Praises of John Donne the metaphysical poet—most distinguished member of a school numbering George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, Abraham Cowley, Andrew Marvell, Henry Vaughan, Thomas Traherne—have ...
A sin, nor shame, nor loss of maidenhead. Yet this enjoys before it woo, And pampered, swells with one blood made of two, And this, alas, is more than we would do. Oh stay, three lives in one flea ...
The first is a setting of John Donne, but for the remaining movements Adams chose contrasting poems by Dickinson. The first of these is ‘Because I could not stop for Death –’, the one ...
[N]ever send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee." Poet John Donne wrote these lines in his "Meditation XVII" as the feared Black Death ravaged his native London in 1624. The plague ...
Richard Flanagan is drowning. Trapped in a kayak, wedged underwater, he sips from a pocket of air inside the Franklin’s roar.
October: Monster by Dzifa Benson “One language is never enough”, Dzifa Benson writes in the first section of Monster, her ...
Check if you have access via personal or institutional login This book considers the professional contribution of John Donne to an emerging homiletic public sphere in the last years of the Jacobean ...
2. Bring happiness to others. You are not an island, as the English poet John Donne observed, and working for your own happiness should be part of a bigger project to build a better world.
Frieze Editor’s Picks is a fortnightly column in which a frieze editor shares their recommendations for what to watch, read ...
British poet and scholar John Donne famously wrote ‘No man is an island’ in his poem of the same name, and the adage has remained in popular vernacular since its 16th century beginnings. The original ...
As New York and Philadelphia became hubs for publishing in the United States, there was a need to sell more books to a ...
Please contact Liverpool University Press for availability about this product An accessible introduction to the full range of Donne's poetry which challenges the assumptions of traditional readings of ...