"Analysis of john donne the indifferent" Essays and Research Papers

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    Edson incorporates Donne’s work to illuminate both explicit and implicit themes‚ creating an undeniable condition. Prior to John Donne’s Judeo Christian conversion he believed that life was only fulfilling if shared with another individual. He conveyed in his pre-conversion poems and stressed the power and importance of love to a person’s well being and existence. Donne contrives the idea that love must not be a "Dull Sublunary lover’s love"‚ rather a relationship where "two souls...are one‚" a

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    Comparative essay on two poems: A Feaver & The Flea By John Donne Introduction: John Donne is remembered today as one of the leading interpreters of a style of poetic verse known as “metaphysical poetry‚” which flourished in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.1 Metaphysical poetry usually employs unusual verse forms‚ complex figures of speech that are applied to create elaborate and surprisingly unorthodox metaphorical examples‚ and learned themes discussed according to

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    Good morning/afternoon to the members of the ETA. The ETA should keep John Donne’s poetry on the curriculum because his works are noted for their strong and bodily style. “The Flea” by John Donne should be studied because John Donne is a very unique metaphysical poet. Donne is exceptionally good at creating unusual unions between different elements to illustrate his point and form a persuasive argument in his poems. In “The Flea”‚ we find the use of conceit where the Flea is thought to be their

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    John Donne’s sonnet entitled “Divine Sonnet X” looks closely at death and Donne fervently writes about his views on death and his strong belief that death should not be feared‚ but embraced. Donne personifies death all throughout his poem as he challenges death by stating that death is not the “mighty and dreadful” part of life that most people fear‚ but rather an escape from life where people can be at peace like they are when they are sleeping. Donne is literally conversing with death‚ and pleading

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    his brother dead after being convicted of catholic sympathies‚ and his wife‚ buried after his 12th child. John Donne writes as a cry to god “Holy Sonnet IX” to express the suffering he has experienced and questions God for this pain. Through a variety of allusions and tone‚ Donne questions the undeserving cruelty of God ands begs for forgiveness. Despite being a very religious poet‚ Donne faced many questions on the morality of God. Many of the allusions from the sonnet expresses his disagreement

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    John Donne Death is a very complicated subject that people view very differently in different situations. In John Donne’s Holy Sonnets‚ he writes about death in Meditations X and XVII. Both meditations use many similar rhetorical devices and appeals‚ but the tones of the meditations are very disparate. Donne’s different messages in Meditations X and XVII convey tones of defiance and acquiescence towards death‚ respectively. His apparent change of attitude towards death could be accounted for

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    in pairs of texts set for study. To what extent is this made evident in the texts you have studied? Connections between John Donne’s Selective Poems and Margaret Edson’s play Wit to a great extent enrich the audiences understanding of each text and the themes of death and love. When these texts are studied together it is evident through continual intertextual reference that Donne has heavily influenced the play Wit. Although the texts differ contextually‚ with Donne’s 17th Century poetry and Edson’s

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    THE MAIN FEATURES OF THE METAPHYSICAL POETRY ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN DONNE The term "metaphysical poetry" is used to describe a certain type of 17th century poetry. Metaphysical poetry is concerned with the whole experience of man. It means that the poetry is about showing knowledge and thoughts from different areas of experience‚ especially about love‚ romantic and sensual; about man’s relationship with God and about pleasure‚ learning and art. Metaphysical

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    By comparatively analysing the connections between texts‚ a responder’s understanding of intrinsic human concerns are outwardly enhanced. Edson’s play “W;t” is a manifestation of the Selected Poetry of John Donne‚ and explores the analogous notions of redemption through self-examination and the need for human relationships. A responder‚ when taking both Edson and Donne’s work as one‚ understands the timelessness of human concerns. Hence‚ there can be no doubt‚ that fundamental to any comparative

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    exploration of the human feelings‚ there was also a group of bold poets in the 17th Century who took their words to a rather analytical side of the abstracts aspects of life. John Donne‚ one of Metaphysical Poetry’s main figures‚ stands out for his choice of simple words to approach more complex themes of life. In ‘‘Holy Sonnet 10’’‚ Donne brings Death to human level in which he strongly criticizes it for being inferior to other mortal pleasures. Donne’s boldness is emphasized as he alters the English sonnet’s

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