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  2. John Donne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Donne

    John Donne's poetry represented a shift from classical forms to more personal poetry. Donne is noted for his poetic metre , which was structured with changing and jagged rhythms that closely resemble casual speech (it was for this that the more classical-minded Ben Jonson commented that "Donne, for not keeping of accent, deserved hanging").

  3. The Sun Rising (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sun_Rising_(poem)

    The poem incomplete. The Sun Rising (also known as The Sunne Rising) is a thirty-line poem (a great example of an inverted aubade) [1] with three stanzas published in 1633 [2] by the English poet John Donne. The meter is irregular, ranging from two to six stresses per line in no fixed pattern.

  4. As Due By Many Titles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/As_Due_By_Many_Titles

    It is included in the Holy Sonnets – a series of poems written by John Donne. According to the currently adopted sequence, the poem comes second in the order. [ 1 ] It has also appeared in all of the proposed sequences so far - changes in positioning were, however, minimal, as the poem has remained in the first or second position ever since ...

  5. Holy Sonnets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Sonnets

    There is a poem of John Donne, written just before his death, which I know and love. From it a quotation: "As West and East / In all flatt Maps—and I am one—are one, / So death doth touch the Resurrection." That still does not make a Trinity, but in another, better known devotional poem Donne opens, "Batter my heart, three-person'd God;—."

  6. Death Be Not Proud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Be_Not_Proud

    "Sonnet X", also known by its opening words as "Death Be Not Proud", is a fourteen-line poem, or sonnet, by English poet John Donne (1572–1631), one of the leading figures in the metaphysical poets group of seventeenth-century English literature. Written between February and August 1609, it was first published posthumously in 1633.

  7. Elegy XIX: To His Mistress Going to Bed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elegy_XIX:_To_His_Mistress...

    Donne neatly hits the traditional estimate of love by expressing it in terms of an adventure”. [6] Here, Gransden commends Donne's comparison of sexual intercourse to an adventure, which was a modern way for his speaker to coax the mistress into bed. Donne's metaphysical conceit also dabbles in gendered power dynamics of early modern England.

  8. Devotions upon Emergent Occasions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devotions_upon_Emergent...

    John Donne, aged about 42. Donne was born in 1572 to a wealthy ironmonger and a warden of the Worshipful Company of Ironmongers, and his wife Elizabeth. [2] After his father's death when he was four, Donne was trained as a gentleman scholar; his family used the money his father had made to hire tutors who taught him grammar, rhetoric, mathematics, history and foreign languages.

  9. A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Valediction:_Forbidding...

    "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" is a metaphysical poem by John Donne. Written in 1611 or 1612 for his wife Anne before he left on a trip to Continental Europe, "A Valediction" is a 36-line love poem that was first published in the 1633 collection Songs and Sonnets, two years after Donne's death.