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Super infinite the transformations of john donne by katherine rundell
Super infinite the transformations of john donne by katherine rundell







super infinite the transformations of john donne by katherine rundell

Woodland can be a counter-intuitive haven. He may not have been a comforting writer, but he was certainly a powerfully disturbing one. Interpreting his ‘metaphysical’ poetry may be akin, thinks Rundell, to ‘cracking a locked safe’ but his sermons are starkly direct in confronting the questions of sin and death, soul and flesh. It was, says Rundell, ‘a fantastic piñata of a job’, which came with many perks and a hefty salary.ĭonne now turned his talents as a wordsmith to become ‘the star preacher of the age’, his pulpit performances enthralling audiences. Donne’s background was Catholic – 11 of his relatives died for their faith – and the extent to which his conversion to Anglicanism was coloured by opportunism is unclear.īut it was a shrewd move because, as a widower aged 49, he was promoted to Dean of St Paul’s Cathedral. Religion then became central to his work. These brought him to the notice of James I, who made him his personal chaplain. What he began to exploit, however, was a gift for flattery and rhetoric, exploited in brown-nosing begging letters to aristocrats and funeral elegies written to order. He took some diplomatic and administrative jobs and briefly served as a member of Parliament, but at the age of 36 he could write ‘to this hour, I am nothing’. He is a poet of the bedroom, relishing a woman’s naked body as if it was a world to explore and conquer – ‘O my America, my New-Found-Land’.ĭonne’s early adult life was a struggle against illness and poverty. Largely inspired by his wife Anne (who bore him 12 children in 16 years), he uses the word ‘love’ more than any other except ‘and’ or ‘the’. Handsome and a dandy, he appears to have been something of a womaniser, though Rundell believes he was more flirt than predatory seducer. Had Rundell wanted to, she could easily have moulded his story into a novel along the lines of Wolf Hall – Donne has something of the same enigmatic and conflicted personality as Hilary Mantel’s hero, Thomas Cromwell.īorn into a prosperous family and educated at Oxford and the Inns of Court, Donne was ambitious.

super infinite the transformations of john donne by katherine rundell

This biography of the poet and priest John Donne (above) is grounded in research Katherine Rundell undertook for her doctorate









Super infinite the transformations of john donne by katherine rundell