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    John Donne and “The Bait” John Donne was born in 1572 into a Roman Catholic family. For most of his life he was an outsider‚ a Catholic in Protestant England. Yet‚ after traveling abroad and studying theology‚ Donne converted to the English church. During that time‚ some of his poems display his interest in and critiques of English society‚ as well as his quest for true religion. In 1596-97‚ Donne joins a military expedition against Catholic Spain‚ which inspired him to write two poems about life

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    Biography of John Donne

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    Biography of John Donne John Donne was an English poet‚ satirist‚ lawyer and priest. He is considered the pre-eminent representative of the metaphysical poets. His works are noted for their strong‚ sensual style and include sonnets‚ love poetry‚ 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

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    The Canonization by John Donne Love is true and pure‚ a divine experience‚ a way to live more and to surpass even death. It is a sublime fantasy that is real and better than the material world. Love is life’s paradox. This is the idea that John Donne is expressing in the poem The Canonization. It is a reply as well as a declaration that the poet makes to the world- a world that treats lovers harshly. He scorns the worldly‚ he questions the inquisitive‚ he proves the myths true‚ he places his love

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    Flea John Donne

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    poems written by John Donne. However‚ both discuss the same theme of love. The two poems are different in the kind of love‚ the picture of women in both‚ and in the structure. First of all‚ the two poems deal with the same topic which is love but of course from very different views. The Flea speaks about pure physical love and how does the poet can convince his beloved to do what he wants. He uses the flea as a symbol of their love where in it their blood are mingled. For Donne‚ it is their ’marriage

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    The Flea By John Donne

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    In the poem “The Flea” by Donne shows the magical love poem mode‚ the speaker bent for transforming even the most outlandish pictures into expanding images of affection and sentiment. The poem “The Flea” utilizes the picture of a flea that has recently chomped the poet and his cherished to outline a diverting clash about whether the two will take part in premarital physical relation. The poet needs to‚ the adored does not‚ thus the poet‚ very smart but rather trying in vain‚ utilizes the flea‚ in

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    acknowledging diversity and allowing for inclusion amongst different people is a huge deal. In John Donne’s Sonnet‚ The Indifferent‚ readers at first glance may assume that it would fit perfectly into today’s views about inclusion. However‚ as the reader progresses through the poem‚ they may come to a different interpretation of the text than was first conceived. The first 18 lines of the poem show the build up to John Donne’s final argument. These lines also contain a couple of lines with multiple interpretations

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    “The Canonization” by John Donne Define canonize. 1 to declare (a deceased person) an officially recognized saint 2 to make canonical 3 to sanction by ecclesiastical authority 4 to attribute authoritative sanction or approval to 5 to treat as illustrious‚ preeminent‚ or sacred 6 Don’t know 1. How many steps? 5steps. 2. What does it mean to be beatified? to give a dead person a title of honor for being very good and holy Stanza 1 1 Presumably‚ what has been said to the speaker

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    John Donne Poetry

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    JOHN DONNE‚ we sometimes forget‚ was an Elizabethan. Scholars do well to warn us against over-simplifying the pattern of literary change into a simple succession ofmovements and ’reactions’‚ and to remind us that in periods of heightened vitality developments in different directions often exist side by side.1 By no means all of what we now consider typically Elizabethan poetry was in existence when Donne began to write. It remains true‚ nevertheless‚ that Donne chose to do something different

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    John Donne Love Poetry

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    W.H. Auden in his prose book “The Dyers Hand and Other Essays” suggests “What makes it difficult for a poet not to tell lies is that‚ in poetry‚ all facts and all beliefs cease to be true or false and become interesting possibilities…It may not‚ perhaps‚ be absolutely necessary that he believe it‚ but it is certainly necessary that his emotions be deeply involved‚ and this they can never be unless‚ as a man‚ he takes it more seriously than as a mere poetic convenience.” It is Donne’s sensibility

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    John Donne Apparition

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    John Donne – "The Apparition" In John Donne’s poem‚ "The Apparition‚" the title tells us that the poem is about a person having an epiphany. We know this because the word "apparition‚" means "to become visible" or "an epiphany." In the opening lines of the poem‚ the speaker addresses his listener as a "murdresse." He then goes on to tell her that when she "thinkst" she is "free from all solicitation from" him‚ his "ghost will come to" her bed. This tells us that the speaker is a rejected

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