Category Archives: For the Love of God

A Hymn to Christ

It was interesting to read “A Hymn to Christ” and noticing the way, yet again, Donne inverts and twists a metaphor. When writing about a tree, he says, “as the tree’s sap doth seek the root below, in winter, in my winter now I go…” Rarely do we think about downward motion with nature: trees and flowers evoke imagery of growth, of blooming upwards. Usually the “movement” of literature is towards spring and summer, instead of winter. This is especially fascinating to me when taken in the context of religious imagery: “the tree of life”; “the tree of knowledge,” but also Ovid, and Pagan connotations. Any thoughts about how Donne uses nature to speak about religious themes in these poems?

Poet and Preacher: Donne’s Two Lives

It’s interesting to think about John Donne’s two lives – as a poet and as a preacher – and how they are both interconnected and separate. I have always known Donne as a poet, while his life in the Church took a backseat in my understanding of his work. But this weekend’s readings made it clear to me how important it is to understand his religious life, and how vital knowledge of his life as a preacher is in understanding his life as a poet (and vice versa).

I have a predisposition when reading Renaissance poets to assume that they are religious “on the side,” so to speak, and my reading of Donne’s poems proved on the whole no different. Sonnet 14 was an indicator of his deeply religious side, but the counterpoint to that are poems such as “The Flea,” in which he clearly tries to convince a woman to have sex with him outside of marriage (that’s a sin, right?). To feel as though Donne does not completely “buy in” to his supposed religion completely changes the nature of his poetry, and to read his sermons is to see a quite different side of the man.

I am now in fact convinced that students should be required to read some of his religious writings before setting upon his poetry, so as to look at his work with a greater understanding of Donne as a man for whom religion was a profession. Of course, whether or not Donne’s life as a preacher speaks to his belief in the Church is a different matter altogether – but it must be an indicator that he was a man of true faith. Assuming this to be so, how do we now read “The Flea”? Or does Sonnet 14 provide just such an answer?

Man v. World

I was very interested in Donne’s description of the size of the man compared to the size of the world in “Meditation 4.” Interestingly, he claims that the “pieces of man” when stretched out are much greater than the world. The complexity, he argues, of humans is so great. Why then would the sum of all humans be so much less significant than the complexity of one individual human? It would seem that when added together, the complexities and interactions between humans would be greater than those of any one individual. To Donne, when the world is seen as a collection of humans, something about the greatness of the individual is lost. What is that something? Why is the world so small compared to the individual?