John Donne Poet
- Gender: Male
- Citizenship: England
- Born: Jan 22, 1572
- Died: Mar 31, 1631
John Donne was an English poet and a cleric in the Church of England. He is considered the pre-eminent representative of the metaphysical poets. His works are noted for their strong, sensual style and include sonnets, love poems, religious poems, Latin translations, epigrams, elegies, songs, satires and sermons. His poetry is noted for its vibrancy of language and inventiveness of metaphor, especially compared to that of his contemporaries. Donne's style is characterised by abrupt openings and various paradoxes, ironies and dislocations. These features, along with his frequent dramatic or everyday speech rhythms, his tense syntax and his tough eloquence, were both a reaction against the smoothness of conventional Elizabethan poetry and an adaptation into English of European baroque and mannerist techniques. His early career was marked by poetry that bore immense knowledge of English society and he met that knowledge with sharp criticism. Another important theme in Donne's poetry is the idea of true religion, something that he spent much time considering and about which he often theorized. He wrote secular poems as well as erotic and love poems.
Be thine own palace, or the world's thy jail.
motivational
Nature's great masterpiece, an elephant the only harmless great thing.
nature
God employs several translators some pieces are translated by age, some by sickness, some by war, some by justice.
age & war
No spring nor summer beauty hath such grace as I have seen in one autumnal face.
beauty
Reason is our soul's left hand, faith her right.
faith
More than kisses, letters mingle souls.
love
I am two fools, I know, for loving, and for saying so in whining poetry.
poetry
Love built on beauty, soon as beauty, dies.
beauty
Art is the most passionate orgy within man's grasp.
art
Any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankind And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls it tolls for thee.
death