Extract a definition of love from Donne’s love poems.
Write
a note on the treatment of love in Donne’s poems.
or
Write
a comprehensive note on Donne’s contribution to English love poetry.
Ans. Donne’s
reputation as a love poet rests on the lyrics written at several periods
of his life but published in 1635 in the single volume called songs and
sonnets. It would not be easy to extract a simple definition of love from
Donne’s poems, for
they present a surprising variety of mood and attitude to the emotion or feeling. The poems are at times
frankly sensual, at other times splendidly passionate, at yet other times
cynical and touched with scorn and bitterness
Passion marks much
of the love poetry of Done. The opening of many a poem is dramatic its
passion. The Canonization comes
immediately to mind :
For God’s sake hold your tongue and let me love.
Or we have:
I wonderby my troth, what thou and i
Did
till we loved ?
(
the Good-Mirrow)
Whoever comes to shroud me do not harm.
(The
Funeral)
The are poems marked
by cynicism and scorn. In these
poems, Done seems to be expressing contempt towards love itself. Even here,
however, we have variety. In some of the poems, for instance, Woman’s Constancy
and go and catch a falling star , there is a gaiety and playfulness. But there
are other poems such as the appa-rition where the theme of woman’s
faithlessness in love becomes a hymn of hate. The poet’s own fickleness is love
may get a playful treatment as in The Indifferent or a much more serious
handling as in love’s Usury.
Several of the love
poems are marked by simple,pure affection. Here the conception of love
rises to something concrete, tender and affectionate; here Donne is neither
Petrarchan nor Platonic. In these poems Donne celebrates the best in conjugal
love. The song Sweetest love. I do not go, the Anniversary and A Valediction:
forbidding Mourning are examples expressing the sweet contentment of love. The
Sun Rising, The Good-Morrow, The Dream are poems recording the delight of
mutual love-making, without outside interference, and with not hint of any
inadequacy in the beloved.
Donne’s poems also
present sensual love in all its aspect- from the bitterness of love
thwarted, so the fleeting paradise of desire fulfilled. Elegy: on Going to Bed may almost be called a pornographic poem for
the frankness with which it describes the sensuous aspect of love. Donne did
not consider bodily love to be impure. It was as importance to him as the
spiritual attraction between two souls. It is only through the bodies that the
souls meet, as he says in The Ecstasy.
On the whole, one can discern five
major themes in Donne’s love poetry. There is the sorrow of
parting, the misery of secrecy, the falseness of the mistress, the fickleness
of the lover and finally contempt for love itself. However, we have to
differentiate between the nuances of love in Donne’s poetry. Love in one sense
is a holy passion and in this sense it is irrespective of whether it is within
marriage or outside it. In another sense, it another sense, it is purely
physical, in which case it is nothing better than lust. Love which partakes of
the body and the soul is best. Perhaps the last stanza of The Canonization
aptly sums up Donne’s philosophy of love, that a complete relationship between
man woman fuses their souls into a complete whole and thus they become a world
in themselves. In The Sun Rising too
Donne expresses the same idea. As Grierson remarks, “neither sensual passion,
not gay and cynical wit, not scorn and anger, is the dominant note in Donne’s
love poetry”. Bennett is right when she observes that Donne’s love poetry is
not about the difference between marriage and adultery, but about the
difference between love and lust.
It is not easy to
extract a definition of love from poems which deal with so many attitudes
to the emotion. However, whether dealing with sensual or spiritual love, or the
complex combination of both, Donne is always is always passionate. The problem
which forms the basic theme of Donne’s love poetry is the place of love in this
world of change and death. The problem is viewed from different angles; as a
result, love is expressing a surprising variety of attitude. Love threatened by
change is at times seen in a cynical light, at times with bitter
disillusionment, as in Farewell to Love where
the poet asks whether love is nothing more than a ginger-bread king discarded
at a fair. But then love is also seen as the one thing which remains immortal.
On the whole, one might say that Donne’s poems celebrate love in both its
physical as well as spiritual aspects. Love is properly fulfilled only when it
embraces both body and soul- that, one might say, is the definition of love we
may extract from the mature love poems of Donne.
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