Synopsis
The Poetical Works of John Donne gathers the verse of one of England's most audacious early modern imaginations: songs, elegies, satires, epigrams, the Holy Sonnets, and devotional poems. Its literary style is famously "metaphysical," joining passionate immediacy to intellectual difficulty through startling conceits, dramatic argument, paradox, and compressed wit. Written within the late Elizabethan and Jacobean world, Donne's poetry unsettles Petrarchan convention and courtly polish, turning love, death, faith, and bodily experience into arenas of urgent inquiry. John Donne (1572–1631) lived a life of striking reversals that illuminates the poems' tensions. Born into a Catholic family in Protestant England, educated in law and theology, seasoned by travel, ambition, and political disappointment, he later became an Anglican priest and Dean of St Paul's Cathedral. His clandestine marriage to Anne More, spiritual crises, bereavement, and public vocation all inform the verse's fusion of erotic boldness, religious anxiety, and meditative discipline. This collection is indispensable for readers who value poetry that thinks as intensely as it feels. Donne rewards close attention, offering language at once intimate, learned, unsettling, and profoundly alive.
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