to
his impending departure and absence from his wife as a form of death,
suggesting that his separation from her is a form of emotional obliteration
(although he states that the physical distance cannot alter their ubiquitous
love).
Holy
Sonnet 10, commonly referred to as "Death Be Not Proud," is perhaps
Donne's most blatant statement of his philosophy of life and death. Here, a
personified Death cannot boast in its power, for death merely transitions the
soul from a physical state to a spiritual one. Ultimately, all people will
reach their metaphysical state, and thus, "Death, Thou shalt die."
Love as
both physical and spiritual
Donne
equates physical love and spiritual love in many of his works. To this end,
Donne often suggests that the love he has for a particular beloved in a
particular poem is superior to that of others’ loves. In Donne, loving someone
is as much a religious experience as a physical one. His love transcends mere
physicality, and thus it is of a higher order than that of more mundane lovers.
In “Love’s Infiniteness,” for example, Donne begins with a traditional-sounding
love poem, but by the third stanza the lover has transformed the love between
himself and his beloved into an abstract ideal which can be possessed
absolutely and completely.
In Donne,
physical union and religious ecstasy are either identical or analogous. His
later poetry (following his joining the ministry) maintains some of his carnal
playfulness from earlier poetry, but transforms it into a celebration of union
between soul and soul, or soul and God.
Interconnectedness
of humanity
One of Donne's most famous statements, "No
man is an island complete unto himself," directs his readers to an often
overlooked aspect of Donne's metaphysical thinking. He sees every man and woman
as spiritually interrelated, noting that the death of one person affects every
other. A death quickly affects the deceased's circle of friends, family, and
acquaintances, and it is generally felt by the majority of humanity, even those
who had no personal interaction with the deceased. Just as grains of sand that
have eroded from the shores of Europe diminish the continent's land
mass--however infinitesimally--the life and death of an individual affect the
rest of humanity in the larger scope of the world.
Fidelity
Writers
in Donne's time often expressed negative views of women, and some of Donne's
poems seem to express such views with biting force. One corollary to seeing
divine and physical love as coming forth from the same source is the almost
obsessive focus on fidelity in Donne's works. In "Go and Catch a Falling
Star," for example, the reader is asked to travel for ten thousand days
and then confirm:
No where
Lives a woman true, and fair.
Lives a woman true, and fair.
He then
asks his reader to inform him "if thou find'st one" who is faithful
after all, but immediately changes his mind:
Though she were true, when you met her,
And last till you write your letter,
Yet she
Will be
False, ere I come, to two, or three.
And last till you write your letter,
Yet she
Will be
False, ere I come, to two, or three.
Read
literally, the poem seems sexist, suggesting women's universal fickleness and
susceptibility to straying from true love. Read as more broadly about fidelity,
however, the poem may suggest mankind's propensity to stray from dedication to
God.
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