enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. John Donne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Donne

    John Donne (/ d ĘŚ n / DUN; 1571 or 1572 [a] – 31 March 1631) was an English poet, scholar, soldier and secretary born into a recusant family, who later became a cleric in the Church of England. [2]

  3. The Well Wrought Urn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Well_Wrought_Urn

    The bulk of the book is devoted to close reading of poems by John Donne, Shakespeare, Milton, Alexander Pope, William Wordsworth, Keats, Lord Tennyson, Yeats, Thomas Gray, and T. S. Eliot. In The Well Wrought Urn, theory illuminates practice and vice versa. The poems are meant to be "the concrete examples on which generalizations are to be based".

  4. The Renegade (poem) - Wikipedia

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

    "The Renegade" is a poem by David Diop which blackguards those Africans who have espoused European customs at the expense of their African roots. Critics have noted, sometimes pointedly, that Diop himself spent most of his life outside Africa. The point of view is first person singular and the persona uses apostrophe to address the alienated ...

  5. Category:Poetry by John Donne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Poetry_by_John_Donne

    The Holy Sonnets of John Donne; ... The Sun Rising (poem) V. A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning This page was last edited on 5 November 2016, at 19:28 (UTC) ...

  6. 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.

  7. 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.

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

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

    "Elegy XIX: To His Mistress Going to Bed", originally spelled "To His Mistris Going to Bed", is a poem written by the metaphysical poet John Donne.. The elegy was refused a licence for publishing in Donne's posthumous collection Poems in 1633, but was printed in an anthology, The Harmony of the Muses, in 1654. [1]

  9. Pseudo-Martyr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudo-Martyr

    Pseudo-Martyr is a 1610 polemical prose tract in English by John Donne. It contributed to the religious pamphlet war of the time, and was Donne's first appearance in print. It argued that English Roman Catholics should take the Oath of Allegiance of James I of England. [1] It was printed by William Stansby for Walter Burre. [2]