Name:
Nargis I. Saiyad
Paper: The
Renaissance Literature
Topic: John
Donne’s poems-‘Sweetest Love’ and ‘The Sun Rising’
Class: M.A.II, Sem.: I
Year: 2012/13
Submitted
To,
Dr. Dilip
Barad,
Dept. of English,
Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University.
Bhavnagar.
John
Donne’s Poems-‘Sweetest Love’ and ‘The Sun Rising’
·
About
John Donne :-
John Donne is one of the metaphysical
poets. Metaphysical poetry is difficult to understand because it demands of
intellectual effort.
·
His
Poetry :-
Donne’s Poetry shows the human
struggle for harming between head and heart. Donne’s approach to love is very
down-to-earth, sometimes we may shock but it is always original.
Let’s
see his two
Poems:
·
SONG
-‘SWEETEST LOVE, I do not go’ :
According to P.K. Thakar, we can understand the Poem in three levels. Let’s
view it according to P. K. Thakar in levels.
·
Phonological
level :-
In
this poem the words like ‘deaths’ and ‘die’, He and ‘hath no and nor ‘so’ ‘But’
and ‘believe’, ‘speedier’ and since, add, another, and hour, alliterate
each-other so, the device of alliteration is used hero.
·
Semantic
level :-
The
poem is about the departure of the loves. So, this is love poem. The title
itself suggests it. It is a lyric.
“SWEETEST
love, I do not go,
For
weariness of three,”
Here,
the poet wants to say that he is not going because he is tired of his beloved.
Moreover,
he says that even he is going to get fitted love from the world. He compares
his departure with the death.
In
the second stanza he uses the metaphor of ‘Sun’. He says that even sun comes
daily and goes out every-day. He says that he will also come like it.
This
is the first line of the third stanza. Here he becomes philosophical. He says
that man’s power is feeble. He adds that if a man wishes to add hour to good
fortune, he can’t. Even he can’t recall a lost hour.
Then
he gives the message that it all depends on man’s mentality. We give power to
our misfortune.
In
the fourth stanza, the lover aryls that he is so much a part of her, he is in
her breath.
The
first three stanzas tell about the departure and return of the lover but the
last two stanzas tell about the harm that the beloved can cause.
In
the last stanza, the poet says that his beloved should nod think ill about
their future. He fears that if she continues take part to fulfill her fear. It
is written here like this.
“Destiny
may take thy part and may thy fear fulfill.”
At
last he advises his beloved to imagine. She should think that both of them are
on bed turning aside of each-other.
3.
Grammar Level :-
This
is a lyric of five stanzas. Here the apostrophe ‘I’ is used that refers to the
lover.
The
archaic words are also used here like ‘thee’, ‘thou’, ‘thy’ etc...
·
The
sun Rising :-
Ø Theme
:-
This
is a love poem in which the lover complains to the sun that it should not shine
and disturb him and his beloved.
Ø Content
:-
“Busy old fool, unruly sun,
Why dost thou thus,
Though windows, and
through curtains, callous?”
So,
he calls the sun as a “busy”, ‘old’, ‘fool’ and asks that why it is disturbing
them?
Thus,
he tells the sun to go and shine to late school-boys, Prentice,
court-huntsmen, ants and disturb them.
He
says that in love hours, days, month all are the waste of time.
The
love is stronger than the sun-beams. He also says that he can eclipse and cloud
them with a wink.
This reminds us Shakespeare’s “My
mistress eyes are nothing like the sun” in one sonnet.
This
was a standard Renaissance love-poem convention to proclaim his beloved’s
loveliness.
In
the final line, he gives Ptolemaic astronomic idea that the earth the centre of
the universe and the sun rotates around the earth and this final line is,
“This
bed thy centre is, these walk thy sphere”
Thus,
here the poet-lover wants to say that their feelings of love are more important
than anything in the world.
Ø Structure
:-
The
poem has there stanzas and each are ten lined. The rhyming scheme in each stanza
is ABBACDCDEE.
The
tone is mocking and railing when he calls the sun as ‘busy’, old, fool. The sun
is personified here.
The
wards like ‘must’ and ‘notion’, ‘School’, and’ sour, call, and country, no and
knows, alliterate each-other. So, the device of alliteration is used here the
words like ‘thou’, through, go, ‘I’ ‘thy’, are repeated. So, the repetition is
used in the poem.
Ø Conclusion
:-
We can see
paradox, belittling cosmic forces, love as both physical and spiritual,
interconnection humanity etc. for example, in ‘The Sun Rising’ the lovers
believe that their love is more important than the whole world. That refers to
the belittling cosmic forces. In most of his love poems, he tells that there
love is superior to any other. This
refers to the love as both physical and spiritual. Donne’s imagination is great and we can see
his greatness of writing the poem by these two poems.
hello nargis i liked the way u have described your points and i have one question that have u found any similarities and dissimilarities between these two poems?
ReplyDeleteHello Namrata,thanks for the comment.Yes I found one similarity between them and it is that both poems are love poems and 'the sun'is personified and the poet himself is the lover and he believes that love is higher than anything else in the world and the difference is that 'Sweetest love' is about departure and 'The Sun Rising'is about disturbance of Natural things on their love.
ReplyDeleteI love it,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your Post. The Sun Rising by John Donne is a awesome poet! Click here
ReplyDelete