Tuesday, October 22, 2019

John Donne Critical Quotes Essays

John Donne Critical Quotes Essays John Donne Critical Quotes Paper John Donne Critical Quotes Paper Essay Topic: Poetry Achsah Guibbory on inevitability of contradiction For Donne, For Donne, the process of examining emotional expereince inevitably produces poetry of contradicitons Achsah Guibbory on influences on love poetry he turns he turns to the Roman Ovid, rather than imitating the Petrarchan love poetry Achsah Guibbory on Narrative Voice Unlike his Unlike his contemporary Ben JonsonDonne adopts different roles and postures Barbara Lewalski on Holy Sonnets Finding the Finding the whole of salvation traced in ones own soul (Non-Ignatian) C.S Lewis on puzzles There are There are puzzles in his work, but we can solve them all if we are clever enough C.S Lewis on love poetry His love His love poetry is Hamlet without the prince C.S Lewis on love and hate The love The love of hatred and the hatred of love C.S Lewis on Metaphysical The very The very qualities which make him unsatisfying poetic food make it a valuable ingredient C.S Lewis on Love Love is Love is a god and lovers his clergy Izaak Walton on Narrative Voice There are There are two Donnes: Jack Donne; and Dr John Donne John Wall on Holy Sonnets His despair His despair is never without a move towards hope; his hope, never without a move towards despair Louis Martz on Holy Sonnets A continually A continually shifting series of dramatic momentstemporary conclusionsbut all only for a moment final' Michel Montaigne on Contradiction I find I find nothing more difficult to believe than mans consistency, and nothing more easy than his inconsistency Ovid on Love Love is Love is a kind of warfare Peterson on Holy Sonnets The First The First Sonnet poses the problem that the sequence attemtps to resolve Samuel Jonson on Conceits dicordia concorsi dicordia concorsi the discovery of occult resemblances in things apparently unlike Samuel Jonson on Wit Those writers Those writers who on the watch for novelty could have little hope of greatness Samuel Jonson on buried wit Genuine wit Genuine wit and useful knowledge may be sometimes found, buried in the grossness of expression Samuel Jonson on Metaphysicals as not being poets Instead of Instead of writing poetry they only write verse Samuel Jonson on Wit Wit which Wit which is at once natural and newthe metaphysicals have seldom risen Samuel Jonson on Hyperbole Confused magnificence Confused magnificence thatcould not be imagined T.S Eliot on Complexity A development A development by rapid succession of thought which requires considerable agility on the part of the reader T.S Eliot on Metaphysical Poets more Poets more often named than read T.S Eliot on goal of the Metaphysicals Trying to Trying to find the verbal equivalent for states of mind and feeling T.S Eliot on Wit Donne elaborates Donne elaborates a figure of speech to the furthest stage to which ingenuity can carry it T.S Eliot response to Johnson All poetry All poetry is heterogeneous Thomas Carew on Metaphysical Donne purgd Donne purgd The Muses garden, threw awaythe lazie seeds / Of Servile imitationAnd fresh invention planted William Kerrigan on power and love Donnes love Donnes love poetry stems from a frustrated sense of power Helen Gardner on Openings The brilliant The brilliant abrupt openingsare like the lump of gold flung down on the table John Carey on Biography The first The first thingto remember about Donne is that he was a Catholic; the second, that he betrayed his faith. John Carey on Complexity The complexities The complexities are not riddles to be solved, but natural and unresolvable, like living. John Carey on argument He treats He treats argument not as an instrument for discovering truth but as a flexible poetic accessory John Carey on Conceits Angels, mummy, Angels, mummy, mandrakes, maps, coins, and shadows, they are meeting places for opposites. Dennis Flynn on Religion and apostasy I propose I propose that we describe Donne not as an apostate or as a blasphemer but simply as a survivor of the Elizabethan persecution. Roger B. Rollin on Biography Carey is Carey is a psychobiological critic for his reading of, the Holy Sonnets as if each poem were a versified treatment of an actual event in Donnes psychological life Ben Johnson on Narrative Voice Don[n]e for Don[n]e for not keeping accent deserved hanging. Samuel Coleridge on Wit With Donne, With Donne, whose muse on dromedary trots, / Wreathe iron pokers into true-love knots; / Rhymes sturdy cripple, fancys maze and clue. / Wits forge and fire-blast, meanings press and screw. T.S Eliot on Biography Donne found Donne found no substitute for sense, / To seize and clutch and penetrate; / Expert beyond experience, // He knew the anguish of the marrow / The ague of the skeleton; / No contact possible to flesh / Allayed the fever of the bone. Pope on Wit that which that which has been often thought, but was never before so well expressed Douglas Bush on Liminality wandering between wandering between two worlds Wilbur Sanders on Dependence Donne felt Donne felt his dependence on God to resemble his dependence on secular patronage Samuel Johnson on Unrealism imitating imitating neither nature nor life William Hazlitt on Complexity Some quaint Some quaint riddles in verse, which the Sphinx could not unravel Thomas De Quincey on Rhetoric A rhetorician, A rhetorician, not a poet Leigh Hunt on Intellectualism To look To look at nothing as it really is but only as to what may be thought of it Thomas Arnold on Donne being too intellectual A poet A poet of feeling could never stop to elaborate T.S Eliot on Intellectualism Devour any Devour any kind of experience into the cerebral cortex, the nervous system, and the digestive tract Virginia Woolf on Opposites His poetry His poetry admits contrasts and psychological intricacy Peter Conrad on Separation Donnes dramatic Donnes dramatic situations are analytic divorces Achsah Guibbory on Politics Love itself Love itself is political involving power transactions between men and women Al Alvarez on Confidence Spenser seeks Spenser seeks erudition, and Donne sprezzatura T.S Eliot on Dramatic devices telescoping of telescoping of images Grierson on Donne as a Catholic Donne would Donne would not have become a Protestant in a Catholic country J.B. Leishman on argument An argumentative poet John Carey on Opposites Imagined Corners, Imagined Corners, they are meeting places as opposites Stevie Davies on Sexism He attacks He attacks convention as castrated and saplesshe presents naked priapism and brags thereby his dangerous integrity

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