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Expect no cozy love poetry here. Donne's attitude is defiant and aggressive. He certainly knew all of the stages and emotions of love ranging from rapture to deep despair. The young Donne's disrespect for women and his intense sexuality might perhaps put some readers off. Though the courtship and marriage to Anne More (in 1601) would bring a change. In terms of class Anne was by far Donne's superior, and her father forbade the marriage. Yet Donne had deeply fallen in love, and put his career on the line to marry Anne secretly. It cut him down in arrogance. Anne died in 1617, worn out by her yearly pregnancies (Donne had quite an appetite).
The reader can track the courtship and marriage of Anne and John Donne throughout the poems. But often Donne will address an imaginary lady. As Mr. Fowkes indicates the background of his poetry is difficult to pinpoint. And add to this the fact which we should also not forget, that Donne was a Catholic who converted to the Anglican Church and felt guilty about it.
A complicated man harbouring many selves and souls. Even though I may not agree with Donne's aggressive ways in several poems, he expresses himself with such an intensity and passion (that I cannot avoid him), which makes up for some of the most compelling and brilliant poetry ever written in the English language.
Whether you are timid about poetry or love John Donne, this is the point of no return.
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Donne is a difficult poet, and one of the main objects of this edition of the 'Songs and Sonets' (not 'Sonnets' because we are here given the original spelling) is to try to clarify any and all points where the meaning would not be perfectly clear to a reader of reasonable intelligence.
The text is a modern recension, based largely on the text of Grierson's 1912 edition of Donne's 'Poetical Works,' and makes use of variants recorded in that edition and in manuscript material which has since come to light.
Redpath's notes are full, detailed, and extensive, and in addition offer full commentaries on every poem. He tells us that his aim was to create "an edition for the general reader, which would bring these remarkable poems to readers both in England and abroad, neither merely as a sometimes exasperatingly obscure plain text, nor as part of a bulky specialist volume or series of volumes" (p.vii).
The poems are preceeded by an interesting 35-page Introduction, and the book is rounded out with a series of Appendices, a Select Bibliography, and an Index of First Lines. At just 156-pages it's a slim book and pleasant to handle, and it's also quite easy to use as most notes run alongside the text on facing pages.
In a book of this nature the editor's problem is always that of trying to strike a balance between giving the reader too much help or too little. Although Redpath may have given some readers a bit more help than they need, on the whole he seems to have struck a nice balance, and most readers will probably find most of his notes and commentary to be both helpful and illuminating.
So for those who have discovered the beauty of Donne's poems, but who may be still scratching their head over their many difficulties and obscurities, the present book will go a good way towards resolving most problems. It will enable anyone to read these poems with far greater understanding and appreciation of their nuances, and hence with far greater enjoyment.
Redpath's is an excellent edition, and strongly recommended.
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Often one finds references to T. S. Eliot when people speak or write about Donne. For me, the references are usually facile and Donne is clearly the greater figure. It says much to me that I love him dearly though I do not share his religious belief. I respect Eliot, but I find it much more difficult to love him and often even to locate him. He is too cold and artificially remote in comparison and I do not accept the validity of his 'impersonal transcendence'. I am not saying that Eliot should have tried to be more in touch with the reader, that is a silly idea and never a real concern for a genuine artist. I am saying that he should have tried to be more in touch with himself. He is in reality no more inwardly complex or many-faced than Donne, and certainly not more profound, but by comparison he seems cold, fragmented and stagnant to me and simply more inclined to wear his sweat on his sleeve. I know that some might say that Eliot had more difficult times and trials to deal with than did Donne, but I think that anyone who familiarizes himself with the wide range of Donne's work, and this volume from The Modern Library makes that possible, will see this is simply not true. Any one who is not familiar with Donne's work is unaware of some of the deepest, richest, vivifying depths that English language art has reached. It has something to do with love of which Donne knew much.
A great reference tool for the student of literature, and a good read (Oxford English dictionary readily accessible, of course).
John Hayward is a noted and respected scholar who has here given us an excellent selection of much of Donne's finest poetry. The book includes a generous selection from Donne's 'Songs and Sonets,' along with representative 'Elegies,' 'Epithalamions,' 'Satyres,' 'Verse Letters,' 'Anniversaries,' 'Epicedes and Obsequies,' and 'Divine Poems.' The poems are preceded by a brief and interesting Introduction by Hayward, a Note on the Text, and a Chronological Table, and the book is rounded out with an Index of First Lines.
All in all, Hayward has given us an admirable selection in which those who are already familiar with Donne are going to find most of their favorites. As such, it can be unreservedly recommended to those who already know their Donne, and would be an excellent book, for example, to have along on a trip.
But Donne is a difficult poet, and any newcomer to Donne who takes up this book is going to have problems because of its almost complete lack of annotations. The poems are only lightly footnoted, and the extensive notes a beginner needs are absent.
Newcomers to Donne should try to find a more fully annotated edition, one that will help explain the many knotty points and obscurities that we find in the poems. One good edition that can be recommended is Theodore Redpath's 'The Songs and Sonets [sic] of John Donne' (1976), an edition designed for the general reader which gives detailed and extensive notes and full commentaries.
Donne is a marvelous poet, and it would be a pity if new readers were to be put off his poems by obscurities that can very quickly be resolved by a well-annotated edition. The present edition is more of a reader's edition for those who already know and love the poems.