John Donne: The Reformed SoulMetamorphosing from scholar to buccaneer, from outcast to establishment figure, John Donne emerged as one of the greatest English poets, concentrating the paradoxes of his age within his own crises of desire and devotion. Following Donne from plague-ridden streets to palaces, from the taverns on the Bankside to the pulpit of St. Paul's, John Stubbs's biography is a vivid portrait of an extraordinary writer and his country at a time of bewildering and cruel transformation.--From publisher description. |
Mnenja - Napišite recenzijo
Na običajnih mestih nismo našli nobenih recenzij.
Vsebina
The Den | 3 |
Henry | 21 |
Cadiz | 47 |
The Islands | 63 |
Captain Donne | 80 |
The Secretary | 86 |
Lost Words | 109 |
The Rebels | 126 |
16171631 | 315 |
Stone | 317 |
The Torn Ship | 332 |
Clay | 352 |
The Spouse | 378 |
Devotions | 398 |
The Old Player | 407 |
The Reprimand | 433 |
The Member | 144 |
The Undoing | 154 |
16031616 | 175 |
Sunrise | 177 |
The Close Prison at Mitcham | 204 |
Irregularities | 231 |
The Apparition | 261 |
A Valediction to the World | 286 |
The Likeness | 445 |
Afterword | 475 |
479 | |
529 | |
Acknowledgements | 535 |
537 | |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
accepted asked authorities became become body brought called Church close Court daughter dead death died Donne Donne's Earl early Egerton England English Essex fact father felt followed friends gave give given Goodyer hand hath head Henry hope James John keep kind King knew Lady late later least leave Letters living London look Lord March marriage married matter mind moved needed never offered passed Paul's perhaps poem political position present priest probably Protestant Queen reason received Reformation religious remained returned Robert Roman Catholic royal secretary seems sent Sermons side Sir George social soul taken things Thomas thought took turned verse Walton wife writing written wrote young