1 / 9

John Donne

John Donne. 21 January 1572 – 31 March 1631. English poet, preacher and a major representative of the metaphysical poets of the period His worksarenotable fortheirrealistic and sensual style and includesonnets, lovepoetry, religious poems, Latin translations,.

gunda
Download Presentation

John Donne

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. John Donne 21 January 1572 – 31 March 1631

  2. English poet, preacher and a major representative of the metaphysical poets of the period • His worksarenotable fortheirrealistic and sensual style and includesonnets, lovepoetry, religious poems, Latin translations,...

  3. Despite his greateducation and poetictalents, he livedin povertyforseveralyears, relyingheavily on wealthyfriends • He spentmuch of themoney he inheritedduring and after his education on womanizing, literature, pastimes and travel

  4. John Donne – The Sun Rising Busyoldfool, unruly Sun,         Whydost thouthus, Throughwindows, and throughcurtains, call on us ? Mustto thymotionslovers' seasonsrun ?         Saucypedanticwretch, gochide         Lateschool-boys and sourprentices,     Go tellcourt-huntsmenthattheking will ride,     Callcountryants to harvestoffices; Love, all alike, no seasonknowsnorclime, Norhours, days, months, whicharetherags of time.  

  5. Thybeams so reverend, and strong         Whyshouldstthouthink? I couldeclipse and cloudthemwith a wink, Butthat I wouldnot lose her sight so long.         If her eyeshavenotblindedthine,         Look, and to-morrowlatetellme,     Whetherbothth' Indias of spice and mine     Be wherethouleft'stthem, orlieherewithme. Askforthosekingswhomthousaw'styesterday, And thoushalthear, "All here in onebedlay."        

  6.    She'sall states, and all princes I ;        Nothingelseis ; Princes do butplayus ; compared to this, All honour'smimic, all wealthalchemy.         Thou, Sun, art half as happy as we,         In thattheworld'scontractedthus ;     Thineage asksease, and sincethydutiesbe     To warm theworld, that'sdone in warming us. Shinehere to us, and thou art everywhere ; Thisbedthycenteris, thesewallsthysphere.

  7. Summary • Lying in bedwith his lover, thespeakerchidestherisingsun, callingit a “busyoldfool,” and askingwhyitmustbotherthemthroughwindows and curtains • He saysthatifthesunasksaboutthekings he shined on yesterday, he will learnthatthey all lie in bedwiththespeaker • He explainsthisclaimbysayingthat his belovedislikeeverycountry in theworld, and he islikeeveryking; nothingelseis real.

  8. Form • Thethreeregularstanzasareeach ten lineslong and follow a line-stresspattern of 4255445555—linesone, five, and sixaremetered in iambictetrameter, linetwois in dimeter, and linesthree, four, and seventhrough ten are in pentameter • Therhymescheme in eachstanzaisABBACDCDEE

  9. Language • Donneendows his speakerwithlanguageimplyingthatwhatgoes on in his headisprimaryovertheworldoutsideit (in the second stanza, thespeakertellsthesunthatitisnot so powerful, sincethespeakercan cause an eclipsesimplybyclosing his eyes)

More Related