AUTHORS
Alcott,
Louisa May
Alighieri,
Dante
Andersen,
Hans Christian
Austen,
Jane
Balzac,
Honore de
Barrie,
James M.
Bierce,
Ambrose
Blake,
William
Bronte,
Emily
Bronte,
Charlotte
Bronte,
Anne
Bulfinch,
Thomas
Burnett,
Francis Hodgson
Burroughs,
Edgar Rice
Byron,
Lord George Gordon
Carroll,
Lewis
Cervantes,
Miguel de
Chaucer,
Geoffrey
Chekhov,
Anton
Chesterton,
Gilbert Keith
Christie,
Agatha
Coleridge,
Samuel Taylor
Conrad,
Joseph
Cooper,
James Fenimore
Crane,
Stephen
Darwin,
Charles
Defoe,
Daniel
Dickens,
Charles
Dickinson,
Emily
Donne,
John
Dostoevsky,
Fyodor
Douglass,
Frederick
Doyle,
Arthur Conan
Dumas,
Alexandre
Eliot,
George
Emerson,
Ralph Waldo
Fitzgerald,
F. Scott
Forster,
E.M.
Frost,
Robert
Grahame,
Kenneth
Hardy,
Thomas
Hawthorne,
Nathaniel
Henry,
O
Hesse,
Hermann
Homer
Hugo,
Victor
Huxley,
Aldous
Irving,
Washington
James,
Henry
Joyce,
James
Keats,
John
Kipling,
Rudyard
Lamb,
Charles
Lawrence,
D.H.
Leroux,
Gaston
London,
Jack
Longfellow,
Henry Wadsworth
Machiavelli,
Niccolo
Maupassant,
Guy de
Melville,
Herman
Milton,
John
Montgomery,
Lucy Maud
More,
Thomas
Orwell,
George
Poe,
Edgar Allan
Scott,
Sir Walter
Shakespeare,
William
Shaw,
George Bernard
Shelley,
Mary Wollstonecraft
Shelley,
Percy Bysshe
Sinclair,
Upton
Smith,
Adam
Sophocles
Stevenson,
Robert Louis
Stoker,
Bram
Stowe,
Harriet Beecher
Swift,
Jonathan
Tennyson,
Lord Alfred
Thoreau,
Henry David
Tolstoy,
Leo
Twain,
Mark
Tzu,
Sun
Verne,
Jules
Virgil
Voltaire,
Francois-Marie Arouet
Wells, Herbert George
Wharton,
Edith
Wilde,
Oscar
Woolf,
Virginia
Wordsworth,
William
Yeats,
William Butler
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John Donne Biography
John Donne was the most outstanding
of the English Metaphysical Poets and a churchman famous for his
spellbinding sermons. His poetry is noted for its ingenious fusion
of wit and seriousness and represents a shift from classical
models toward a more personal style. Donne was born in London to a
prominent Roman Catholic family but converted to Anglicanism
during the 1590s. At the age of 11 he entered the University of
Oxford, where he studied for three years. According to some
accounts, he spent the next three years at the University of
Cambridge but took no degree at either university. He began the
study of law at Lincoln's Inn, London, in 1592, and he seemed
destined for a legal or diplomatic career. In 1596, Donne joined
the naval expedition that Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, led
against Cádiz, Spain. On his return to England, Donne was
appointed private secretary to Sir Thomas Egerton, Keeper of the
Great Seal, in 1598. Donne's secret marriage in 1601 to Egerton's
niece, Anne More, resulted in his dismissal from this position and
in a brief imprisonment. The poet, in a characteristic pun, later
summed up the experience: "John Donne, Anne Donne,
Undone." During the next few years Donne made a meager living
as a lawyer, serving chiefly as counsel for Thomas Morton, an
anti-Roman Catholic pamphleteer. Donne may have collaborated with
Morton in writing pamphlets that appeared under Morton's name from
1604 to 1607. Donne's principal literary accomplishments during
this period were Divine Poems (1607) and the prose work
Biathanatos (c. 1608, posthumously published 1644), a half-serious
extenuation of suicides, in which he argued that suicide is not
intrinsically sinful. In 1608 a reconciliation was effected
between Donne and his father-in-law, and his wife received a
much-needed dowry. His next work, Pseudo-Martyr (1610), is a prose
treatise maintaining that English Roman Catholics could, without
breach of their religious loyalty, pledge an oath of allegiance to
James I, king of England. This work won him the favor of the king.
Donne became a priest of the Anglican church in 1615 and was
appointed royal chaplain later that year. In 1621 was named dean
of St. Paul's Cathedral. He attained eminence as a preacher,
delivering sermons that are regarded as the most brilliant and
eloquent of his time. Donne's poetry embraces a wide range of
secular and religious subjects. He wrote cynical verse about
inconstancy (for example, Go and catch a falling star and I can
love both fair and brown); poems about true love, such as The
Good-Morrow and Sweetest love, I do not go/For weariness of thee;
Neoplatonic lyrics on the mystical union of lovers' souls and
bodies, such as Air and Angels and The Ecstasy; brilliant satires;
hymns and holy sonnets depicting his own spiritual struggles, such
as A Hymn to God the Father, Batter my heart, three-personed God,
and I am a little world made cunningly, in which he begs God to
purge him of sin. The two Anniversaries--An Anatomy of the World
(1611) and Of the Progress of the Soul (1612)--are elegies for
15-year-old Elizabeth Drury, whose death epitomized for Donne the
decay of the world, physically and morally, and whose entry into
heaven heralded its potential regeneration. It was formerly
assumed that Donne's poetry reflected the growth of "Jack
Donne" libertine into "Dr. John Donne," the somber
dean of St. Paul's; that sensual love poetry typified his youth,
while obsessive thoughts of sin and death characterized his later
career. Except for the Anniversaries, however, nearly all his
poems were published posthumously and cannot be dated. Moreover,
whatever the subject, they reveal the same characteristics that
typified the work of the metaphysical poets: dazzling wordplay,
often explicitly sexual; paradox; subtle argumentation; surprising
contrasts; intricate psychological analysis; and striking imagery
selected from nontraditional areas such as law, physiology,
scholastic philosophy, and mathematics. (A Valediction: Forbidding
Mourning contains the famous comparison of lovers' souls to the
legs of a compass.) Samuel Johnson disapproved, for "the most
heterogeneous ideas are yoked by violence together." But T.
S. Eliot, who championed the metaphysicals in the 20th century,
praised Donne and his followers for achieving a "unification
of sensibility." Donne's prose, almost equally metaphysical,
ranks at least as high as his poetry. The Sermons, some 160 in
all, are especially memorable for their imaginative explications
of biblical passages and for their intense explorations of the
themes of divine love and of the decay and resurrection of the
body. Paradoxes and Problems (c. 1598) is a collection of playful
demonstrations (for example, "A Defence of Women's
Inconstancy" and "Why Puritans Make Long Sermons").
In Ignatius His Conclave (c. 1610), satirizing the Jesuits, Loyola
is ejected from hell and ordered to colonize the moon, where he
will do less harm. Devotions upon Emergent Occasions (1624) is a
powerful series of meditations, expostulations, and prayers in
which Donne's serious sickness at the time becomes a microcosm
wherein can be observed the stages of the world's spiritual
disease. The work includes the celebrated reflection on the
meaning of a distant funeral bell: No man is an Iland, intire of
it selfe; … any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved
in Mankinde; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell
tolls; It tolls for thee. Donne was fully prepared for his own
death. Having left his sickbed to deliver his last sermon,
fittingly entitled "Death's Duel," he then returned home
to pose for his portrait in a funeral shroud. He died a month
later.
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