24
January 1573 A.D. John Donne Born—Anglican Cleric, Dean of St.
Paul’s Cathedral & “Metaphysical Poet”
John Donne, (born
sometime between Jan. 24 and June 19, 1572, London, Eng.—died March 31, 1631, London), leading English poet of the Metaphysical school and dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral, London (1621–31). Donne is often
considered the greatest love poet in the English language. He is also noted for
his religious verse and treatises and for his sermons, which rank among the
best of the 17th century.
Life
and career
Donne was born of
Roman Catholic parents. His mother, a direct descendant of Sir
Thomas More’s sister, was the youngest daughter of John
Heywood, epigrammatist and playwright. His father, who,
according to Donne’s first biographer, Izaak
Walton, was “descended from a very ancient family in Wales,”
was a prosperous London merchant. Donne was four when his father died, and
shortly thereafter his mother married Dr. John Syminges, who raised the Donne
children. At age 12 Donne matriculated at the University
of Oxford, where he studied for three years, and he then most
likely continued his education at the University
of Cambridge, though he took no degree from either university because
as a Roman Catholic he could not swear the required oath of allegiance to the
Protestant queen, Elizabeth. Following his studies Donne probably traveled in Spain and Italy and then returned to London to read law, first at Thavies Inn (1591) and
then at Lincoln’s Inn (1592–94). There he turned to a comparative examination
of Roman Catholic and Protestant theology and perhaps even toyed with religious
skepticism. In 1596 he enlisted as a gentleman with the earl of Essex’s successful
privateering expedition against Cádiz, and the following year he sailed with Sir
Walter Raleigh and Essex in the near-disastrous
Islands expedition, hunting for Spanish treasure ships in the Azores.
After his return to
London in 1597, Donne became secretary to Sir
Thomas Egerton, lord keeper of the great seal, in whose employ Donne
remained for almost five years. The appointment itself makes it probable that
Donne had become an Anglican by this time. During his tenure with the lord
keeper, Donne lived, according to Walton, more as a friend than as a servant in
the Egerton household, where Sir Thomas appointed him “a place at his own
table, to which he esteemed [Donne’s] company and discourse to be a great
ornament.” Donne’s contemporary, Richard
Baker, wrote of him at this time as “not dissolute [i.e., careless],
but very neat; a great visitor of Ladies, a great frequenter of Plays, a great
writer of conceited Verses.”
While in Egerton’s
service, Donne met and fell in love with Anne More, niece
of Egerton’s second wife and the daughter of Sir George
More, who was chancellor of the garter. Knowing there was no chance of
obtaining Sir George’s blessing on their union, the two married secretly,
probably in December 1601. For this offense Sir George had Donne briefly
imprisoned and dismissed from his post with Egerton as well. He also denied
Anne’s dowry to Donne. Because of the marriage, moreover, all possibilities of a career
in public service were dashed, and Donne found himself at age 30 with neither
prospects for employment nor adequate funds with which to support his
household.
During the next 10
years Donne lived in poverty and humiliating dependence, first on the charity of Anne’s cousin at
Pyrford, Surrey, then at a house in Mitcham, about 7 miles (11 km) from London, and
sometimes in a London apartment, where he relied on the support of noble
patrons. All the while he repeatedly tried (and failed) to secure employment,
and in the meantime his family was growing; Anne ultimately bore 12 children, 5
of whom died before they reached maturity. Donne’s letters show his love and
concern for his wife during these years: “Because I have transplanted [her]
into a wretched fortune, I must labour to disguise that from her by all such
honest devices, as giving her my company, and discourse.” About himself,
however, Donne recorded only despair: “To be part of no body is as nothing; and
so I am. … I am rather a sickness or a disease of the world than any part of it
and therefore neither love it nor life.”
In spite of his
misery during these years, Donne wrote and studied assiduously, producing prose works on theology, canon law, and anti-Catholic polemics and composing
love lyrics, religious poetry, and complimentary and funerary verse for his patrons. As early as 1607
friends had begun urging him to take holy orders in the Church
of England, but he felt unworthy and continued to seek secular
employment. In 1611–12 he traveled through France and the Low Countries with
his newfound patron, Sir Robert Drury, leaving his wife at
Mitcham. Upon their return from the European continent, the Drurys provided the
Donnes with a house on the Drury estate in London, where they lived until 1621.
In 1614 King James
I refused Donne’s final attempt to secure a post at court and said
that he would appoint him to nothing outside the church. By this time Donne
himself had come to believe he had a religious vocation, and he finally agreed
to take holy orders. He was ordained deacon and priest on Jan. 23, 1615, and preferment soon followed. He was made a royal
chaplain and received, at the king’s command, the degree of doctor of divinity
from Cambridge. On Nov. 22, 1621, Donne was installed as dean of St. Paul’s
Cathedral, at which he carried out his duties with efficiency and integrity.
But this turnabout in Donne’s professional life was accompanied by searing
personal grief. Two years after his ordination, in 1617, Anne Donne died at age
33 after giving birth to a stillborn child. Grief-stricken at having lost his
emotional anchor, Donne vowed never to marry again, even though he was left
with the task of raising his children in modest financial circumstances at the
time. Instead, his bereavement turned him fully to his vocation as an Anglican
divine. The power and eloquence of Donne’s sermons soon secured for him a
reputation as the foremost preacher in the England of his day, and he became a favourite of both Kings James
I and Charles
I.
In 1623 Donne fell
seriously ill with either typhus or relapsing fever, and during his sickness he
reflected on the parallels between his physical and spiritual
illnesses—reflections that culminated during his recovery in the prose Devotions
upon Emergent Occasions, published in 1624. On Feb. 25, 1631, Donne, who was fatally ill with stomach
cancer, left his sickbed to preach a final sermon at court;
this was published posthumously as “Death’s Duell” and is sometimes considered
to be his own funeral sermon. He returned to his sickbed and, according to
Walton, had a drawing made of himself in his shroud, perhaps as an aid to
meditating on his own dissolution. From this drawing Nicholas
Stone constructed a marble effigy of Donne that survived the
Great Fire of 1666 and still stands today in St. Paul’s Cathedral.
Poetry
Because almost none
of Donne’s poetry was published during his lifetime, it is difficult to date it
accurately. Most of his poems were preserved in manuscript copies made by and
passed among a relatively small but admiring coterie of poetry lovers. Most
current scholars agree, however, that the elegies (which in Donne’s case are
poems of love, not of mourning), epigrams, verse letters, and satires were
written in the 1590s, the Songs and Sonnets from the 1590s until 1617,
and the “Holy Sonnets” and other religious lyrics from the time of Donne’s
marriage until his ordination in 1615. He composed the hymns late in his life,
in the 1620s. Donne’s Anniversaries were published in 1611–12 and were the only important poetic works by him
published in his lifetime.
Donne’s poetry is
marked by strikingly original departures from the conventions of 16th-century
English verse, particularly that of Sir
Philip Sidney and Edmund
Spenser. Even his early satires and elegies, which derive from
classical Latin models, contain versions of his experiments with genre, form,
and imagery. His poems contain few descriptive passages like those in Spenser,
nor do his lines follow the smooth metrics and euphonious sounds of his
predecessors. Donne replaced their mellifluous lines with a speaking voice
whose vocabulary and syntax reflect the emotional intensity of a confrontation
and whose metrics and verbal music conform to the needs of a particular
dramatic situation. One consequence of this is a directness of language that electrifies his mature poetry. “For Godsake hold your tongue, and let
me love,” begins his love poem “The
Canonization,” plunging the reader into the midst of an encounter
between the speaker and an unidentified listener. Holy Sonnet XI opens with an
imaginative confrontation wherein Donne, not Jesus, suffers indignities on the
cross: “Spit in my face yee Jewes, and pierce my side….”
From these
explosive beginnings, the poems develop as closely reasoned arguments or
propositions that rely heavily on the use of the conceit—i.e.,
an extended metaphor that draws an ingenious parallel between apparently dissimilar situations
or objects. Donne, however, transformed the conceit into a vehicle for transmitting multiple, sometimes even contradictory,
feelings and ideas. And, changing again the practice of earlier poets, he drew
his imagery from such diverse fields as alchemy, astronomy, medicine, politics,
global exploration, and philosophical disputation. Donne’s famous analogy of
parting lovers to a drawing compass affords a prime example. The immediate
shock of some of his conceits aroused Samuel
Johnson to call them “heterogeneous ideas…yoked by violence
together.” Upon reflection, however, these conceits offer brilliant and
multiple insights into the subject of the metaphor and help give rise to the
much-praised ambiguity of Donne’s lyrics.
The presence of a
listener is another of Donne’s modifications of the Renaissance love lyric, in
which the lovers lament, hope, and dissect their feelings without facing their
ladies. Donne, by contrast, speaks directly to the lady or some other listener.
The latter may even determine the course of the poem, as in “The Flea,” in
which the speaker changes his tack once the woman crushes the insect on which
he has built his argument about the innocence of lovemaking. But for all their
dramatic intensity, Donne’s poems still maintain the verbal music and
introspective approach that define lyric poetry. His speakers may fashion an
imaginary figure to whom they utter their lyric outburst, or, conversely, they
may lapse into reflection in the midst of an address to a listener. “But O,
selfe traytor,” the forlorn lover cries in “Twickham Garden” as he transforms
part of his own psyche into a listener. Donne also departs from earlier lyrics by
adapting the syntax and rhythms of living speech to his poetry, as in “I wonder by my troth, what thou, and I/Did, till we
lov’d?”. Taken together, these features of his poetry provided an impetus for
the works of such later poets as Robert
Browning, William
Butler Yeats, and T.S.
Eliot.
Donne also
radically adapted some of the standard materials of love lyrics. For example,
even though he continued to use such Petrarchan conceits as “parting from one’s
beloved is death,” a staple of Renaissance love poetry, he either turned the
comparisons into comedy, as when the man in “The Apparition” envisions himself
as a ghost haunting his unfaithful lady, or he subsumed them into the texture
of his poem, as the title “A
Valediction: Forbidding Mourning” exemplifies. Donne’s
love lyrics provide keen psychological insights about a broad range of lovers
and a wide spectrum of amorous feelings. His speakers range from lustful men so
sated by their numerous affairs that they denounce love as a fiction and women
as objects—food, birds of prey, mummies—to platonic lovers who celebrate both
the magnificence of their ladies and their own miraculous abstention from
consummating their love. Men whose love is unrequited feel victimized and seek
revenge on their ladies, only to realize the ineffectuality of their
retaliation. In the poems of mutual love, however, Donne’s lovers rejoice in
the compatibility of their sexual and spiritual love and seek immortality for
an emotion that they elevate to an almost religious plane.
Donne’s devotional
lyrics, especially the “Holy Sonnets,” “Good Friday 1613, Riding Westward,” and
the hymns, passionately explore his love for God, sometimes through sexual
metaphors, and depict his doubts, fears, and sense of spiritual unworthiness.
None of them shows him spiritually at peace.
The most sustained
of Donne’s poems, the Anniversaries,
were written to commemorate the death of Elizabeth Drury, the 14-year-old daughter of his patron, Sir Robert
Drury. These poems subsume their ostensible subject into a philosophical
meditation on the decay of the world. Elizabeth Drury becomes, as Donne noted,
“the Idea of a woman,” and a lost pattern of virtue. Through this idealized
feminine figure, Donne in The First Anniversarie: An Anatomie of the World
laments humanity’s spiritual death, beginning with the loss of Eden and
continuing in the decay of the contemporary world, in which men have lost the
wisdom that connects them to God. In The Second Anniversarie: Of the Progres
of the Soule, Donne, partly through a eulogy on Elizabeth Drury, ultimately
regains the wisdom that directs him toward eternal life.
Prose
Donne’s earliest
prose works, Paradoxes
and Problems, probably were begun during his days
as a student at Lincoln’s Inn. These witty and insouciant paradoxes defend such
topics as women’s inconstancy and pursue such questions as “Why do women
delight much in feathers?” and “Why are Courtiers sooner Atheists than men of
other conditions?” While living in despair at Mitcham in 1608, Donne wrote a
casuistic defense of suicide entitled Biathanatos. His own contemplation of suicide, he states, prompted in him “a
charitable interpretation of theyr Action, who dye so.” Donne’s Pseudo-Martyr, published in 1610, attacks the recusants’ unwillingness to swear the oath
of allegiance to the king, which Roman Catholics were required to do after the Gunpowder
Plot (1605). The treatise so pleased James I that he had
Oxford confer an honorary master of arts degree on Donne. In 1610 Donne also
wrote a prose satire on the Jesuits entitled Ignatius His
Conclave, in both Latin and English.
In 1611 Donne
completed his Essays in Divinity, the first of his theological works. Upon recovering from a
life-threatening illness, Donne in 1623 wrote Devotions
upon Emergent Occasions, the most enduring of his
prose works. Each of its 23 devotions consists of a meditation, an
expostulation, and a prayer, all occasioned by some event in Donne’s illness,
such as the arrival of the king’s personal physician or the application of
pigeons to draw vapours from Donne’s head. The Devotions correlate Donne’s physical decline with spiritual sickness, until both
reach a climax when Donne hears the tolling of a passing bell (16, 17, 18) and
questions whether the bell is ringing for him. Like Donne’s poetry, the Devotions are notable for their dramatic immediacy and their numerous Metaphysical
conceits, such as the well-known “No man is an Iland,” by which Donne illustrates the unity of all Christians in the mystical
body of Christ.
It is Donne’s
sermons, however, that most powerfully illustrate his mastery of prose.
One-hundred and fifty-six of them were published by his son in three great
folio editions (1640, 1649, and 1661). Though composed during a time of
religious controversy, Donne’s sermons—intellectual, witty, and deeply
moving—explore the basic tenets of Christianity rather than engage in theological disputes. Donne brilliantly analyzed
Biblical texts and applied them to contemporary events, such as the outbreak of
plague that devastated London in 1625. The power of his sermons derives from
their dramatic intensity, candid personal revelations, poetic rhythms, and
striking conceits.
Reputation
and influence
The first two
editions of Donne’s Poems were published posthumously, in 1633 and 1635, after having circulated
widely in manuscript copies. The Poems were sufficiently popular to be published eight times within 90 years of
Donne’s death, but his work was not to the general taste of the 18th century,
when he was regarded as a great but eccentric “wit.” The notable exception to
that appraisal was Alexander
Pope, who admired Donne’s intellectual virtuosity and echoed
some of Donne’s lines in his own poetry. From the early 19th century, however,
perceptive readers began to recognize Donne’s poetic genius. Robert
Browning credited Donne with providing the germ for his own
dramatic monologues. By the 20th century, mainly because of the pioneering work
of the literary scholar H.J.C. Grierson and the interest of T.S. Eliot, Donne’s
poetry experienced a remarkable revival.
The impression in
his poetry that thought and argument are arising immediately out of passionate
feeling made Donne the master of both the mature Yeats and Eliot, who were
reacting against the meditative lyricism of a Romantic tradition in decline.
Indeed, the play of intellect in Donne’s poetry, his scorn of conventionally
poetic images, and the dramatic realism of his style made him the idol of
English-speaking poets and critics in the first half of the 20th century.
Readers continue to find stimulus in Donne’s fusion of witty argument with
passion, his dramatic rendering of complex states of mind, his daring and
unhackneyed images, and his ability (little if at all inferior to William
Shakespeare’s) to make common words yield up rich poetic meaning
without distorting the essential quality of English idiom.
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