John Donne
John Donne was born in 1572 in London, England. He is known as
the founder of the Metaphysical Poets, a term created by Samuel
Johnson, an eighteenth-century English essayist, poet, and
philosopher. The loosely associated group also includes George
Herbert, Richard Crashaw, Andrew Marvell, and John Cleveland.
The Metaphysical Poets are known for their ability to startle
the reader and coax new perspective through paradoxical images,
subtle argument, inventive syntax, and imagery from art,
philosophy, and religion using an extended metaphor known as a
conceit. Donne reached beyond the rational and hierarchical
structures of the seventeenth century with his exacting and
ingenious conceits, advancing the exploratory spirit of his time.
Donne entered the world during a period of theological and
political unrest for both England and France; a Protestant
massacre occurred on Saint Bartholomew's day in France; while
in England, the Catholics were the persecuted minority. Born
into a Roman Catholic family, Donne's personal relationship
with religion was tumultuous and passionate, and at the center
of much of his poetry. He studied at both Oxford and Cambridge
Universities in his early teen years. He did not take a degree
at either school, because to do so would have meant subscribing to the
Thirty-nine Articles, the doctrine that defined Anglicanism.
At age twenty he studied law at Lincoln's Inn. Two years
later he succumbed to religious pressure and joined the
Anglican Church after his younger brother, convicted for his
Catholic loyalties, died in prison. Donne wrote most of his
love lyrics, erotic verse, and some sacred poems in the
1590's, creating two major volumes of work: Satires, and
Songs and Sonnets.
In 1598, after returning from a two-year naval expedition against
Spain, Donne was appointed private secretary to Sir Thomas
Egerton. While sitting in Queen Elizabeth's last Parliament in
1601, Donne secretly married Anne More, the sixteen-year-old
niece of Lady Egerton. Donne's father-in-law disapproved of the
marriage. As punishment, he did not provide a dowry for the couple
and had Donne briefly imprisoned.
This left the couple isolated and dependent on friends, relatives, and patrons. Donne
suffered social and financial instability in the years following
his marriage, exacerbated by the birth of many children. He
continued to write and published the Divine Poems in 1607. In
Pseudo-Martyr, published in 1610, Donne displayed his extensive
knowledge of the laws of the Church and state, arguing that
Roman Catholics could support James I without compromising
their faith. In 1615, James I pressured him to enter the
Anglican Ministry by declaring that Donne could not be
employed outside of the Church. He was appointed Royal
Chaplain later that year. His wife, aged thirty-three,
died in 1617, shortly after giving birth to their twelfth
child, a stillborn. The Holy Sonnets are also attributed to
this phase of his life.
In 1621 he became dean of Saint Paul's Cathedral. In his later
years, Donne's writing reflected his fear of his inevitable
death. He wrote his private prayers, Devotions upon Emergent
Occasions, during a period of severe illness and published
them in 1624. His learned, charismatic, and inventive preaching
made him a highly influential presence in London. Best known
for his vivacious, compelling style and thorough examination of
mortal paradox, John Donne died in London in 1631.
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