this subtle knot - Collection des thèses et mémoires électroniques
Transcription
this subtle knot - Collection des thèses et mémoires électroniques
ISABELLE GUY "THIS SUBTLE KNOT" The Metaphysical Conceit in John Donne's Prose and Poetry Mémoire présenté à la Faculté des études supérieures de l'Université Laval dans le cadre du programme de maîtrise en littérature d'expression anglaise pour l'obtention du grade de Maître es arts (M.A.) DEPARTEMENT DES LITTERATURES FACULTÉ DES LETTRES UNIVERSITÉ LAVAL QUÉBEC 2007 © Isabelle Guy, 2007 I Abstract The présent thesis seeks to define the rôle played by the Metaphysical conceit in the formulation of John Donne's vision of a unified cosmos. The conceit is hère regarded as an élément of style that probes into the nature of relationships, as well as a unifying élément in Donne's works that enables him to translate into verse the intangible ties that bind a man to other human beings and to the Divine so as to render an abstract reality more apprehensible to the mind. To him, the individual self is indeed defined almost exclusively in terms of the manner in which it relates to other human beings, to the divine, or to the political and religious institutions that regulate his society. In most of the works scrutinized in the présent thesis, Donne is in fact concerned with the représentation of an idéal of communion that involves the dissolution of the individual self into a greater whole. In the works analyzed in the présent thesis, Donne almost invariably formulâtes this idéal in terms of the relationship that unités body and soûl in an individual, which he conceives as a reflection of the way in which the material and the spiritual interact in the universe. In his exploration of the ties that bind human beings together and to the Divine, the Metaphysical conceit is vital to the expression of his idéal of interrelatedness. This thesis therefore focuses on the way in which the conceit, as a literary device that compares relationships, reinforces his vision of a unified cosmos. ii Résumé Ce mémoire a pour but d'explorer l'utilisation que le poète anglais John Donne fait d'une figure de style appelée « Metaphysical conceit » dans sa description des relations entre individus ainsi qu'entre l'homme et le divin. L'intention de ce mémoire est de faire émerger le caractère unificateur de la «Metaphysical conceit» dans l'œuvre de Donne. En effet, cette figure de style permet à cet auteur de traduire en langage poétique les liens intangibles qui unissent les êtres humains les uns aux autres ainsi qu'à Dieu dans le but précis de rendre plus tangible une réalité abstraite. Pour Donne, l'être humain se définit presque exclusivement à travers les rapports qui l'unissent à ses semblables, à Dieu, ou aux institutions politiques et religieuses qui gouvernent la société au sein de laquelle il évolue. Dans la plupart des oeuvres analysés dans ce mémoire, Donne tente d'exprimer sa vision d'un idéal qui implique la dissolution de l'être dans un tout beaucoup plus vaste. Il illustre cet idéal à travers la formulation d'une image, celle de la relation qui unit le corps à l'âme chez l'homme, qui reflète en soi l'interaction qui allie le matériel au divin dans l'univers. L'étude des œuvres de prose et de poésie de Donne révèle le rôle prépondérant joué par la « Metaphysical conceit » dans la formulation de son idéal de communion. Par conséquent, l'objet de ce mémoire est l'étude de la manière dont la « Metaphysical conceit » renforce la vision qu'avait Donne de l'univers comme d'un tout uni. iii Acknowledgements I would like to express my most sincère gratitude to ail those who made it possible for me to complète this thesis. 1 wish to thank, first and foremost, my thesis director, Professor Anthony Raspa, both for his help and guidance and for accepting to share his love of literature and of John Donne with me. I could not hâve dreamed of having a better director for the writing of this thesis and 1 am most grateful to him for accepting to supervise me. His rigour and insight hâve enriched my growth as a student and I am indebted to him in more ways than 1 could possibly express. 1 would also like to extend a heartfelt thank you to Professor Elspeth Tulloch for her encouragement, and to the Département des littératures for accepting this project. My warmest thanks go to my family for their unwavering faith in me. 1 would like to express my most sincère gratitude to my dear Marc-André, whose love and patience enabled me to complète this work. Finally, 1 wish to thank the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for its financial support. iv 7 o my dearest Marc-A ndré... Who makes my circle just, And makes me end where I begun. V And you want to travel with him And you want to travel blind And you ihink maybe you'Il trust him For he's touchedyourperfect body with his mind. Léonard Cohen vi TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS iii TABLE OF CONTENTS vi CHAPTER I - THE METAPHYSICAL CONCEIT AND THE CRITICAL WORLD: A DEFINITION 1 CHAPTER II - "SO WE SHALL/BE ONE, AND ONE ANOTHER'S ALL": THE AMOROUS MICROCOSM 25 CHAPTER III - "I AM A L1TTLE WORLD MADE CUNMNGLY": THE POET AND HIS GOD 51 CHAPTER IV - "NO MAN'S AN ISLAND, ENTIRE IN 1TSELF": MAN AND SOCIETY 76 CONCLUSION - "THAT SUBTLE KNOT, WHICH MAKES US MAN" 105 BIBLIOGRAPHY 108 Chapter 1 The Metaphysical Conceit and the Critical World A Définition The Metaphysical School of poetry in England can be considered as having been inaugurated by the Jesuit poets Jasper Heywood and Robert Southwell in the late sixteenth century. Yet it is only a génération later through the works of Heywood's nephew, John Donne, that poetry in the Metaphysical style acquired the vitality, soulfulness, and wit that allowed for its triumphant revival in the beginning of the twentieth century. Donne's appeal as a poet lies mostly in his particular handling of the Metaphysical conceit, an élément of style which has corne to be perceived as the hallmark of the Metaphysical tradition. Early in the twentieth century, it was this élément of Donne's style that attracted T.S. Eliot. For décades after the publication of Eliot's influential review of Grierson's anthology of Metaphysical poetry in 1921 and the argument it contained, the conceit was perceived as a literary device that joined together unrelated éléments in a far-fetched comparison for greater imaginative effect. At the same time it had corne to be considered as representing a dissociation of sensibility. However, since Eliot's time, perceptions of the conceit and Donne's style hâve changed and evolved. At the end of the last century and at the beginning of ours, new approaches to the conceit appeared that at least, 2 historically-speaking, can be thought of as doing more justice to its complexity and its beauty than the approach to conjoined unrelated éléments that Eliot's criticism employed. Technically speaking, historically, the conceit owes its structure to Aristotle's metaphor of proportion in which of "four things the second is to the first as the fourth is to the third" (Poetics, 41). As for the term 'metaphysics', it usually refers to a branch of philosophy concerned with first principles which probes into the nature of things (Webster New World Dictionary and Thésaurus, electronic version). The Metaphysical conceit may therefore be regarded as a literary device that investigates relationships in order to find out what defines their nature. The conjunction of the meaning of thèse two terms, "conceit" and "metaphysical", not only describes the functioning of a literary device, but may also serve to define Donne's epistemological approach to the created universe. In fact, in both his verse and in several of his prose texts, Donne's manner of investigating the world seems concerned with the exploration of the ties that bind a human being to other individuals, and to the divine. This assessment of Donne's epistemology contrasts sharply with the views expressed by several prominent authors of the earlier twentieth century such as Carey, Leishman, Parfitt, and Eliot himself, who hâve described Donne as being sometimes a self-centered, egoistical man - as an apostate and an abject flatterer who was strongly motivated by his pursuit of advancement. Nevertheless, récent critical assessment has refuted thèse views. The second part of the twentieth century has been in fact characterized by a shift of interest on the part of Donne scholars from his rhetoric to the epistemological discourses that hâve influenced his poetry. This change of focus has led the critical world to the considération of the poet's philosophical conception of man and création. As a resuit, critics such as Kaskela, McKevlin, and Presti-Russel hâve defined Donne in terms of his quest for relatedness and his faith in humanity. 3 Whereas récent criticism conveys a more accurate understanding of Donne's philosophical outlook on the world and men, none of the critics previously mentioned has concentrated on an in-depth investigation of his use of the Metaphysical conceit in his description of the relationships available to human beings. Following upon the works of the twentieth century scholars who hâve investigated either Donne's handling of the conceit or his interest in the ties that unité men to each other and to the divine, this thesis will explore Donne's use of the Metaphysical conceit in his description of three différent clearly identifiable types of relationships: between men and women, among human beings in gênerai, between man and the Divine. From the beginning of the twentieth century to the 1960s, numerous théories of Metaphysical poetry were advanced, yet even after décades of intense scrutiny, critics still could not seem to agrée on a définition of the most striking feature of the style: the Metaphysical conceit. This first chapter of the présent thesis thus présents an overview of the évolution of critical perceptions of the Metaphysical conceit from Eliot's influential review of Grierson's anthology to van Hook's article "'Concupiscence of Witt': The Metaphysical Conceit in Baroque Poetics", published in 1986. In his essay entitled "The Metaphysical Poets", Eliot expresses views on Metaphysical poetry that influenced the way the style was to be perceived for générations. To him, the Metaphysical style appeared as a resuit of a désire to compel unrelated expériences into unity (283). In his essay, his perception of the Metaphysical conceit seems to revolve around the belief that poets of the seventeenth century used this literary device to reproduce through verse a "direct sensuous appréhension of thought" (286). In other words, Eliot explains that through the Metaphysical conceit, English poets of the late Renaissance could bridge the gap that had settled in towards the beginning of the modem era between thought and sensibility. Moreover, he 4 explains that the Metaphysical poets' "mode of feeling was directly and freshly altered by their reading and thoughts" (286). Hence, the poets' learned thoughts, applied to their sensibility, would modify their way of feeling. This of course would account for the "heterogeneity of materials" (283) that characterizes the conceit. In the conceit, through this heterogeneity, images springing from the poet's disparate knowledge of astronomy, alchemy, history, or any other domain of learning, would be used in his description of emotional states. According to Eliot, the connections established between thèse seemingly unrelated éléments in the conceit would be "forced upon it by the poet" (282). Eliot in fact argues that this amalgamation of "disparate expérience" (287) confers uniqueness and richness to poetry in the Metaphysical style and makes it the perfect médium for the description of man's expérience which he defines as "chaotic, irregular, fragmentary" (287). Consequently, he describes the effect of the Metaphysical conceit as "something permanently valuable, which subsequently disappeared, but ought not to hâve disappeared" (285). Thus, to Eliot, the Metaphysical conceit encapsulâtes the essence of what poetry ought to hâve been in 1921, and should be today, as it was in Donne's day. The image of the compass that ends "A Valediction: forbidding mourning" would certainly constitute an excellent example of the forced likening of unrelated materials that Eliot perceives in the Metaphysical conceit. In this famous image, the lovers' soûls are compared to the two ends of a compass used in geometry, whose movements remain irrevocably linked ("A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", 11. 25-36). The image may serve to illustrate Eliot's idea of dissimilar éléments compelled into unity and held together by an incredible show of ingenuity on the part of the poet. Such a compass is indeed rarely associated with the subject of romantic love. Following Eliot's reasoning, the likening of two soûls with the two ends of a compass could therefore be said to convey a sensé of incongruity. In addition, the passage would also represent how the poet's learned thoughts, by being applied to the description of an emotional state, would 5 influence and alter his "mode of feeling" (Eliot, 286). That is, Eliot would hâve seen in this conceit "a récréation of thought into feeling" (286) - an émotion modified by reason. Thus, in his review of Grierson's anthology, Eliot recognizes the heterogenetic variety of materials that charactenzes the Metaphysical conceit, and at the same time emphasizes the poet's successful création of a sensé of unity through his use of the conceit. However, in a later essay published in ,4 Garlandfor John Donne and entitled "Donne in Our Time", Eliot altered his approach somewhat. There, for the first time he stressed the "manifest fissure between thought and sensibility" that, according to him, charactenzes the verse of John Donne, "a chasm which in his poetry he bridged in his own way" (8). Hence, in the years that hâve separated the publication of Eliot's essays, his focus has shifted. That is, while Eliot's earlier essay emphasized Donne's successful recovery of a sensé of unity through his use of the conceit, his later work stresses the poet's apparent failure to reconcile the parts of his fragmented expérience. If Eliot's analysis of the Metaphysical conceit may seem just at first sight, it remains historically fragmentary. His "misunderstanding" of Donne's use of the conceit - historically, we must call it that - is due in great part to his failure to recognize the poet's indebtedness to Aristotle's "metaphor of proportion". Although the conceit in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning" may be regarded, on the surface, as a literary device that compares unrelated éléments, its functioning reflects that of the metaphor of proportion in which the poet shows the similarities between the relationships that unité two sets of things. Thus, Donne does not equate the lovers with a compass, but rather employs the relationship that unités the two ends of the compass to illustrate what unités two lovers' soûls. Therefore, this Metaphysical conceit does not merely yoke unrelated things together, but rather seeks to represent the intangible ties that, in reality, bind physically distant éléments. 6 Furthermore, Eliot's définition of the conceit conveys an impression of strain and fails to account for the fluid rhetoric that characterizes some of Donne's finest love poems. In fact, the critic in "Donne in Our Time" even goes so far as to state that in Donne's verse, "it is not, as it is with the Elizabethans in their worst excesses, the word, the vocabulary, that is tormented - it is the thought itself ' (Eliot, 12). As a resuit of his constant focus on the disparity of objects forced together in the conceit, Eliot overlooks Donne's extraordinary capacity at finding, through those seemingly forced comparisons, the very essence of the expérience he seeks to describe. The image of the compass may perhaps seem incongruous when applied to the description of two lover's soûls, but it nevertheless sums up precisely the way thèse soûls interact in Donne's mind. Thus, the conceit in "A Valediction" does not uniformly hâve to appear as the représentation of a tormented thought. It could also be considered as the attainment of a successful expérience. In this famous image of the compass, Donne skilfully brings the reader to embrace his point of view as each line flows fluidly into the other. If Donne's conceit asks for a certain amount of concentration on the part of the reader, its ingenuity lies precisely in the fact that the poet's reasoning seems just and unconstrained and créâtes unity rather than disunity. Eliot was perhaps unwilling to make the leap that the Metaphysical conceit demands from the reader to a transcendent truth existing beyond the physical realities attached to the words. Today, now that we hâve moved into another critical era than Eliot's, we may perhaps feel that a more historically oriented approach could hâve enabled him to corne to a better understanding of Donne's thinking. In Metaphysical andElizabethan Imagery of 1947, Rosemond Tuve's focus on the historical facts that may hâve influenced the Metaphysical conceit brought new and enlightening éléments to the debate. Unlike Eliot, who twenty-five years earlier avowedly measured Metaphysical poetry according to "modem" ideals of the first half of the twentieth century, seeing in it the epitome of what poetry ought to be (289), Tuve warns against the danger of trying 7 to force seventeenth-century poetry "into the narrow pattern defined by modem criteria" (7). Instead, she advocates an approach that takes into account the standards against which poems were measured in the Renaissance (229). Accordingly, she bases her analysis on the dictâtes of the two disciplines that established the standards of perfection in both written and spoken language in the Renaissance - those of logic and rhetoric - devoting most of her attention to those precepts that Aristotle sets forth in his Metaphysics. Tuve in fact states that young men in Renaissance England had learned how to apprehend the world by using Aristotle's theory of the ten catégories, which she lists as follows: "substance, quality, relation, manner of doing, manner of suffering, when, where, si tus, and habitus" (284-285). Tuve explains that "the first step in disciplined thinking" for young scholars "was to know what a thing is by référence or application of the ten Aristotelian catégories or predicaments" (284). According to her, logical training thus influenced the works of poets who were, generally, men of learning. In fact, Tuve explains that poets of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, by "thinking from certain ones of the predicaments" (285), generated the images that adorned their verse. To her, then, the Metaphysical conceit is one of the literary devices that sprung from the poets' application of logic to the writing of poetry. She thus defines the conceit as "an image based simultaneously on a number of predicaments or commonpiaces in logic (...) framed with especial subtlety" and through which the poet pursues the idea of a likeness based on "several logical parallels" (294). Applied to the image of the flies in "The Canonization", Tuve's theory gives the impression of falling very close to the mark. Following her argument, one may indeed consider that Donne, through his use of the Metaphysical conceit in this poem, establishes parallels between the sets of things he compares. Let us take an example from the image of flies and tapers in Donne's "The Canonization". In the verses: "Call us what you will, we are made by such love;/ Call her one, me another fly,/ We are tapers too, and at our own cost die" (11. 19-21), 8 Donne may be said to highlight the similarities that unité three sets of things - 1) two lovers drawn to each other, 2) flies attracted by the light of a flame, and 3) a taper slowly consumed by its own flame. By drawing parallels between thèse sets of éléments, Donne therefore seems to describe his beloved and himself as irresistibly drawn to each other like two flies attracted by a flame and as burning from a love that devours them like a taper slowly consumed by its own flame. Following Tuve's reasoning one could therefore consider that the poet bases himself on the Aristotelian predicament of quality and, from it, builds intricate images that enable him to define the type of relationship in which he is involved. If Tuve's assessment seems close to the mark, she may still be thought of as falling short of Aristotle's 'metaphor of proportion', for if Donne draws parallels between sets of things, it is not the things in themselves that are compared, but the very relationships that unité them. That is, in "The Canonization", Donne does not merely draw parallels between the lovers and two flies attracted by a flame, and between thèse same two lovers and a taper consumed by a flame, but he rather attracts the reader's attention to the relationships, to the intangible ties, that unité thèse sets of things. Hence, the lovers are not like two flies attracted by a flame, but are to each other the same as a flame is to a fly. While the distinction may seem insignificant, the second option accentuâtes the reader's focus on the relationship itself instead of on the things being compared. Thus, if Tuve's criticism points to important éléments that appear to hâve been overlooked by Eliot, such as the rôle of logic and the influence of the Classics on the Metaphysical conceit, she fails to identify a very important influence that has contributed to shape the most distinctive feature of poetry in the Metaphysical style and, as a resuit, her criticism may be seen as constituting a most interesting but yet incomplète analysis of this conceit. Furthermore, by focussing so much on logic, Tuve fails to designate correctly the élément in Donne's peculiar use of the conceit which allows for the création of the sensé of wonder so 9 characteristic of the Metaphysical style. In a comment on the period that saw the decay of the Metaphysical conceit, she indeed déclares that what makes a "real différence between this [a médiocre conceit] and a poetically successful conceit of any date is not the extent of the ingenuity - ( . . . ) The real différence is, rather, this complète irrévérence with respect to the demands of the subject" (Tuve, 319). In other words, she attributes the success of a conceit to the poet's yoking together of éléments that seem incongruous with regard to the subject being discussed. Hence, Tuve may be thought of as repeating Eliot's approach of reducing the appeal of the Metaphysical conceit to its treatment of heterogeneous materials. Donne's conceit in "The Canonization" may speak of Aies and tapers, of objects that are not normally associated with a subject like love, yet its true power lies in the sensé of immediacy that the reader dérives from the successful comparison of relationships that unité sets of things - in the impression that through verse, the poet has succeeded in defining the indefinable. Hence, the appeal of Donne's conceit lies mostly in its Metaphysical character rather than in the disparity of the éléments it compares. Like Tuve, Dame Helen Gardner stresses the strong élément of logic that characterizes the conceit. Yet, if Tuve sees the Metaphysical conceit as a literary device based on rhetorical precepts, Gardner views it rather as a central élément in a rhetorical argument. This change of focus leads Gardner to describe the conceit as an instrument of définition or of persuasion in a poem that "has something to say which the conceit explicates or something to urge which the conceit helps to forward" (xxvi). Hence, to Gardner, the Metaphysical conceit plays a major rôle in the articulation of the poet's reasoning and may thus be regarded more as a rhetorical than a literary device. Accordingly, the poet through his use of the conceit may be said to establish a "proof by analogy" which in fact constitutes the "body of a metaphysical poem" (Gardner, xxvi). The third stanza of Donne's "The Good Morrow", if we wish to take it as an example of what Gardner argues, could therefore be seen as revolving around an argument that aims at proving 10 that the two lovers' feelings are immune to change. That is, through the conceit comparing the eye of each lover containing the reflection of the other lover to two perfect hémisphères on a map ("The Good Morrow", 11. 15-21), the poet skilfully argues his case. He represents by analogy how the two lovers complète each other perfectly just as a picture of one side of the planet compléments the picture of its other side on a map of the world. In the perfection of the représentation of the planet by the pictures of its two sides, one may see how the union of the lovers confers immortality on their affection. The aim of the conceit's whole argument is therefore to persuade the reader of the justness of its central thesis. Following Gardner's reasoning, then, the Metaphysical conceit may be compared to "the beating out by which the métal is shaped to receive its final stamp, which is the point towards which the whole has moved" (xxvi). Thus, in Gardner's mind, the conceit's sole aim is to make the reader accept the thesis it défends and ought to be regarded as a tool of persuasion. Although Gardner's définition of the Metaphysical conceit may seem reductive, the argumentative and rhetorical dimension to which it points is significant. For, Gardner does not limit her comments on the conceit to its rhetorical effect. Indeed, in a later work she directs her attention from the conceit's rhetorical character to its inner-workings. In an analysis of Donne's "The Extasie" published in Elizabethan andJacobean Studies, Gardner does identify the mechanism of the "metaphor of proportion" as présent in the poem's image of the two armies suspended in battle by fate (11. 13-16). Even though she does not term it as such, her description of Donne's famous conceit clearly corresponds to the définition of Aristotle's "metaphor of proportion". In this conceit, Gardner sees more than a simple simile. In fact, she explains that by expanding the "as", one may corne to the realization that "The parallel is not between Fate's action and the soûls hanging in the air. The connexion hère is purely verbal - between the Homeric metaphor of the scales of battle 'hungout' in the heavens and the soûls being 11 'suspended' above the bodies" (Gardner, 297). Although Gardner fails to point out Donne's indebtedness to the Classics, she nonetheless provides an enlightening analysis of a conceit in which she successfully identifies the éléments being compared. That is, by expanding the "as", as she suggests (297), the comparison in the image takes a new form: the soûls are to each other as the two armies are to each other, when the gods suspend them in time and space intermingled, and yet utterly still. She thus identifies the four éléments, the two loving soûls and the two warring armies, being compared in this conceit. Although she does not explicitly equate the Metaphysical conceit to the metaphor of proportion and fails to account for its sensé of wonder, Gardner's analysis demonstrates a yet unequalled understanding of its inner-workings in the development of twentieth-century criticism. Unlike the critics previously mentioned, J.B. Leishman in The Monarch ofWU (1951) does not provide his readers with an explicit définition of the Metaphysical conceit. Still, his treatment of the poetry of Donne reveals much on his views regarding this most elusive literary device. Interestingly, he does not identify much in Donne's verse that could be termed 'metaphysical'. The reason may be that he imposes strict parameters on the nature of metaphysics probing into the existential nature of things and its possible relationship to poetry. Leishman explains that only those poems in which the poet "has introduced (...) something of the rigorously logical and syllogistic method of the académie and theologian disputations, and only in so far as such disputations, because of their philosophical and semi-philosophical subjectmatter, might be loosely described as metaphysical" (89). This passage encapsulâtes the main tenet of his whole argument on the metaphysical aspect of Donne's verse. That is, to Leishman, a Metaphysical poem must treat of a metaphysical subject - a désignation for which the topics that Donne exploits in his most outrageous and light-hearted poems do not qualify. While Leishman remains gênerai regarding his définition of what constitutes a metaphysical topic, he discusses the non-metaphysical in Donne's verse in détail. He therefore explains that several of Donne's poems in Elégies and Sangs and Sonnets are works in which the poet was merely "displaying his wit, maintaining, with the most sequacious but only half-serious logic (...) the most outrageous paradoxes" (148). Consequently, in the hundred pages Leishman dévotes to those poems, he never mentions the word 'metaphysical'. On the other hand, he readily acknowledges the présence of metaphysical éléments in those poems in which the poet addresses what he regards as some higher, more philosophical topic, such as in "The Sun Rising" (190). Therefore, he draws a line between Donne's argumentative and yet outrageous poems and his "Metaphysical" verse which he generally considers more serious. Leishman thus bases his approach on what makes a poem "Metaphysical" on its subject-matter. His approach results therefore in great part from his concern with the philosophical ideas possibly contained in the conceit as well as from his disregard for the rôle played by the image's structure. Let us establish a contrast to Leishman and consider the conceit as a literary device that compares the relationships uniting two pairs of objects using the same pattern as that of the 'metaphor of proportion' (A is to B as C is to D). With this approach, our aim is to investigate the nature of relationships, and one may easily corne to think of the conceit as a literary device capable of describing a wide variety of relations. Indeed, there is no reason why such a structure for the conceit could not be applied to several types of relationships. Furthermore, a seemingly trivial subject treated in a light-hearted fashion may sometimes, through Donne's skilful use of the Metaphysical conceit, that is, "relations", reveal a truth that transcends its triviality. Moreover, as Hugh Lawson-Tancred observes in his introduction to Anstotle's Melaphysics, the input upon which metaphysicians usually based their reasoning was "simple, even banal, features of our daily dealings in the world", whereas the output was often "an extraordinary and dramatic reassessment of the fondamental structure of that world" (xiii). It therefore follows that despite 13 the frivolity of some of Donne's topics, his handling of the Metaphysical conceit seems consistent with the methods used by metaphysicians in their investigation of the world. Thus, one cannot restrict Donne's use of the Metaphysical conceit only to those poems in which he expresses openly heavy philosophical matters. In the context of his approach therefore, Leishman does not identify Metaphysical éléments in several of Donne's poems. For instance, he sees nothing in "The Flea" that, in his view, could deserve to be termed "Metaphysical". To Leishman, the appeal of this poem lies solely on "the very triviality of the subject" and on Donne's miraculous triumph as a poet who wrote "three stanzas, twenty-seven Unes, of close-knit, consécutive argument on such an apparently unpromising subject as a flea-bite" (165). To him, "The Flea", because of its subjectmatter, cannot be rated as a Metaphysical poem. Thus, Leishman predictably fails to identify the Metaphysical conceit in the passage that describes the union of the two lovers in a flea that "swells with one blood made of two" ("The Flea", 1. 8). In thèse lines, the lover tries to convince his beloved that the union of their blood in the flea is much as will be their physical union through sexual intercourse. If what happens in the flea and what happens to them may be regarded as similar, the mingling of their blood through physical union ought no more to cause the lady to lose her honour than a flea-bite. Consequently, the poet expresses his belief that his beloved's honour is in no way imperilled by the loss of her virginity. The pattern of connexions in this image is similar to that established through the "metaphor of proportion". While the conceit developed in "The Flea" may be said to deal with a trivial subject, it nevertheless remains a Metaphysical conceit that probes into the essence of the relationship that two lovers may enjoy through physical contact. Hence, Leishman's great emphasis on the philosophical character of Metaphysical poetry might be considered as causing him to misinterpret seriously a poem like 14 "The Flea" in which Donne's treatment of a trivial subject reveals a truth that reaches far beyond the syllogistic and insignificant. If Leishman's approach to the Metaphysical élément in Donne's verse is due in great part to his view that only philosophical discourse can make "Metaphysical" poetry "metaphysical", it may also be explained by the subjectivity of the critical thinking of his era. Leishman indeed states that modem readers value poetry only when it is characterized by "self-expression, selfrevelation, [and] sincerity" (165). Since Donne wrote at a time when, according to Leishman, audiences paid little attention "to différences in substance and in seriousness" (147), he questions the sincerity of several of his poems that he distinguishes from the poet's more "serious, more impassioned, more tender, and, one cannot help but feel, more personal" (179) works. For reasons which he does not state, Leishman seems more inclined to attach the term 'metaphysical' to those poems which measure up to this idéal of authenticity. "The Sun Rising" is one such serious poem he treats as truly Metaphysical. In his analysis of the famous passage in which the lover compares the relationship that his beloved and himself enjoy to that which ties a monarch to a wealthy state, he identifies the image used by Donne as "a conceit which (...) combines naturally with the far profounder, more deeply felt (...) idea that he and his beloved are a world in and for themselves" (Leishman, 190-191). Leishman's favourable outlook on the poem is hère due to his belief in the poet's sincerity. He indeed explains that one could, on reasonable grounds, argue that "the tenderness in it [the poem] was inspired by Ann" (191), Donne's wife, and that consequently, the feel.ings expressed in it may be regarded as authentic. Thus, Leishman can successfully identify a Metaphysical conceit in those poems that he considers serious. Yet, he treats the same literary device in Donne's supposedly insincere verse as a mère effect of wit. Clearly, Leishman's outlook on the conceit might be said to speak for his, Leishman's, own time. 15 Still fairly early in the twentieth century in The Donne Tradition (1930), George Williamson's views on the Metaphysical conceit incorporate éléments from the discourses of most critics who preceded him and yet introduce some interesting personal innovations. In the first chapter of his book, he defines the Metaphysical conceit as a literary device that présents a "rational perception of relations" (31). Williamson explains that through the conceit, Donne "wove the fabric of his thought, and gave the pattern by which he united his most disparate knowledge into an image witty or imaginative, novel or compelling, but always rising from a tough reasonableness and often attaining startling insight, with moments of breath-taking beauty" (32). Like Gardner and Tuve before him, Williamson highlights the logical and argumentative aspect of the Donnean conceit to translate his thought process through verse. He also stresses the sensé of wonder that the literary device achieves under the influence of Donne's genius by causing readers to reach for a truth that transcends the boundaries of the earthly and physical. Furthermore, unlike most of his predecessors, he explicitly identifies the conceit as a device which compares relationships in a logical way. If Williamson récupérâtes Eliot's idea of the unification of disparate materials, he therefore gives it an interesting new dimension. While he acknowledges the heterogeneity of knowledge that characterizes Donne's use of the conceit, he brings Eliot's reasoning into another area of cultural thinking by identifying the two types of expérience the poet joins through verse. Williamson indeed explains that to himself, the Metaphysical conceit primarily appears as a device that brings together the spiritual and the secular, saying: "In his [Donne's] life, as in his poems, ail his moods are implicit in the mood dominant at a given moment: the priest is in the lover, and the lover in the priest; the divine poem is implicit in the love song, and the love song is in the divine poem" (51). Donne's joining of materials pertaining tothe secular and lowly in a single image to define relationships touching upon the spiritual and the Divine may be regarded 16 as the union of dissimilar expériences. Still, through the Metaphysical conceit, the poet shows the physical world as imbued with spirituality and the spiritual world as permeated with sensuousness. In this respect, Williamson considers the conceit as the product of a "unified sensibility" (51), not so much because of its yoking together of disparate knowledge, but because of the unity of feeling conveyed through the description of seemingly unrelated expériences. That is, to Williamson, the worshipper and the lover corne together through the conceit because the poet lived both expériences in similar ways. Williamson's reasoning can easily be applied to a poem like "The Extasie" in which the lovers' expérience may be compared to a spiritual révélation. In this poem, the lovers' soûls leave their bodies and, suspended in utter stillness, corne to the realization that when love "Interinanimates two soûls,/ That abler soûl, which thence doth flow,/ Defects of loneliness controls" ("The Extasie", 11. 42-44). The lovers united in contemplation then "are this new soûl", which the poet describes as composed of atoms "whom no change can invade" (11. 46, 48). As a resuit of this ecstatic expérience, the lovers reach an extra-sensorial level of consciousness through which they understand that the union of their soûls through perfect love has made them immune to change. Yet, this révélation is accompanied by another realization - that of the relationship between the spiritual and the physical in love. The lovers' soûls thus suspended over their bodies in ecstatic, almost religious contemplation, recognize that if love is a thing of the mind, it must be enacted in the body, for "On man heaven's influence works not so,/ But that it first imprints the air,/ So soûl into the soûl may flow,/ Though it to the body first repair" ("The Extasie", 11. 57-60). In this conceit, the soûl is to the body as the sphères are to the air. That is, as the sphères that revolve in the universe must imprint their trajectories on the galaxy before they manifest their influence on the physical world, so must the spiritual part of man influence the beloved through the body before touching her mind. In this image, the poet therefore mingles 17 notions of astronomy, science, and spirituality with the aim of depicting an expérience of human love that resembles a religious one, and through this expérience the two lovers realize that perfect, spiritual love must find its expression in the body. Hence, "The Extasie" exemplifies Williamson's belief that the unified sensibility in Donne's use of the conceit brings together the worshipper and the lover in a single figure. Through the conceit, the reader gets "the exact curve of Donne's mode of thinking and feeling", a mode which "embraced intense passion, intellectual difficulty, and unusual imaginative connections" (84). Therefore, Williamson's assessment of the Metaphysical conceit encapsulâtes both its function as a literary device that recréâtes the poet's thoughts and a sensé of wonder that encompasses both the secular and the spiritual. Although further inquiry would be required to verify the applicability of Williamson's views to the coriceits présent in Donne's light-hearted poems, he seems to hâve captured the sensé of the indefinable, elusive, and yet breath-taking quality that characterizes the poet's use of this literary device. The critical world's shift away from Donne's rhetoric to his epistemological discourses in the later twentieth century resulted in the relegation of the Metaphysical conceit to an inferior position among its concerns. In the years following the publication of Williamson's The Donne Tradition, Donne's critics seem to hâve built largely upon Williamson's most comprehensive study, adding little to the debate surrounding the structure of the conceit. Nonetheless, the few studies that hâve treated of the conceit at length from the publication of Williamson's work tothe end of the 1980s hâve yielded valuable insight on its aesthetic effect upon the mind of the reader. This is notably the case with Murray Roston's The Son/ of Wit (1974). In this work, Roston attempts to identify the mechanisms of the Metaphysical conceit that enable Donne to create the sensé of wonder that Williamson refers to as the "Metaphysical shudder" (90). He rejects the idea of a logical basis for the conceit promoted by Tuve and her followers, seeing through its 18 outward appearance of a logical development nothing more than an exercise of equivocation inspired by Jesuit poetics (81). Already at the beginning of this chapter, we mentioned the Jesuit poets Jasper Heywood and Robert Southwell. Indeed, to Roston, Donne's poetry originates from the poetics developed by the Christian writers of the early Counter-Reformation, who used equivocation and paradox as weapons "in the struggle to subvert the intimidating authority of Reason" (85). Hence, according to Roston, Donne's poetics are a reflection of the concerns of his era - a means to challenge precepts that appeared to him as inappropriate to express certain realities. Roston indeed points to Donne's dissatisfaction with right reason in matters of faith in his analysis of a passage from Essayes in Divinity, in which he highlights the poet's "realization that empirical démonstration cannot attain to ultimate truths" (81). Consequently, Roston identifies the Metaphysical conceit as "a means for gesturing towards a transcendent verity" (76) situated far beyond the reach of right reason. Applied to a poem such as "The Sun Rising", Roston's reasoning seems, to a certain extent, accurate. The conceit that compares the lovers to the centre of the Ptolemaic universe around which the sun revolves indeed appears as sweet nonsense that nevertheless points to a truth far greater than the reality of the lovers' situation. In fact, the lover who compares himself to "ail princes" and his mistress to "ail states" ("The Sun Rising", 1. 21) is merely translating through verse a feeling that reaches beyond the apparent irrationality of his argument - simply that his beloved means the world to him. According to Roston, "A close reading of almost any poem by Donne will confirm the centrality of such lightly camouflaged illogicality which the perceptive reader (at whom Donne invariably aims his verse) is intended to grasp, whether at the conscious or subconscious level" (73-74). Certainly, the speaker of "The Sun Rising" challenges the rules governing the universe in order to express a feeling that cannot be illustrated through 19 any reasonable disputation. Hence, to Roston, through a witty and yet nonsensical argument, Donne may be regarded as gesturing towards a truth that transcends reason and reality. That Donne's conceits challenge the rules of logic to a certain degree cannot be denied. Yet ail imagery hovers slightly beyond the boundaries of strict reality in order to illustrate a mood, a perception, or a feeling. Certainly, Robert Burns's love was not a literal "red, red rose" ("Red, Red Rose", 1.1) any more than the lovers of "The Sun Rising" were the centre of the universe. If, to use Roston's words, Donne's imagery establishes its point by "blurring the line between metaphor and fact" (74), it does so precisely because the relationships that unité the sets of things being compared are so similar that their reality cannot fail to merge almost perfectly. When Gardner, Tuve, or Williamson allude to the logicality of the Metaphysical style, they may in fact be referring more to its argumentative aspect than to strict scholastic logic. Donne's poems indeed almost invariably lead the reader through a séries of intellectual acrobaties that culminate in the acceptance of its central thesis. Roston's over-reading of the conceit's logical and discursive éléments may perhaps be thought of as having led him to demand of Donne more than can generally be expected from a poet. Nevertheless, one may intuitively sensé Roston to be heading in the right direction when he describes the complex movement of Donne's poems, most of the time enacted through the conceit, as creating "a spring-board for the leap into the mysterious or the transcendental" (75). Two lovers' feelings for each other, a worshipper's faith in his God, or a man's sensé of belonging to a community, are realities that élude définition. Yet Donne's strength lies precisely in his capacity, through his handling of the conceit, to cause his readers' to accept the reality of thèse relationships on a rational basis and, simultaneously, to feel the truth that transcends the boundaries of the written text. Therefore, in his représentation of a reality that sometimes éludes reason, Donne blends the rational and irrational in conceits that gesture towards a verity that descends upon the reader as a révélation. In '"Concupiscence of Wit': The Metaphysical Conceit in Baroque Poetics" (1986), an article published in Modem Philology, J.W. van Hook also réfutes Tuve's theory of the ten Aristotelian predicaments as the basis for the Metaphysical conceit. Yet unlike Roston later, he does not discard the logical élément of the conceit altogether. Van Hook in fact makes the best of Tuve and Roston's approach by fusing them. He thus bases his assessment of the conceit on the writings of Baroque continental theorists such as Peregrini and Tesauro, whose texts constitute valuable sources of contemporary insight on both its structure and the aesthetic response it générâtes. He defines the conceit as a figure of speech based on a central metaphor "building around its fondamental image a distinct rhetorical structure with unprecedented poetic and epistemological aims of its own" (van Hook, 24). Concretely, what he means is that the conceit provides the reader with a play on hypothetical correspondences. Van Hook explains how Baroque theorists perceived metaphors essentially as products of the ingegno or "logical intellect" (28), a dual faculty that fused intellect and imagination. Tesauro, he writes, conceived of the ingegno as a faculty which probed "the most remote and minute circumstances hidden within things" and "rapidly [brought] together ail thèse circumstances, tentatively joining or dividing them" (28). According to van Hook, Peregrini himself referred to the ingegno as "that faculty which seeks and spéculâtes on the true (...) the power of mind that marvels at whatever is beautiful and efficacious" (28). Accordingly, Baroque theorists viewed metaphor essentially as "the record of the spéculative exploration by which the ingegno probes expérience and fuses it into intelligible wholes" (28) - hence the hypothetical correspondences to which van Hook points in the conceit. Like other critics before him, van Hook also conceives of the conceit as arising out of seventeenth century psychology, and figurative language as originating primarily from man's attempts to explain the world to himself. Yet, he réfutes the théories of critics like Tuve who try to measure the conceit according to some external reality. To him, metaphors are not based on one or several Aristotelian predicaments, but allow for the mind's "flight between the analytical catégories" (29) so as to enable the reader to distinguish correspondences which he would otherwise hâve missed. If the Metaphysical conceit is, according to van Hook, based on a central metaphor, he explains that this literary device differs substantially from the simpler or ordinary metaphor. The ordinary metaphor, he argues, directs the reader's attention to a pretty image, whereas the conceit directs his aesthetic response to the comparison it establishes. The conceit indeed "records the ingegno's experiment with the catégories of judgement" (van Hook, 34). In other words, the conceit differs from a simple metaphor because it does not simply create corrélations between différent objects but represents rather the intellect's play with hypothetical correspondences. The Metaphysical conceit therefore takes the reader one step further than the objects of the simple metaphor and enables him to connect with the poet's ingegni and to follow the movement of his thought. Hence, in this study, van Hook explicitly identifies the aesthetic effect of the Metaphysical conceit on the reader's mind to which Williamson was intuitively pointing in The Donne Tradition, within the texts of Baroque theorists. Van Hook illustrâtes the Baroque theorists' reasoning with an analysis of the three last Unes of Donne's "The Good Morrow". In thèse Unes, the poet-speaker attempts to persuade his lover that their unchanging feelings for each other will confer immortality upon them, and to do so he uses a syllogism inspired from the precepts of alchemy: "What ever dyes, was not mixt equally;/ If our two loves be one, or, thou and 1/ Love so alike, that none doe slacken, none can die" ("The Good Morrow", 11. 19-21). Donne's argument, like any other valid syllogism, is constituted of a major and a minor premise that convey an impression of logic. Still, the attentive reader cannot fail to perceive the hole in Donne's argument, for love can in no way guarantee immortality. Yet, as van Hook emphasizes, thèse Unes "appeal most directly to what Tesauro 22 called the 'third opération of the intellect'", (36) which replicates every step of the poet's syllogistic thought from one analytical category to the other. The major premise indeed présents the popular Renaissance belief that the imbalances between the four humours in an object or being caused its decay, whereas the minor premise uses the idea of an equal mixture as a metaphor for constancy in love. The reader is therefore guided through every step of the poet's thought process and finally embraces the natural conclusion that reciprocal love confers immortality. If this conclusion may appear to the attentive reader as a fallacy, the truth it points to does not lack in logic, for a couple of lovers will tend to remain so only if both partners love each other equally. Commenting on Donne's use of the conceit, therefore, van Hook explains that this literary device generally effects a "passage from déception to insight" which in itself constitutes "an unexpected and therefore fascinating way of learning" (37). Van Hook then describes the conceit primarily as a literary device that "drive[s] the mind toward a new mode of awareness and vision" (38). For him, it mingles logic, intellect and imagination in a novel and compelling way. Although he does not mention the influence of Aristotle's metaphor of proportion on the underlying structure of the Metaphysical image, his assessment of its aesthetic effect enables him to identify the émotion that Williamson tentatively named "the Metaphysical shudder" (90) attached to Donne's verse. Moreover, van Hook's analysis of the conceit does not rule out its indebtedness to the metaphor of proportion, for his emphasis on the ingegno's flight between catégories could allude to the comparison of the relationships that unité sets of things. Certainly, his study of the Baroque continental theorists' conception of the Metaphysical conceit could hâve yielded more insight on this much debated literary device had it been extended into a book. Although van Hook could hâve developed his study of the historical origins of the Metaphysical conceit to a greater degree, his assessment of 23 the way in which the conceit was perceived in Baroque poetics produced novel information on its aesthetic effect. From Eliot's influential review of Grierson's anthology to van Hook's '"Concupiscence of Wit': The Metaphysical Conceit in Baroque Poetics", critical views of the Metaphysical conceit hâve changed and evolved. While the earliest définitions of the conceit emphasized its immédiate material implications, critics hâve extended their views of the objects in the conceit, devoting attention both to its inner-workings or its philosophical aspect. Finally, more recently, some critics hâve coupled both dimensions of inner-workings and philosophy to deliver a broader picture of what the Metaphysical conceit means. Certainly, the critical world has corne a long way in its study of the works of the Metaphysical poets. Against the background of the évolution of Donne criticism in the last hundred years that I hâve hoped to describe hère, the main concern of this thesis is to focus on Donne's use of the Metaphysical conceit in his description of human relationships and of man's relation with the Divine. By doing this the thesis aims to demonstrate how Donne's handling of the conceit enabled him to develop through both verse and prose his vision of a unified cosmos. In Chapter 11,1 shall seek to define the rôle of the conceit in Donne's manner of conveying his vision of the relationships that unité men and women in the "Songs and Sonnets". In Chapter III, 1 will attempt to analyse Donne's handling of the conceit in his search for a sensé of unity in divine worship in both his "Holy Sonnets" and in some passages selected from his Dévalions ripon Emergent Occasions. Finally, in Chapter IV, 1 will investigate the way Donne envisioned man's relationship to the rest of mankind in Pseudo-Martyr, Essayes in Divinity, and Dévotions npon Emergent Occasions. This last chapter will also attempt to define the way in which ail the relationships discussed in the preceding chapters corne together in his investigation of the ties that unité mankind as a whole, thus culminating in a unified vision of création. Throughout the présent thesis, Donne's représentation of the ties uniting the soûl to the body shall also be scrutinized as a central élément of his epistemology that contributes to define his approach to the three other types of relationships. This thesis will of course discuss both the aesthetics and the structure of the Metaphysical conceit. Yet, I intend to concentrate on the analysis of the manner in which the conceit, as a literary device that compares the relationships that unité two sets of things, is used in both Donne's poetry and prose to médiate his epistemological approach to human expérience, which he conceived as a unified whole evolving under the ever-watching eye ofGod. Chapter II "so we shall/ Be one, and one another's Ail": The Amorous Microcosm Donne's portrayal of amorous relationships in his Songs and Sonnets has perplexed many critics over the years following the revival of his works at the end of the nineteenth century. Several among Donne scholars hâve questioned the sincerity of his most exalted love poems whereas others hâve expressed réservations regarding the apparent detachment of the poet-speaker in works such as "The Indiffèrent" and "Goe, and catche a falling star", seeing the lusty braggadocio as a persona that could not be reconciled with the real Donne. In addition, some critics hâve taken offence at Donne's portrayal of women in his lighter lyrics, which they perceived as degrading and revolting. Others hâve even criticized his représentation of women in his poems of mutuality, seeing in his treatment of the amorous microcosm a form of négation of the female other through its intégration into the maie persona (Hodgson, 14). lnterestingly, in this respect, voices hâve been raised defending Donne in the feminist camp that has formed one strong branch of literary criticism in récent générations. For instance, llona Bell in "The Rôle of the Lady in Donne's Songs and Sonnets" (1983) explains that empathy towards the lady constantly "informs the witty, lusty braggadocio" (116) who, unconsciously, 26 struggles to attune himself to his partner, to fbresee her objections, and to convince her to embrace his views. In a more récent study (1996), Lunderberg explains that the women addressed in Donne's poetry contribute to shape not only the speaker's argument, "but also his person" (164). Thus, whereas some critics still perceive Donne's treatment of female characters as degrading, some more récent criticism has emphasized the poet's primarily empathetic attitude to the female other. Certainly, thèse latest feminist assessments of Donne's poetry are consistent with the récent critical trend among Donne scholars which emphasizes the poet's désire for relatedness in an essentially unified création. In their attempt to reconcile the two seemingly opposed views of love conveyed in the Sangs and Sonnets, other scholars hâve turned to the différent epistemological discourses that may hâve influenced Donne's perception of human relationships. Until the end of the 1980s, the theory of correspondences seems to hâve been particularly popular in the critical world. The theory of correspondences posits the unity of a création in which ail contradictions are reconciled in God's immanence in the universe. In A Lecture in Love 's Philosophy (1984), Me Kevlin applies this theory to Donne's lyrics. He thus explains that in the Songs and Sonnets, Donne créâtes a "vision of a world of human love in which the divine and human are brought together analogously through man's capacity to actualize the potentialities inhérent in the System of universal correspondences" (3). Tn other words, Donne's imagery in the Songs and Sonnets would be the fruit of his capacity to establish analogies between the visible and the invisible, the little and the great, the earthly and the heavenly, in order to define better and understand the expérience of human love. Since Donne draws his analogies from a fallen création and describes the feelings that animate a highly complex and imperfect créature such as man, the world of human love he depicts "must be broad enough to include selfishness, inconstancy, and deceit" (Me Kevlin, 7) along with mutuality and self-sacrificing love. Following Me Kevlin's reasoning, the Songs and Sonnets ought therefore to be regarded as descnbing the alpha and oméga of human love, hence the existence side by side of poems such as "The Indiffèrent" and "The Canonization". Other théories hâve of course been applied to the Songs and Sonnets in order to explain the contradictory views Donne seems to express regarding human love. In an article entitled "Love, Poetry, and John Donne in the Love Poetry of John Donne" (2000), R..V. Young hypothesizes that the so-called duality that marks the Songs and Sonnets is in fact due to the tension existing between two opposed conceptions of love in the Renaissance: Eros and Agapé (252). Young explains that in Donne's times, Eros designated a form of possessive and lustful love, whereas Agapé was a term applied to a form of love which involved self-sacrifice and charity (252). Following Young's reasoning, Donne in the Songs and Sonnets would be dramatizing the opposition between thèse two divergent, and yet complementary, visions of love. Although both Young and Me Kevlin's théories may seem appealing, it is hard to limit Donne's philosophical conception of human relationships to a single epistemological approach. Love is a highly complex feeling which involves contradiction and reversai - a feeling that Donne perhaps understood better than anyone else, for as he aptly put it in "Love's Growth", "Love's not so pure, and abstract, as they use/ To say, which hâve no mistress but their muse" (11. 11-12). It is therefore not surprising for a man with an intellect as penetrating as Donne's certainly was, to deliver a highly perplexing assessment of an equally perplexing feeling. Of course, the purpose of this thesis is not to settle a debate that has been going on for décades among Donne scholars, but to examine Donne's use of the Metaphysical conceit in his investigation of human relationships, and in this chapterthe spécifie love relationship between a man and a woman. The study of Donne's handling of this literary device in the Songs and Sonnets indeed reveals an important dimension of his conception of mutual love. The conceit 28 tends to appear less frequently in Donne's most light-hearted poems, with a few exceptions such as "The Flea" and "The Relie". Yet in both his lighter lyrics and more serious poems, Donne's conceits almost invariably describe states of perfect merging between two individuals, either spiritually, physically, or both. Although he frequently satirizes the behaviour that could prove harmful to a love relationship through the use of rhetorical devices associated with the Metaphysical conceit, such as paradox and antithesis, the images which, structurally, establish a comparison between two sets of things are almost invariably used to describe states of perfect unity. That Donne was hostile to behaviour that could induce séparation and enmity is obvious, not only from the reading of the Songs and Sonnets, but also from the examination of his other works. In "Circles of Love" (1991), Kaskela notably remarks that the condemnation of selfcenteredness is central to "The First Anniversary", in which "the speaker déplores extrême individualism, perceiving it to be indicative of the continuing fall of humanity away from God's original unified and interrelated création" (6). Donne's divergent views expressed in the Songs and Sonnets could therefore be regarded as being reconciled in his search for relatedness in a world he conceived primarily as a unified whole. Whether or not one agrées with Kaskela, in Donne's verse, the conceit nevertheless appears as the tool par excellence for the investigation of the ties that unité. It is indeed through this literary device that the poet most frequently develops his vision of beauty and fulfilment in mutual love. As Helen Gardner observes in her introduction to The Metaphysical Poets, to Donne, there was no such thing as unrequited love (xxx), for as he himself stated, "it cannot be/ Love, till 1 love her that loves me" ("Love's Deity", 11. 13-14). Hence, one must separate those poems in which Donne célébrâtes mutuality from those that lack it and that concern its opposite. It is in the poems celebrating fully mutual love that he provides the most valuable insight into the way in which he conceived of amorous 29 relationships, and in which he most frequently employs the conceit as the device to explore ail their aspects. In Donne's poems of mutuality, the image of the lovers as a microcosm reflecting the macrocosm of the created universe is central to his handling of the conceit. Through the microcosm, he depicts amorous relationships as a séries of concentric circles that reconcile the spiritual and the secular in the lovers and brings the whole universe in relation to them. Donne's représentation of the microcosm seems to resuit from the combination of both Aristotle's conception of the human soûl and of some notions of contemporary alchemy. Following upon the works of Anaxagoras, Aristotle in De Anima attempts to provide a satisfactory explanation of the way in which man's cognition enables him to perceive the world surrounding him. In this work, he defines the human mind as a microcosm or small-scale représentation of the universe. He thus explains his conception of the nature and mode of functioning of the human soûl, saying: "If, then, thinking is like perceiving, it will either be some kind of affection by the thought object or some such thing. It must then be something unaffected which yet receives the form and is potentially of the same kind as its object but not the same particular, and the intellect must stand in that relation to the objects of thought in which the perceptive faculty stands to those of perception" (111. 4, 201-202). In this passage, Aristotle seems to conceive of the human intellect - the spiritual part of man - as a kind of a small-scale représentation of Plato's realm of eternal forms. That is, for man to apprehend the world surrounding him the thinking intellect must take the form of the objects it perceives and, since everything in the universe is available to man's perception, the intellect must hâve the capacity to contain ail forms in the universe. However, unlike Plato's realm of eternal forms, the thinking part of the soûl is not ail things at ail times. That is, to Aristotle, the intellect cannot hâve "any nature of its own except just this, to be potential" (III. 4, 202). It therefore follows that the intellect is, "before it thinks in 30 actuality none of the things that exist" (III. 4. 202). Hence, according to Aristotle, if everything in the created universe may be food for thought, then man's intellect must necessarily hâve the capacity to take the form of ail things that exist. Yet, the soul's potentiality to encompass the entire universe is présent only on a latent level and must be called upon to manifest itself. Nevertheless, to Aristotle, the human soûl, and especially the intellect, has the capacity to represent to itself the alpha and oméga of the cosmos, which is why he sums up his conception of the intellective soûl as, "in a way ail the things that exist" (III. 8, 210). Aristotle's belief that the soûl is, in a sensé, représentative of ail things in the universe is echoed in the works of several Renaissance thinkers, notably Marsilio Ficino. In his study of the microcosm in Donne's poetry, Me Kevlin quotes a passage from Ficino, in which the Italian philosopher describes the soûl as "the bond and juncture of the universe" (19). Although primarily a Neo-Platonist, Ficino stressed the centeredness of the soûl in création in a way which is highly reminiscent of Aristotle's depiction of the human intellect as "ail things that exist" (Aristotle, III. 8, 210). Man's ail encompassing intellect, because of its capacity to envision ail things, was thus seen in the Renaissance as a microcosm of the created universe, a notion reflected in Donne's Holy Sonnet V, "1 am a little world made cunningly" (and the word "cunning" we must remember originates in the Old English verb "cunnan" meaning "to know"). Moreover, the idea that each individual was a small-scale représentation of the cosmos was then reinforced by the belief in man's uniqueness in création as the only créature born out of the conjunction of the animal and the spiritual. In his analysis of the Sangs and Sonnets, Me Kevlin in fact explains that "Philosophically, the composition of body and soûl made man the appropriate Connecting link between the spiritual and the material éléments in the chain of being" (15). Renaissance thinkers thus conceived of man as existing halfway between the animal and the angel, and of the joining of spirituality and physicality in a single créature as a microcosmic représentation of the way in which God's spirit pervaded the universe. Hence, in body and soûl, man was indeed thought of as ail existing things. However, in the Songs and Sonnets, it is not man, but rather the conjunction of maie and female in mutual love that symbolizes the bond of the spirit and matter in the universe to which both Ficino and Aristotle refer. In this respect, Donne's conception of the amorous microcosm seems to hâve been influenced by either hermeticism, contemporary alchemy, or both. Indeed, both disciplines held that ail creational processes resulted from the union of maie and female principles. In a discussion on the différent epistemologies that hâve influenced Donne's poetry, Anthony Presti Russel notes particularly the poet's indebtedness to hermeticism, seeing in his imagery echoes of the hermetic belief that "female and maie principles pervade ail being" (291). Alchemists in Donne's time also thought that the union of maie and female principles was central to ail création. In fact, the transmutation of base metals to gold was conceived of as resulting from two alchemical processes to which Donne alludes explicitly in "The Canonization": the 'eagle' and the 'dove'. In addition to figuring as common symbols for maie strength and female meekness, the 'eagle' and the 'dove' were alchemical terms for processes involving maie and female principles which supposedly combined into the stage of transmutation called the 'phoenix' (Norton Anthology of Poetry, 179). Still, the transmutation of metals was only symbolic of alchemy's real aim, which was the transubstantiation of the soûl - "a kind of spiritual transformation and rebirth" (Robinson, 9). Hence, tothe Renaissance alchemist, the perfect joining of maie and female principles led tothe refinement of one's being. Donne's depiction of the amorous microcosm can therefore be considered as indebted to both Aristotle's conception of the human intellect as a small-scale représentation of the universe and to the possibly Hermetic belief in the association of maie and female principles as the basis for ail création. Through the metaphor of the amorous microcosm, Donne conveys a sensé of 32 unity between both parts, maie and female, of the microcosmic world which he represents as superior to the macrocosm of the created universe. Under the poet's pen, the lovers expérience the joining of their soûls as a sensuous expérience and the union of their bodies as a spiritual one, and they become each other's alpha and oméga in a relationship that refînes them. In the Songs and Sonnets, I wish to argue in this thesis, it is mainly through the Metaphysical conceit that Donne conveys his vision of mutuality in love. The conceit indeed is the means by which he utters his philosophical conception of shared love. Moreover, it is also the tool he uses to render apprehensible to the mind the intangible and invisible ties that unité two beings. For example, in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", Donne develops his thème through a séries of conceits, each image adding précision and emotional intensity to his vision of the relationship that unités the two parting lovers. The poem ostensibly relates Donne's discourse to his wife on his departure on a diplomatie mission across the Channel onto the Continent in 1612. In it, he uses the conceit as an instrument to probe the expérience of leave-taking and to assert his belief that true love of both body and mind will resist the trials imposed by distance. The poem's first conceit seeks to define the nature of the relationship that unités the lovers and poignantly gives expression to their pain: As virtuous men pass mildly away, And whisper to their soûls, to go, Whilst some of their sad friends do say, The breath goes now, and some say, no: So let us melt, and make no noise, No tear tlood, nor sigh tempest move, 'Twere profanation ofourjoys To tell the laity our love. ("A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", 11. 1-8) In the first stanza of the above, the relationship that unités the parting lovers is compared to that which binds a dying, virtuous man to his soûl. More than a mère attempt to urge a solemn parting, this stanza provides valuable insight into how the poet-speaker conceives of his $3 relationship with his beloved. They are as closely tied to each other, as merged with one another, as the soûl is with the body. Through its représentation of the strong intimacy that unités the parting lovers, the conceit of the dying man invests the expérience of leave-taking with a rare emotional intensity. Although the lovers' séparation ought not to be as définitive as the soul's departure to heaven is to the dying man, roads in Renaissance Europe were often perilous and so was the crossing of the English Channel to the Continent that lay before Donne. Keeping thèse simple, and yet easily forgotten facts in mind, the comparison established between the dying m a n ' s relationship to his departing soûl and that which joins the two parting lovers seems highly appropriate. In spite of the hazards that the maie lover's departure condemns him to confront, both lovers must take their séparation solemnly as a virtuous man allows for his soûl to départ serenely, confident of its safe journey to heaven. Through this first conceit, Donne therefore defines the nature of the bond that unités the lovers in such a way as to do justice to the émotions the expérience of leave-taking stirs in two beings so thoroughly committed to each other. In addition, if the parting lovers are to each other as the departing soûl is to the dying man, through this conceit, Donne may in fact be attempting to utter a statement on the connectedness of physicality and spirituality in love. The conceit of the departing soûl indeed attracts the reader's attention to m a n ' s dual nature. That is, through this image, Donne seems to catch as in a net this fleeting moment during which the dying man exists simultaneously in the worlds of the living and the dead. By highlighting this particular aspect of the nature of man, Donne could also be making a statement on the equally dual nature of human love - an aspect which he treats more analytically in "The Extasie". As the relationship that binds a man to his soûl involves the interaction of the soûl with the sensés, the love that lies behind the existence of the amorous microcosm may therefore be regarded as one which involves both sensuousness and spirituality. 34 The part of the poem that follows (11. 9-36) présents the solution to the problem of séparation introduced in the first two stanzas. It does so by expanding the feelings incorporated in the microcosm to bring them to a cosmic level. Donne indeed now handles the conceit in such a way as to demonstrate how the ties that unité the lovers will alter and extend the scope of their existence so as to resist the effects of distance. The poet-speaker thus compares what the amorous microcosm will be during his absence to the condition of the planets as they influence men. Moving of th'earth brings harms and fears, Men reckon what it did and meant, But trépidations of the sphères, Though greater far, is innocent. ("A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", 11. 9-12) The lovers' motions at a distance from each other are hère likened to the movements through which the heavens were thought to influence the earth. Tn the Renaissance, the motions of the sphères, although of a far greater magnitude than the earthquakes that disturb the surface of the planet, were believed to cause subtle altérations in the atmosphère. In "Living Magnets, Paracelsian Corpses, and the Psychology of Grâce in Donne's Religious Verse", Angus Fletcher explains that, through the atmosphère, the sphères of the solar System would affect both the humours or vapours travelling through the body and the faculties of the mind (5-9). In "A Valediction", therefore, Donne refers to the complex movements through which the heavens influence the human body and mind in order to create a direct correspondence between them and those of the lovers. Through this conceit, the poet is in fact describing how the love that unités the lovers keeps them attuned to one another in both body and soûl until the speaker's return. Moreover, because this conceit compares the relationship Connecting both parts of the amorous microcosm to the relationship between the planets and the earth, Donne's explicit référence to the "trépidations" ("A Valediction", 1. 11) of the sphères is meant to explain the 35 nature of the affection that binds the lovers. The "trépidations" were a heavenly movement induced on the planets on the outer circle of the Ptolemaic System. It resulted from their proximity to the eternal and the infinité that lay just beyond it. Through this conceit, not only does the poet-speaker stress the futility of great shows of grief, but he also élevâtes the love that unités the lovers to the level of the infinité and the eternal. Through this conceit, the microcosm is thus expanded beyond the boundaries of the cosmos. Donne's use of the metaphysical conceit in this instance therefore enables him, as Ferry writes, to "demonstrate his power over changing expérience" (96). Through this image, the poet-speaker of "A Valediction" asserts his authority over the passage of time and, within the bounds of the microcosm, defeats mutability. Hence, the conceit of the sphères in "A Valediction" confers a cosmic magnitude to the feelings that unité the lovers, for as Ebreo, the ltalian philosopher-critic, stated in his dialogue between Sophia and Philo, the love that ties a man and a woman to each other is like the principle that fuses the parts of the mutable uni verse together and that also maintains this universe in touch with the eternal (McKevlin, 16). Through the conceit of the sphères. Donne therefore describes a love of such magnitude that it can withstand the effects of séparation. The lovers of "A Valediction" are thus distinguished from "Dull sublunary lovers" (1. 13) whose feelings for each other are confined to physical contrast and so diminish as soon as the beloved is out of sight. By contrast, the lover's soûls, "which are one,/ (...) endure not yet/ A breach, but an expansion" (11. 21-23). This soûl born of the lovers' union extends itself upon the surface of the globe to cover the distance scparating them, "Like gold to aery thinness beat" (1. 24). Although this image is a simile and, structurally speaking, does not exactly constitute a conceit as we hâve defined it for the purposes of this thesis, it nevertheless reinforces the thème of the lovers' power over expérience. More importantly, as Donne uses it, the image extends the love existing in the microcosm to the 36 planetary macrocosm beyond it, using alchemical figures to stress the purifying effect of mutual love upon the soûl. As contemporary alchemists conceived of the transmutation of base metals to gold as a symbol for the purification of the soûl, Donne's use of alchemical imagery may therefore be regarded as symbolic of the refinement of the one soûl, or "world soûl" (Fletcher, 2), resulting from the lovers' union. Commenting on this image, Presti Russel explains that to Renaissance alchemists, "Gold leaf was associated with an even more subtle refinement of the spirit" (299) - to a higher stage of spiritual purification. Thus, through the image of "gold to aery thinness beat" (1. 24), Donne not only asserts the relationship's résistance to changing expérience, but he also highlights its purifying effect upon the mind. The ties that bind together both parts that is, both lovers - of the microcosm are thus as pure as gold, the only métal that could then be beaten into a thin leaf. It is thus the purity of the lovers' feelings that allows for its expansion across time and space and guards it against the breach of séparation. To the poet-speaker, love is therefore endowed with an aura of mysticism - it is the spiritual expérience through which the soûl is refined. The extended conceit of the compass that then follows the poem's figure of the beaten gold brings the microcosm and the macrocosm together in an extraordinary image of the conquest of distance. In an image that not only reaffirms the unity of the couple, the conceit of the compass also addresses a reality far greater than its constituents - their dominance over space. While the poet-speaker begins the seventh stanza by conceding that the two parts of the microcosm, namely the lovers, may be regarded as distinct from each other, yet they are so "As stiff twin compassés are two" ("A Valediction", 1. 26). For in reality, like the two ends of a compass, the lovers remain irremediably tied to each other and conquer distance at the saine time. As such, they add purpose and usefulness to their mutual union: Thy soûl the fixed foot, makes no show 37 To move, but doth, if th'other do. And though it in the centre sit, Yet when the other far doth roam, It leans and hearkens after it, And grows erect, as that comes home. Such wilt thou be to me, who must Like th'other foot, obliquely run; Thy firmness makes my circle just, And makes me end, where I begun. ("A Valediction", 11. 27-36) Hère, Donne uses an apparently common élément of the macrocosm, namely its universality, to describe one aspect of the microcosm, namely the lovers, that assumes the proportion of the macrocosm itself. What is little becomes universal. If the lovers are to each other as the two feet of a compass are to one another, then the beloved's thoughts lean towards the poet-speaker, following his movements across the macrocosm as the fixed foot of the compass moves in accordance with the other foot. In turn, the poet-speaker dérives his strength from the knowledge that the beloved's love and thoughts are upon him even as he is wandering abroad figuratively tracing a circle around the circumference of the earth. The conceit of the compass hence symbolizes the expansion of the bond that unités the lovers across time and space as they seem to assume the dimension characteristic of the larger macrocosm itself. In the process of becoming larger than itself, so to speak, the microcosm represented by the two lovers takes upon itself the appearance of the macrocosm of the uni verse. Kurthermore, Donne's choice ofthe circle, inhérent in the conceit ofthe compass, to describe the lovers' motions in the universal macrocosm bears an important significance with regard to their représentation of love. The image ofthe circle in which Donne draws the entire journey from and to his lover, is indeed accepted almost universally "as the symbol of eternity and never-ending existence" and, in some instances, even connûtes perfection (Kaskela, 57). Certainly, Donne must hâve been conscious ofthe symbolic meaning of circularity. His choice of the compass, and thus of the circle, to represent the motions of the very parts of the microcosm highlights the lasting perfection of the relationship of the lovers and reinforces their sensé of unity. Once more, in the poem, following the earlier image of "trépidation", the lovers' motions seem attuned to those of the sphères in the Ptolemaic System as, by Donne's departure and return, they seem to become as infinité as the macrocosm itself In his analysis of this famous conceit, Presti Russel points to an interesting passage in the literary criticism of the Italian theorist Feccero, who states with regard to the compass image that "This [circular] motion is the archetypal pattern of Love's universe, the principle of cohérence joining matter and spirit throughout ail levels of reality" (299). In other words, the circularity of the lovers' motions is the very expression of the love that unités them to the cosmos. Therefore, through the image of the compass, Donne not only reasserts the unity of the microcosm but also how mutual love may lead two individuals to embrace a higher form of love. In this respect, one may find faint echoes in "A Valediction" of Plato's ladder of love, which starts with the love of an individual at the bottom and ends with the love of eternal beauty itself at the top, appearing "always single in form", ail other beautiful things sharing its character (Plato, 49). Certainly, Donne's final conceit points to a reality far greater than man's understanding and invests mutual love with a sensé of mystery. Thus, as Williamson notes in The Donne Tradition, the Metaphysical conceit, or rather the succession of conceits in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning" forms the body of the poet's thought (24). In this poem as in many others, Donne indeed employs the conceit to probe the ties that unité the lovers and, in "A Valediction" particularly, to explore the expérience of parting for two individuals so completely committed to each other. Through the conceit, he célébrâtes a love in which both body and soûl play a part - a relationship in which each partner finds fulfilment, strength, and purpose. Yet, Donne's imagination functions on a cosmic level as he juxtaposes the 30 whole universe in relation to the lovers. The man and the woman united in mutual love hence appear as an intégral part of the cosmos and move with the stars. Donne's other poem "The Good-Morrow" at once strengthens our view of his use of the microcosm of the lovers and the macrocosm of the universe in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning" while exploring yet another aspect of their relationship. In this poem, his treatment of the conceit serves to lend sensuality to the spiritual union of the lovers, who expérience the awakening of their soûls to a new reality that surpasses in beauty and immediacy the reality of those who live a love of a lesser dimension. Thus, the poem repeats notions présent in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", such as the lovers' isolation from the rest of the world and the union of body and soûl within the microcosm. But if the line separating the microcosm of the lovers from the macrocosm of the universe at times seems to become gradually indistinct in "A Valediction", so closely do the lovers approach the spiritual, the lovers of "The Good Morrow" exist in a reality that at first sight almost completely excludes the macrocosm. They are in fact so thoroughly immersed in each other that their life prior to their encounter acquires the texture of a dream: I wonder by my troth, what thou, and I Did, till we loved? were we not weaned till then, But sucked on country pleasures, childishly? Or snorted we in the seven sleepers' den? 'Twas so; but this, ail pleasures fancies be. If ever any beauty 1 did see, Which 1 desired, and got, 'twas but a dream of thee. ("The Good Morrow", 11. 1-7) Whereas the lovers of "A Valediction" appeared simultaneously as secluded from, and integrated into the macrocosm, in "The Good Morrow" love shapes the lovers' reality and sets them apart from the externat world. Donne thus addresses love's peculiar capacity to influence one's perceptions of the hère and now, and therefore to affect both the mind and the sensés so as to create a new temporal reality revolving exclusively around the beloved. Indeed, to the poet- 40 speaker, love "ail love of other sights controls" and, because of its influence on human perception, has the power to make "one little room, an every where" (11. 10-11). Thus, love in "The Good Morrow" is ultimately again represented as a thing of both body and mind as in "A Valediction", for it fuses the lovers' soûls, and this fusion in turn points to the expansion of their little world emotionally beyond themselves. Through this expansion of the amorous microcosm in "The Good Morrow", the lovers appear to apprehend in a sensuous way the infinity of the soûl, to which Aristotle referred as "ail the things that exist" (111. 8, 210). To Aristotle, body and soûl could not be divorced from each other, for as he observes in De Anima, the affections of the soûl, "insofar at least as they are such things as anger and fear, are in this way inséparable from the natural matter of living things" (1. 1. 130), and Donne's lovers in "The Good Morrow" solive their émotions (11. 15-21). Their rapture reflects Aristotle's principle of the intricate relationship uniting body and soûl through which most affections of the soûl are "shared with the ensouled thing" (1. 1. 128). Accordingly, the later conceit in "The Good Morrow" depicting the similarity of the relationships of the lovers with the pictures of the world on a Renaissance map, and the next conceit (11. 15-21) describing the reflection of each lover in the eyes of the other, probe sensuously through literature into the spiritual union of two beings in love. Hère as in "A Valediction", the poet-speaker uses the image of the microcosm to represent himself and his lover as a little world, born of the fusion of two smaller worlds: "Let sea-discoverers to new worlds hâve gone,/ Let maps to others, worlds on worlds hâve shown,/ Let us possess one world, each one hath one, and is one" (11. 12-14). In this first conceit, each individual is in essence a microcosm reflecting the greater macrocosm. Yet love fuses thèse two microcosms, thus making them the two halves of a greater, indivisible whole, a new single microcosm that reflects the ■ 11 universe. The lovers are therefore to each other as the two opposite faces of the earth pictured on a Renaissance map, "worlds on worlds" (1. 13), complementary and inséparable: My face in thine eye, thine in mine appears, And true plain hearts do in the faces rest, Where can we find two better hémisphères Without sharp north, without declining west? ("The Good Morrow", 11. 1518) Then, in the later conceit probing into the présence of one lover into the eye of the other, the lovers' reflections in each other's eyes seem to materialize the ties that bind them in mutual love. Each lover gazes at his own reflection in the eyes of his partner, each image being in turn reflected back to the eyes of the person from whom it was issued. The lovers are thus intermingled in this complex web of reflections on eyes and maps in the two conceits. Their love appears tangible in their sensés and open to their eyes physically and to their rational intellects at the same time. How much this expérience of the sensés and the mind is présent in the poem is discussed pointedly by Gardner in her introduction to The Metaphysical Poets ( 1961 ). She explains that poems like "The Good Morrow" raise, "even when they do not explicitly discuss, the great metaphysical question of the relation of the spirit and the sensés (...) not as an abstract problem, but in an effort to make the union of two human beings in love, apprehensible" (xxx). She describes significantly the poet's intent in the passage dealing with the eyes as well as the aesthetic effect he créâtes with the conceit of the two hémisphères. Under Donne's pen, both conceits indeed render the indefinable and impalpable more concrète so as to make it available to the understanding. In an article on the historical origins of the Metaphysical conceit, Mazzeo similarly stresses the "qualities of précision and strong sensuous élément" (93) that characterize the Donnean conceit. Certainly, in "The Good Morrow", the extended conceits of the eyes and the maps contribute to make the invisible available to the reader and point to a very abstract but 42 paradoxically précise reality - that of the lovers' certitude of their feelings for each other. If as Aristotle explains, affections involve both body and soûl, then through the conceit Donne may be said to recreate this fleeting moment when the affections of the mind and of the body corne together as the lovers can feel the union of their two beings sensuously. Hence, through his use of the conceit in "The Good Morrow", Donne investigates yet another aspect of mutuality in love - that of the interaction of the soûl and the sensés in the amorous microcosm - and once more attempts to translate the invisible and impalpable through the written text. The aura of mystery and spirituality surrounding the lovers' relationship in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning" and even in "The Good Morrow" is made nowhere stronger than in "The Canonization", a poem which exemplifies perfectly Williamson's statement on the joining of the lover and the priest in a single figure (51). In this poem, the lovers' relationship is indeed defined as a sacred mystery, as the man and the woman pose as saints canonized by the love that seals their union. Donne in fact handles the Metaphysical conceit in "The Canonization" in such a way as to reinforce the parallel established in "A Valediction" between the love that unités both parts of the amorous microcosm and the force that holds the uni verse together. The poem begins abruptly as the reader is parachuted into the middle of an argument that seems well underway. In this first stanza, the poet-speaker serves a well-phrased rebuke to the (we can only suppose) accusations of his interlocutor, someone who does not like the fact that he and his lover are in love. After a well-aimed critique of the clichés of the courtly love tradition, Donne then proceeds to describe the mysterious character of the relationship that unités him to his beloved, and thus raises their love above that of Petrarchan lovers who aspire to spirituality and yet fall beside the mark: Call us what you will, we are made such by love, Call her one, me another fly, We are tapers too, and at our own cost die, 43 And we in us find the eagle and the dove, The phoenix riddle hath more wit By us; we two being one, are it. So to one neutral thing both sexes fit We die and rise the same, and prove Mysterious by this love. ("The Canonization", 11. 19-27) The Metaphysical imagery hère is established through the comparison between three relationships, first that which unités the lovers, secondly that between two flies and the flame that attracts and destroys them, and thirdly that between a taper and its own flame. Once more, Donne uses the circle to symbolize the lovers' union - the flies circle around the flame. Like the image of the twin compassés, the conceit of the flies and the taper draws upon seemingly insignificant éléments of the material world to symbolize the infinity of the microcosm in which the lovers appear simultaneously as the centre and the circumference. In his attempt to translate the mysterious aspect of love into verse, Donne again, as in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", blends religious and alchemical imagery into an intricate conceit. In his use of the alchemical terms of'eagle, 'dove', and 'phoenix', Donne establishes parallels between the alchemical process of transmutation of base metals, its spiritual significance, and the Christian motif of résurrection. Ail of thèse conter a strong aura of mysticism and spirituality to the amorous microcosm that are the lovers. As God's love pervades the created universe, the lovers' affections permeate their little world, acting in a way which is analogous to the heliocentricity that holds the cosmos together. If the last part of the Metaphysical conceit of the flies and tapers appears to herald the lovers' doom, Donne's référence to the alchemical process of transmutation and his évocation of the Christian motif of résurrection in the first part of the conceit together solve the problem. Since the lovers are to each other as the 'eagle' and the 'dove' in the process of transmutation, their union refînes them spiritually and by its very nature renders the désire that burns them harmless. Furthermore, as DiPasquale observes in Literature and Sciemment on the lines "We die and rise the same, and prove/ Mysterious by this love" ("The Canonization", 11. 26-27), the word mysterious may in fact pun "on 'mysterion', which is the Greek word for sacramenf" (16). To her, the mystery of the lovers' union is thus "like the miracle of transubstantiation, a sacred enigma that the secular mind cannot fully comprehend" (16). Whether or not Donne puns intentionally on the word mysterious (1. 27), the sacramental undertones of this extended conceit do contribute to reinforce the idea of the refinement of one's being through love. If love is indeed to the lovers as the Holy Spirit that invests the Eucharistie bread and wine with its présence, thus refining them through a miracle greater than man's understanding, then they may rightly claim to be "canonized for love" (1. 36). Clearly, in the Metaphysical imagery of the poem, Donne gradually refînes his investigation of the ties that unité the lovers and finally cornes to the conclusion that love is, after ail, a mystery that éludes reason. The salvation of the lovers through transubstantiation is explained in the final two stanzas of the poem. The poet-speaker concèdes that his beloved and himself may indeed die, but only to invent another form of résurrection: "And if no pièce of chronicle we prove,/ We'll build in sonnets pretty rooms" ("The Canonization", 11. 31-32). If the lovers cannot find immortality in history books, then poetry shall be to them much as a "well wrought urn" (1. 33) is to the ashes of a saint. In this less striking, but nevertheless beautiful conceit, Donne identifies the means by which the lovers shall find immortality. The written text of poetry will corne to carry their memory throughout further âges. In addition to the motif of Christian résurrection, the Metaphysical imagery of the poem posits the perpétuation of the microcosm through verse. The written text then stands as the spiritual expérience through which both the readers and lovers will be refined to attain immortality. 45 Although it does not constitute a Metaphysical conceit/*?r se, the last stanza of "The Canonization" is worth mentioning if only for its explicit description of the amorous microcosm as Aristotle's "ail things that exist" (III. 8, 210). In thèse lines, the poet-speaker addresses an unnamed audience, saying: And thus invoke us; 'You whom révérend love Made one another's hermitage; You to whom love was peace and now is rage; Who did the whole world's soûl contract, and drove Into the glasses of your eyes (So made such mirrors, and such spies, That they did ail to you epitomize,) Countries, towns, courts; beg from above A pattern of your love!' ("The Canonization", 11. 37-45) Through this invocation, the poet-speaker expresses how mutual love unités two individuals into a little world touched by infinity. Between them, they indeed seem to contract the soûl of the macrocosmic universe into their physical selves and become its reflection in which ail things are unified in God's divine présence. Certainly, in "The Canonization", Donne bridges the gap separating romantic love from a higher form of spiritual, sacred love in a way which is vaguely reminiscent of Plato's ladder of love. At any rate, "The Canonization" may be regarded as a prélude to Donne's writings in his later career as Anglican Dean of St-Paul's, when he admitted to hâve been brought to God by the love of a woman, his wife. The last poem to be covered in this discussion of Donne's use of the Metaphysical conceit in his investigation of the love relationship between a man and a woman, "A Valediction: of weeping", differs significantly from the lyrics previously cited in its handling of the amorous microcosm. The poem indeed constitutes one of the very few instances in which Donne's microcosmic représentation of the lovers deals with a problematic relationship. Whereas poems such as "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", "The Good Morrow", and "The Canonization" convey a sensé of serenity and fulfilment in mutual love, the amorous microcosm of the lover and 46 beloved in "A Valediction: of Weeping" appears as deeply unsettled by a threat which the poetspeaker does not completely succeed in defeating. Nevertheless, Donne's use of the Metaphysical conceit in this poem does not differ much from his treatment of it in his more exalted love poetry. That is, if the lovers' of "A Valediction: of Weeping" do not appear as perfectly merged with each other as those of "The Canonization", through the conceit Donne nonetheless dramatizes the lovers' attempts to reach towards each other and to establish a perfect sensé of balance and unity within the microcosm that they embody. The entire poem in fact revolves around yet another aspect of the interaction of body and soûl in the amorous microcosm, namely the effects of strong émotions or 'affections of the body upon the soûl. In the first stanza, a poet-speaker attempts to corne to terms with his own grief as he must part from his beloved. Like the speaker of "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning", he thus tries to assert his command over changing expérience, yet only to be defeated by mutability: Let me pour forth My tears before thy face, whilst I stay hère, For thy face coins them, and thy stamp they bear, And by this mintage they are something worth, For thus they be Pregnant of thee; Fruits of much grief they are, emblems of more, When a tear falls, that thou falls which it bore, So thou and I are nothing then, when on a divers shore. ("A Valediction: of Weeping", 11. 1-9) In this passage, the poet-speaker fails to hold back his tears, which bespeak a grief he cannot contain and his beloved is reflected in them, and eventually she cried too and he also is reflected in her tears. Yet to him, crying in her présence confers worth upon his tears, for as the King's stamp bestows value to a coin, so her reflection in his tears makes them valuable beyond their normal worth. Through this conceit of the image of the beloved in the tears, the poet-speaker thus attempts to understand the significance of his bodily passion in order to assert his command 47 over changing expérience. What Donne deals with in the poem is described by the critic Sherwood in his Fulfllling the Circle. Sherwood observes that Renaissance thinkers conceived of the body "as the 'book' of the soûl", in which man could observe "an effigy of the soul's condition" (133). Man's ability to interpret the world was then perceived as a means by which he could assert his dominion over the rest of création. By interpreting expérience to his own advantage, the poet-speaker of "A Valediction: of Weeping" hence attempts to regain a certain measure of rational control upon affections of the body which hâve got out of hand. Like the speaker of "The Sun Rising", he thus consciously manipulâtes language, "turning his weeping into a decorous act for which he gravely asks permission" (Ferry, 87). Yet as the conceit unfolds, the poet-speaker's argument turns against him as he cornes to reaiize the transient character of the tears in which he has hoped to préserve an image of his beloved for himself. For, if the beloved's reflection in her lover's tears confers them worth, thèse tears will fall, reducing her reflection to nothing. Donne's use of the image of the tears as preservers of the microcosm of the lover and his beloved in the second stanza reinforces therefore the transient character of the lovers' relationship. The two parting lovers who perceive in each other's tears a reflection of their little world are indeed conscious that thèse tears are doomed to fall to the ground: On a round bail A workman that hath copies by, can lay An Europe, Afric, and an Asia, And quickly make that, which was nothing, ail, So doth each tear, Which thee doth wear, A globe, yea a world by that impression grow, Till thy tears mixed with mine do overflow This world, by waters sent from thee, my heaven dissolved so. ("A Valediction: of Weeping", 11. 10-18) Thèse lines are highly reminiscent of the passage in "The Good Morrow" in which the lovers are respectively described as two little worlds joined as two hémisphères in an indivisible whole (11. 12-14). Like them as well, the two lovers of "A Valediction: of Weeping" are similarly represented as worlds reflected in the tears of their respective partners, each tear in turn sending back this reflection to the tear facing it. However, the images reflected in the lovers' tears in "A Valediction: of Weeping" are of limited worth, for they will be "valid images only so long as they remain within the eyes" (Me Kevlin, 71). Unlike the tears in the image of "The Good Morrow", they are reflections bouncing back and forth between two mirrors facing each other, seemingly without end and with no purpose. Whereas the lovers of "The Good Morrow" can discern reflections of their love in each other's eyes and faces (11. 15-21), the lovers' little world in a "Valediction: of Weeping" never finds its way back to their eyes, and remains confined in the transient tears that will dissolve as they fall. The lovers of "Valediction: of Weeping" who hâve made the insignificant tears the alpha and oméga of the amorous microcosm representing their physical and spiritual union are then left with nothing. As Cathcart points out, the poet-speaker hence comes to the painful realization that : 'tears, followed through to logical conclusions, become not simply worthy but even dangerously valuable because they represent too much" (24). Through the extended conceit of the tears, Donne is thus attempting to represent the dangers inhérent to relationships relying almost solely on physical reaction for sustenance. Clearly, the ephemeral nature of the imagery chosen to represent the microcosm of the lovers identifies them as what he called "dull sublunary lovers" in "A Valediction: forbidding Mourning" (1. 13). In several poems Donne scorns lovers whose love cannot last when they are away from each other, and that appears to be the case in "A Valediction: of Weeping". As Sherwood remarks, the real threat in the poem is not so much "the annihilation of séparation, but of spiritual death through indulgence in the suffering of sexual 4<) love" (135) - in the overflowing of tears shed in the mutual knowledge that the spiritual connection between them does not hâve the strength to sustain séparation. Although the conceit dramatizes the lovers' attempt to reach towards each other through the distance in order to reestablish a sensé of unity within the microcosm, it also highlights the transient nature of their love which cannot sustain itself in the absence of the beloved. How much such a transient uncertain love is disappointing is évident even in the poem's last conceit. Donne draws a striking image depicting a storm and a tide, describing the unsteadiness of the affection of the lovers. The maie lover cautions the woman against the dangers of the future withour proposing a solution to the problem of their séparation. But it must be immediately pointed out that Donne does not condemn the two lovers of "A Valediction: of Weeping" to a personal world that suggests no compensation for them beyond their transitory expérience. His conceit succeeds in re-establishing a certain measure of unity in the microcosm of their parting. In an image that draws parallels between the stormy picture of the weeping lovers and the macrocosm of a purposeful world, the poet-speaker urges his beloved to guard them both against the further emotional tempests that they might be tempted to expérience: O more than moon, Draw not up seas to drown me in thy sphère, Weep me not dead, in thine arms, but forbear To teach the sea, what it may do too soon; Let not the wind Example fmd, To do me more harm, than it purposeth; Since thou and 1 sigh one another's breath, Whoe'er sighs most, is cruellest, and hastes the other's death. ("A Valediction: of Weeping", 11. 19-27) The departing lover, who will probably travel out to sea, begs his beloved to refrain from being to him as the raging océan and bitter wind may prove to be during his trip to the Continent. Within the amorous microcosm of body and spirit of the poet-speaker and his love, her uncontrolled grief 50 would indeed affect him, dragging his heart to the darkest depths of sadness, and through this final conceit, Donne thus attempts to show how distress in one of the partners may affect the other uselessly. The lady's grief threatens to become intense and to make the poet-speaker sink into the same kind of uncontrolled démonstrations of grief as her. In "A Valediction: of Weeping" therefore, feeling is represented as having a power "comparable to the vast forces of nature, whose regular cycles, like the tides, can be disrupted by lawless motions" (Ferry, 89). If uncontrolled passions can tear the amorous microcosm apart, balance and mutuality may, on the other hand, sustain it. In an epigrammatic ending highly reminiscent of the final quatrain of "The Good Morrow", the poet-speaker hence advocates the restoration of a state of balance within the microcosm of the lovers and a return to passions better controlled by the mind. In the Sangs and Sonnets, the Metaphysical conceit appears as Donne's tool par excellence for the investigation of the ties that unité man and woman in mutual love. In the four poems discussed in this chapter, as in many others of his Unes, Donne uses the conceit to probe the nature of the feelings that unité two beings and to render thèse feelings available to the understanding. Through images that mingle spirituality and sensuousness, the infinité and the insignificant, the microcosm of the lovers and the macrocosm of the universe, he célébrâtes a mysterious and yet apprehensible love through which two individuals may find fulfilment and purpose - a union that has the power to refîne the self and to make each lover a better human being. In the few instances in which Donne employs the Metaphysical conceit to investigate more problematic relationships, this literary device nevertheless deals, if not with a relationship of mutuality, at least with a désire for the sensé of perfect unity conveyed by the microcosm. Certainly, in the Songs and Sonnets, Donne's handling of the conceit appears as consistent with the désire for relatedness that seems to pervade most of his writings. Through it, he utters his vision of a world in which ail conflicts and paradoxes may be reconciled in an all-pervasive love. Chapter III "I am a little world made ciiniiingly": The Poet and his God The writings of Dr. Donne, Dean of St-Paul's Cathedral, seem to hâve caused as much turmoil in the critical world as young Jack Donne's Satires and exalted love lyrics. For décades, scholars hâve debated Donne's religious allegiance, unable to décide whether he was a sincère Anglican, or a Catholic in disguise. In fact, critics hâve devoted such an incredible amount of time and effort to tracing signs of both creeds within Donne's works that today, évidence abounds to support both positions. Clearly a member of the Protestant camp, Whalen in The Poetry of Immanence, Sacrament in Donne and Herbert (2002) argues for the primacy of the influence of Calvinism on Donne's mature writings. To him, Donne's sacred verse indeed "marks his confessional identification with the doctrinally Calvinist mainstream of the English Church" (61). Others, like Paul Stevens in "Donne's Catholicism and the Innovations of the Modem Nation State" (2001), hâve remarked that Protestant individualism somehow clashed with Donne's search for relatedness and hâve emphasized his distrust of behaviour and beliefs that could give rise to civil unrest (69). Again, the purpose of the présent thesis is by no means to 52 settle the debate surrounding Donne's true religious allegiance. Yet, thèse récent assessments of his religious writings indirectly highlight his capacity, in a time of great religious upheavals, to perceive the shades of grey in a world too often defined as either black or white. Although the conciliation of his Catholic upbringing with his allegiance to the Church of England must at times hâve proved difficult, Donne seems to hâve found a middle ground within himself for the contradictory views expressed by the warring factions of his times. It is in the context of this middle ground that this chapter examines his relationship with his Christian God. More particularly, in his Holy Sonnets and his prose work Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, how did the aesthetic character of the Metaphysical conceit enable him to achieve his religious and méditative aims? Donne's mitigated position in the debates that were soon to tear his country apart between Puritans and Anglicans and his adhésion to the Anglican Church after several years of unemployment hâve led a few members of the critical world to question the sincerity of his vocation. In John Donne, Life, Mind and Art ( 1981 ), a work now notorious for its primarily hostile attitude towards Donne, Carey déclares that the poet's passage to the Church of England was motivated by his ambition, his intellectualism, and his reaction against his former teachers and elders (3 1 ). This assertion was later to be refuted by critics such as Edwards who emphasized Donne's apparent genuine dedication to his office as Dean of St-Paul's Cathedral in London (99). For Edwards as for many others, Donne's was a true calling, his move to the Anglican Church thus springing from a long period of self-questioning and of serious délibération. Edwards in John Donne Man of Flesh andSpirit in fact succeeds in reconciling Jack Donne with the Dean of St-Paul through the poet's vision of mutual love between a man and woman as a retlection of the Divine love that governs the universe. In "Since she whom I loved hath paid her last debt", Edwards remarks that Donne présents his late wife, Anne, as she who "had persuaded him to drink from a river which came from God, with the resuit that '1 hâve found thee, and thou my thirst hast fed'" (268). Donne's love for his wife thus seems to hâve contributed to elevate his mind towards heaven. Anne Donne's influence on her husband's conception of love may perhaps explain why so much of the lover can be perceived in the poetpriest of Donne's devotional writings. Donne's religious works however differ substantially from his poems of mutuality both in the level of mastery he demonstrates in the treatment of his subject and in the anxiety they betray with regard to his relationship with the Divine. The poet's mind, which indulged in exalted visions of cosmic magnitude in his love lyrics, hère probes the ties that bind a worshipper to his God anxiously, as if unsure of their présence. Consequently, his handling of the Metaphysical conceit lacks the confidence conveyed by the microcosmic imagery of his poems of mutuality. Nevertheless, Donne's attempts to attain the Divine through the Metaphysical conceit bespeak his longing in his relationship with his Maker for the sensé of communion that had marked his union with the beloved in lyrics such as "A Valediction; forbidding Mourning". Although the critical world has devoted more attention to Donne's epistemology than to his rhetoric in the last two décades, some récent studies hâve stressed the appropriateness of the Metaphysical conceit as an instrument to represent his relationship to the Divine. This is notably the case with Brodsky (1982) and Biester (1997) who, in their respective studies of Donne's handling of the conceit, highlight its aptness to the task of'"preaching the Word'" (Brodsky, 839) that he undertook in his mature years. As a literary device often characterized by paradox, reversai and hyperbole, the Metaphysical conceit seems to hâve been the favourite instrument of some Renaissance priests and divine poets for conveying the sensé of wonder the believer may dérive from his expérience of a divine mystery. When he finally undertook the writing of his 54 devotional works in prose such as Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, and his religious verse such as the Holy Sonnets between 1610 and 1620, Donne thus had for long been experimenting with the conceit and "had already exercised the stratégies for provoking admiration that he knew were ail the more sanctioned in religious verse" (Biester, 148). Yet, Donne's soaring mind in his religious lyrics seems impeded in its flight to heaven by the weight of both original and personal sin. The poet-speaker's relationship with his Maker has indeed suffered a breach that must be mended for the salvation of his soûl. In order to restore the ties that once united him to the Divine, the repentant-persona of Donne's devotional works begs God to invest him with His all-pervasive présence and to purify his flesh and soûl from the foui taint of sin. Donne thus builds intricate conceits through which he exploits the image of man as a microcosm purified through the intervention of Divine agency and prays the Lord for the holy peace of mind one dérives from being joined intellectually to his Creator. As the tormented priest asks the Lord to ravish his soûl and take him to his bosom, his expérience of the Divine blends spiritual exaltation with sensuousness. "Holy Sonnet 14" is an example: "Take me to you, imprison me, for 1/ Except you enthral me, never shall be free,/ Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me" (11. 12-14). Donne in fact uses the Metaphysical conceit in his attempt to attain the Divine, and, although several critics hâve questioned his degree of success, he nevertheless achieves the création of an extraordinary sensé of intensity and of immediacy in his représentation of man's relationship with God. The speaker of Donne's Holy Sonnets is an excellent example of his attempt to corne to terms with God in a viable relationship with Him. The speaker frequently represents himself as a sinner who repents for his past mistakes and prays the Lord to afford him His grâce and mercy. Donne indeed seems to conceive of sin as having the power of altering man's capacity to feel God's immanence in Création and therefore of severing the ties linking him to the Almighty. The notion of purification against the divisive force of sin is therefore central to the Holy Sonnets, as thèse primarily dramatize a sinner's attempt to restore the bond that united man to his Maker before the Fall. In "Holy Sonnet 1", a méditation on man's constant need for divine sustenance to élude the pitfalls of sin in a fallen world, Donne represents a worshipper's graduai move from despair to certainty. Concerned with both his immédiate and ultimate destiny, the speaker begs the Lord to guard his soûl against the threat of spiritual death. The first octet depicts the poet-speaker's unsuccessful struggle to free himself from the hold of sin: Thou hast made me, and shall thy work decay? Repair me now, for now mine end doth haste, I run to death, and death meets me as fast, And ail my pleasures are like yesterday, I dare not move my dim eyes any way, Despair behind, and death before doth cast Such terror, and my feeble flesh doth waste By sin in it, which towards Hell doth weigh; ("Holy Sonnet 1", 11. 1-8) Although not ail the images in this passage, structurally speaking, constitute Metaphysical conceits as we hâve defined the figure in the first chapter of the présent thesis, Donne's description of the sinner's spiritual unrest serves to illustrate the manner in which he conceived of sin as an obstacle to man's relationship with the Divine. In the octet, the speaker of "Thou hast made me" présents himself as a dying man who, like his counterpart in the opening conceit of "A Valediction: forbidding Mo.urning", stands "on the brink of eternity" (Edwards, 5), waiting for his soul's passage to another world. Yet, unlike the virtuous man of "A Valediction", who may look upon his approaching death serenely, the speaker of "Thou hast made me" is fraught with the fear of the torments that await him as a penalty for his sins. Donne's référence to the expérience of the parting of body and soûl in the octet is concerned, this time in the reader's mind, with the complication rather than the simplicity of the dual nature of the contingent 'death' of his spiritual self by eternal damnation. The fear and despair of the sinner that inhabit his 56 feeble flesh over the mortality of his body thus confer an aura of corresponding death-like "cold sensuality" to his soûl (Williamson, 50). The sinner, without the intervention of God's redeeming agency, is left with no means of effecting his salvation of the other half of him that is his spirit. Sin's effect on the spiritual part of man is thus hère depicted in terms of Metaphysical imagery that renders it apprehensible to the rational intellect. Human consternation is to the death of the body as moral despair is to the dissolution of the soûl. Certainly, Donne's description of an affection of the soûl, that is, the fear of damnation, by means of its corresponding body-passion confers materiality to an otherwise abstract reality. In her article "Visages de la souffrance chez John Donne", Munoz-Teulié states that the passivity and anxiety expressed by the speaker of Donne's religious lyrics may be explained by the poet's shift to Protestantism in his mature years - to a religion which left a sinner with very little or no certainty with regard to the salvation of his soûl (50-51). In a fallen world left prey to sin and death, man's only hope of spiritual purification was believed, Munoz-Teulié argues, to réside in God's redeeming grâce, but according to much Protestant theology, this grâce was not bestowed on everyone. According to the Calvinist theology of the elect, God chose, it appeared, to give grâce to some and not to others. The attitude of the repentant-persona in Donne's devotional or religious poetry may therefore be thought of as reflecting the Protestant belief in the necessity for further divine assistance to overcome one's weaknesses because he fears that grâce is not enough. In this poem as in several others, Donne therefore represents the chasm that séparâtes a man's aspirations from the reality of his condition. To him, the human mind is "a battlefield between the forces of light and the powers of'lust and envie'" (Edwards, 20) - a battle of which the outcome, without divine sustenance, will always remain uncertain. Unlike the speaker of Donne's poems of maie and female mutuality whose oneness with the beloved was nothing short of a certainty, the tormented worshipper has difficulty to feel God's présence. 57 Although he reaches upwards to his Maker, sin weighs him down and seems to assume that his spiritual death will occur at the same time as his physical démise. In the sestet of "Thou hast made me", Donne introduces the solution to the speaker's predicament described in the octet. He adopts the convention of the sonnet - the octet poses a problem and the sestet solves it - to the structure of the conceit and the nature of Metaphysical verse. The speaker's move from despair to hope and confidence is achieved through the sonnet's graduai pithy, epigrammatic progression towards the condensed conceit of the final line. There, a sensé of unity between the sinner and his Maker is restored in the poem's speaker. Whereas the octet ended on a descending note with the ghastly sight of the torments of hell, the sestet afïords the reader a glimpse of heaven as the poet-speaker turns his gaze upwards: Only thou art above, and when towards thee By thy leave 1 can look, 1 rise again; But our old subtle foe so tempteth me, That not one hour 1 can myself sustain; Thy Grâce may wing me to prevent his art, And thou like adamant, draw mine iron heart. ("Holy Sonnet 1", 11. 9-14) The sestet hère depicts the speaker's progression towards his complète surrender to God's will. Caught in the deadly snares of sin and paralyzed by fear and despair, the sinner needs the intervention of the Lord's grâce to gain heaven. In a conceit that pictures divine grâce as a magnetic power that attracts the hearts of men hardened by sin, he thus signifies his acceptance of the only course of action available to him. The sinner therefore yields passively to his Maker as iron offers itself without résistance to adamant's magnetic attraction. We note the pain in Donne's use of iron. The sinner's heart has become as unfeelingly hard as iron, but paradoxically it is this very iron hardiness that allows God's magnet to work on him. In order to overcome despair and restore a sensé of communion between God and himself, the speaker must, as DiPasquale has pointed out in her study of sacramentality in Donne's verse, 58 "rely upon his own invention, his own concetti, his own skill as a sonneteer" (102). Di Pasquale has argued in fact that this self-reliance is a prévalent need for the speaker throughout the Holy Sonnets: "the poet/speaker is a man alone. His voice - like that of Petrarch in the Rime sparse rings out in a desolate space inhabited only by himself and the projected image of his beloved; and, like Petrarch, he often speaks as much to himself as to the object of his dévotion" (102). In "Thou hast made me", the distraught condition of the poet-speaker that DiPasquale describes is particularly prévalent. It is precisely through the conceit representing God's grâce as magnetic power acting on a lonely human that Donne achieves a sensé of renewal with the Divine. The conceit indeed describes the eflfect of God's agency upon the speaker in such a way as to make it available to the understanding and shows how sinners in a lonely battle willing to surrender to the Lord's grâce will be cleansed from the foui taint of sin that weighs them down. Donne's use of figurative language in his délibérations with God hence "bring[s] the spiritual realm closer to human perception" (Wilcox, 64-65). As in "A Valediction: of Weeping", the speaker's définition of an abstract reality, hère the influence of grâce upon the soûl, through imagery that renders it more apprehensible confers on him a certain measure of control over expérience. The conceit ending "Thou hast made me" thereby appears to assume the character of a sacramental motif that we find in poems such as "The Cross", which, according to Whalen, facilitâtes the speaker's "escape from subjective doubt" (74). That is, as a resuit of Donne's skilled use of the Metaphysical conceit, the speaker's voice, which was wavering with uncertainty in the first octet, ends the poem on a hopeful note. "Thou hast made me" hence progresses from despair to hope and finds its resolution in a conceit of flesh, soûl, iron and magnet that, however momentarily, succeeds in re-establishing a sensé of unity between man and God. Sacramentality is of course not wholly absent from the possibly Calvinist context of Donne's Holy Sonnets. Several critics, such as DiPasquale and Whalen, hâve indeed highlighted 59 its centrality to the définition of Donne's devotional idéal expressed in his divine poetic méditations. For example, "Holy Sonnet 5" ("I am a little world made cunningly") is in fact built upon a conceit which blends sacramental motifs and metaphysical imagery to represent Donne's conception of the expérience of purification through divine agency. In the first part of the poem, the repentant persona is represented as a little world or microcosm made up of matter and spirit, mirroring Création in both its fate and constituents: I am a little world made cunningly Of éléments, and an angelic sprite, But black sin hath betrayed to endless night My world's both parts, and, oh, both parts must die. You which beyond that heaven which was most high Hâve found new sphères, and of new lands can write Pour new seas in mine eyes, that so I might Drown my world with my weeping earnestly Or wash it if it must be drowned no more ("Holy Sonnet 5", 11. 1-9) As in the macrocosm of the created universe, the material and the spiritual appear to be blended in the poet-speaker perfectly. He is therefore represented as a little world in many ways similar to God's Création. This description of man as a small-scale représentation of the universe, however, ought not to be taken only pictonally. Commenting on Donne's "Holy Sonnet 19" "Oh to vex me" and on Alabaster's Sonnet 15, "My soûl is a world by contraction", Anthony Raspa in The Emotive Image explains that instances of microcosmic imagery in seventeenth century British poetry ought not to be regarded as a représentation uniquely of "a visual universe" (17), but also as a référence to the dual émotive nature of the universe. That is, in the Baroque period, which lasted roughly from the beginning until the end of the seventeenth century, man was believed to possess "a dual émotive nature" that placed him not only somehow halfway between the spiritual and the material, but also between sensation and the eternal émotions of love and hâte embodied in God and Satan (Raspa, 17). In "Holy Sonnet 5" ("I am a little world"), 60 Donne's use of Metaphysical imagery again renders an abstract reality, hère the relationship that unités the sensuous and the spiritual in the sinner, available to the understanding. In the same sonnet the Baroque conception of the dual character of human nature as a mixture of temporal and eternal émotions has important implications for the entire poem. The poem's central conceit represents man as a microcosm reflecting the greater macrocosm of the universe, and indeed présents the relationship uniting man's body and soûl as both religious and émotive. That is, as a reflection of the eternal émotions pervading the created universe, man is therefore the théâtre of the war raging between the eternal forces of love and hâte in the macrocosm of the universe temporally anchored in him - of a world in which sin was unleashed in the Fall. The body being the "réceptacle" (Raspa, 17) of man's émotions, the sin that taints the soûl consequently dooms the body. The image that pictures man as a microcosm in the first quatrain of "1 am a little world" thus reinforces the notion of the human compound as a battlefield for the struggle opposing the forces of good and evil introduced in "Holy Sonnet 1" ("Thou hast made me"), and constitutes a powerful statement on the complexity of the sinner's predicament. In order to reach God, the speaker must direct his mind and affections to embrace the ways of immortal love. Thus, as the created universe bears the foui taint of sin, so does the worshipper who, without the intervention of God's redeeming agency, will die spiritually as well as physically. In 'Holy Sonnet 5" ("1 am a little world"), it is therefore through a conceit built on such sacramental interférence in human salvation by God that the sinner fmds his way back to his Maker. The contrite poet-speaker hence appeals to those who were elevated beyond the stars to send tears of sincère repentance for his mistakes and wash away the stain of both original and personal sin just as the world was cleansed of the numerous sins of mankind in the waters of the Flood (11. 5-9). The sacramental dimension of the conceits of "I am a little world" appears exactly described in (.1 DiPasquale's Literature and Sacrament. In her discussion of this sonnet, she explains that the emotional force of the image of the flood may be appreciated only if one recognizes "the water of the Déluge" as a type or "'figure' of baptism" (106). That is, as the Déluge was sent to destroy corruption on earth (Genesis, 6:12), baptism washes away the stain of the original sin from the soûl of an infant. However, the repentant-persona soon realizes the impossibility for him of finding spiritual purification in the sacrament of baptism again. Did not God promise to Noah and his sons that the world would be drowned no more (Genesis, 9:1 1)? Accordingly, an individual cannot receive the sacrament of baptism twice in a lifetime and the poet-speaker's tears of repentance for his sins are deemed insufficient for the salvation of his soûl! Therefore in the sestet of the sonnet the poet-speaker turns to another sacrament, the Eucharist, to cleanse his entire being from the taint of sin. The notion of sacrament itself revolves around the ideas of sign and signifier, which bear an important significance with regard to Donne's use of Eucharistie imagery. English Protestants in Donne's time conceived of the signifier as heavenly grâce whereas the sign was seen as the visible représentation of that grâce (DiPasquale, 40). Through transubstantiation, the visible sign in the Eucharist would be endowed with divine grâce which, in turn, would invest the récipient of the sacrament. Donne seems to hâve shared this conception of the interaction of sign and signifier in the Eucharist for, as he himself explained in Sermon LXVIII quoted in DiPasquale, "when I hâve received [the sacrament] worthily, it becomes my very soûle; that is, My soûle growes up into a better state, and habitude by it, and I hâve (...) the more deified my soûle by the sacrament" (DiPasquale, 1314). In "Holy Sonnet 5", moreover, the poet-speaker describes the annihilation of his being by fire in a way which is reminiscent of the destruction of the visible sign in the Eucharist: But oh it must be burnt; alas the fire Of lust and envy hâve burnt it heretofore, And made it fouler; let their flame retire, And burn me O Lord, with a fiery zeal Of thee and thy house, which doth in eating heal. ("Holy Sonnet 5", 11. 10-14) Like the macrocosm of the created universe, "reserved unto fire against the day of judgement and perdition of ungodly men" (Peter, 3:7), the poet-speaker's little world must burn for the balance of his sins, yet this fire will paradoxically not only consume him but also repair him, healing the burn left by lust and envy, achieving its end in verse by the effect of antithesis characteristic of Metaphysical verse. As the world shall be restored and purified by God's fire (as it had been purified in the dévastation of the Flood), so shall the believer be rejuvenated as a resuit of the destruction of the visible sign by means of which the power of divine grâce shall be unleashed in him. Donne in "Holy Sonnet 5" thus finds comfort in a conceit which performs the spiritual purification effected by the sacrament of the Eucharist - "in the act of receiving, 'in eating'" (DiPasquale, 113). The speaker therefore ends his holy méditation in the knowledge that through his surrender to God's divine agency, the battle raging within the self may finally corne to a close and give way to peace. Through the conceit of "I am a little world", Donne hence fuses notions of sacramentality with Metaphysical imagery to convey a sensé of hope in the renewal of the ties binding a man to his God through the sacraments. If sacramentalism and the émotions as ways of reaching the Divine in "Holy Sonnet 5" hâve given rise to a certain polemic among Donne scholars, none of his Holy Sonnets has caused as much controversy as "Holy Sonnet 14" ("Batter my heart, three-personed God"). Since the revival of Donne's poetry in the early twentieth century, this sonnet has been harshly criticized for its main conceit that suggests that Donne wants a divine râpe to take place. However shocking this image may be to a modem sensibility, it is nevertheless necessary for one to look beyond its literal meaning to appreciate the subtlety of Donne's thought. In "Batter my heart", the ideas of surrender, passivity, and redemptive suffering involved in the notion of divine 63 aggression by râpe are again central to Donne's idéal of dévotion. The imagery that describes the speaker's ravishment ought therefore be considered for its significance as Metaphysical poetry rather than its literal meaning. In his attempt to reach out towards his Maker, the poet-speaker in fact seems to conceive of suffering as a necessary step on the path of rédemption and spiritual purification. In this respect, Donne models his devotional idéal on the life of Christ, whose suffering and death on the cross brought about the rédemption of mankind. Donne indeed seems to regard spiritual purification as involving the complète oblitération and récréation of the self- a rebirth of some sort not unlike the résurrection of Christ. The octet of the sonnet "Batter my heart" thus begins where "1 am a little world" had ended, with the poet-speaker begging his Maker to create him anew: Batter my heart, three-personed God; for, you As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend; That 1 may rise, and stand, o'erthrow me, and bend Your force, to break, blow, burn, and make me new. I, like an usurped town, to another due, Labour to admit you, but oh, to no end, Reason your viceroy in me, me should défend, But is captived, and proves weak or untrue ("Holy Sonnet 14", 11. 1-8) Donne's imagery in the First quatrain of the octet again brings the relationship uniting the sensés of the body and the affections of the soûl to the foreground and lends a certain measure of physicality or tangibility to the ties joining the devotional-poet to his God. As in "Thou hast made me", a chasm séparâtes the speaker's aspirations from the reality of his condition. While part of him wishes to surrender to the Lord's grâce, something in his very nature, the stain of original and personal sin, interfères and prevents him from aspiring towards the Almighty. To free himself from the grasp of sin, he must tolerate a pain which, spiritually, amounts to the sexual violation of his physical self. He therefore asks God to descend upon him and invest his soûl and flesh with His crushing présence. By relying on such physical imagery to describe his expérience of the Divine, and on diction such as "break, blow, burn" (1. 4), the poet-speaker addresses this subtle knot that binds the material and the spiritual in man, and mankind to its Creator. The poem is trying to tell us that this knot finds its perfect expression in Christ himself the symbol of the encounter between the human and the Divine. If, as Aristotle believed, every affection of the soûl has a corresponding body-passion, then the spiritual expérience Donne describes in this sonnet must also be felt in the flesh - sensuously. In the octet's second quatrain, the conceit defining the relationship uniting the sinner to his Maker once more dramatizes the powerlessness of an individual under the hold of sin. In this passage, God is to the speaker as the rightful lord of a town is to the enemy who tries to usurp it. But in the numerous antithèses created by the paradox of the image, God is a rightful town owner as well as a usurping enemy, and the town that is being fought over is Donne the speaker in the poem who fights to keep the enemy out ail the time wishing to let him in (11. 5-8). The repentantpersona imaged in the town is thus unsuccessful in his attempt to overcome the weaknesses that prevent him from yielding to his rightful Lord and paradoxically letting his enemy in. The conceit of the usurped town again represents a sinner's anxiety about his incapacity to intervene for the salvation of his soûl. Once more, a gap seems to separate the speaker's aspirations from the reality of his condition. Certainly, Gardner was right to observe that if the lover and poetpriest persona are in some ways similar, they differ in this that whereas the speaker of Donne's erotic lyrics frequently célébrâtes a conquest, his devotional writings dramatize the opposite, that is a sinner's "struggle to surrender" (Edwards, 150). In the sestet of the sonnet, Donne attempts to bridge the chasm that has formed between the speaker's aspirations and his actual condition. The dramatization of the divine violation is actually the sestet's solution to the problem of the sinner's résistance to God that the octet proposed. The sinner's passage through pain does not appear so much as a breaking of the bond 65 uniting man to his Maker, but as its mending or restoration. Still, the sexual imagery contained in the sestet is stunning to the modem reader: Yet dearly'I love you, and would be love fain, But am bethroted unto your enemy, Divorce me, untie, or break that knot again, Take me to you, imprison me, for I Except you enthral me, never shall be free, Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me. ("Holy Sonnet 14", 11. 9-14) Donne's conceit hère borders on blasphemy as God is simultaneously depicted as a suitor and a rapist. Nevertheless, the poet succeeds in making the expérience of violence appear as a resolution to the speaker's dilemma. That is, God is to the poet-speaker both as a suitor and a rapist only in so far as His influence upon the sinner may be perceived as an intrusion meeting with résistance. The imprisonment and enthrallment in God are paradoxically felt as deliverance by the poet-speaker whose condition is as a resuit finally attuned to his aspirations. Moreover, in his analysis of "Holy Sonnet 14", Raspa explains that the sexual imagery of this conceit may be interpreted as a form of "willed expérience" (63). ' Will' in the Baroque period was conceived as the faculty which "led men as much to God as to anything else" (Raspa, 63). Through the final conceit of the desired râpe, Donne therefore illustrâtes how the sinner may bridge the chasm that has formed between his aspirations and the reality of his condition through an act of will even if he préfigures the expérience in the image of a râpe. Despite the sins that weigh upon his conscience, the repentant-persona may indeed hope for the reinstatement of the bond that tied him to his Maker by willingly yielding to Him. Donne hence présents his idéal of dévotion as willed surrender and, through the final conceit, shows how "ail paradoxes find their suprarational resolution" (Payne, 212) in God. The poet-speaker thus claims his désire to be pure and free to join his Creator. Donne's représentation of a spiritual expérience in terms of physicality in the first quatrain of the controversial "Holy Sonnet 14" constitutes a noteworthy comment by him on his idea of how humans perceive their existential condition. The poem's movement from the material world to the eternal realm of the soûl is indeed central to Donne's epistemological approach to human relationships not only hère but to also elsewhere in his writings. In Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, a work which records his reflections during a long illness that had forced him to take to his bed for a period of 23 days in late 1623, this move from one realm of existence to another lies at the basis of the structure of each of his devotional exercises. Tapping constantly on the border where matter and spirit meet underlies his method of investigating the relationship uniting man to God and création. In his search for a spiritual significance to human expérience, Donne's penetrating mind thus hovers between the sensuous and the spiritual realms that constitute our world. Such an investigation of human condition is représentative of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century era in which man was thought to be continually in touch with the spiritual forces that governed the universe. According to Raspa, Counter-Reformation thinkers in Donne's time indeed believed that "man was always conscious of a meaningful universe" and was "bound to recognize its significance" (13). In Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions that Donne composed after the Holy Sonnets, his search for the spiritual significance of sensuous human expérience hence reflects the Counter-Reformation belief in a universe charged with spiritual meaning. Certainly, because of this, Donne's mature thinking betrays signs of his Catholic upbringing. Of course, Donne's approach to his subject in his devotional writings was not solely influenced by the Baroque Counter-Reformation world-view. The method of Dévotions also relies heavily on that of Protestant typology. The metaphysical approach to the world used by Protestant thinkers revolved around three concepts, namely those of the Book of Créatures, the 67 Book of Scriptures, and the Book of Life. The Book of Créatures designated the created universe whereas the Book of Life referred to the saved spiritual soûls in eternity, a kind of register of the names of the Elect admitted into heaven after death. For its part, the Book of Scriptures was the Bible upon which man could rely to "identify the meaning of history in the présent for the benefit of his salvation" (Raspa, Dévotions, xxix). Protestant thinkers hence believed that the world could be interpreted and understood through the study of the types and prototypes of the Bible and by the relationship of thèse to the Book of Créatures and the Register of the Elect. That is, the events taking place in the Book of Créatures were thought to find their significance in those of the Book of Scriptures and the person who could find this significance could also succeed in having his name inscribed in the Register of the Elect. The interprétation of the spiritual meaning of the events of the Book of Créatures through the médiation of saving knowledge contained in the Bible was then believed to provide man with the spiritual insight necessary to ensure the salvation of his soûl by his registration among the Elect. The conjunction of CounterReformation world-view and of Protestant typology thus defines Donne's epistemological approach to man's relationship with the Divine. Certainly, his reflection on the spiritual significance of human expérience takes him to higher spiritual considérations by way of the sensuous. But in Dévotions this passage between the two realms of heaven and earth is mediated by his pondering on the Book of Scriptures as it informs him about both the natural world of the Book of Créatures and the spiritual world of the Register of the Elect to which he aspires. This movement of Donne's thought between the two realms of existence of the universe in Dévotions in a sensé replicates the aesthetic effect of the Metaphysical conceit that van Hook describes in "Baroque Poetics". As was explained in the first chapter of this thesis, van Hook attributes the aesthetic effect of the Metaphysical conceit to its reproduction of the mind's flight from one to the other of the existential catégories upon which man relies for his analysis of the 68 world (van Hook, 36). Whereas metaphor relies on creating similarities in its représentation of ideas or concepts, the Metaphysical conceit guides the reader's mind every step of the way so as to force it to get "the exact curve of Donne's mode of thinking and feeling" (Williamson, 84). In Dévotions, the subdivision of the world between the material and the spiritual, and of the human condition between the sensés and the soûl, posits the création of analytical catégories such as those van Hook describes. Thèse catégories thus render possible the délimitation, "in the very act of structuring, [of] the scope of human awareness" (van Hook, 27). Accordingly, Donne in his Dévotions juxtaposes temporal expérience in the world of the sensés to its corresponding spiritual reality in order to decipher the spiritual significance of his physical condition. Each of the twenty-three dévotions in Dévotions is divided into a "méditation", an "expostulation", and a "prayer" and the attentive reader may follow the movements of his mind from image to image through ail three parts of each dévotion as they occur to him and, with him, embrace the natural conclusion of his reasoning. As Donne himself points out in one of his sermons: "The soûl of man is incorporate in his words (...) as he speaks, we think he thinks" (VIII, no 15, 11. 220-222). Donne's words in Dévotions npon Emergent Occasions hence mirror his thoughts by replicating the progression of his mind from one set of relationships to another. His treatment of the subject of man's relationship with God in Dévotions may thus be said to follow the method of the Metaphysical conceit and reproduce its aesthetic effect by attracting the reader. Although Donne's method for handling the subject of man's relationship with the Divine may be exemplified by virtually any of his exercises in Dévotions, his fourth dévotion is of particular interest for the présent thesis because of its use of its imagery of microcosm and macrocosm. This dévotion records the fourth day of Donne's illness when his condition requires the assistance of a physician. In the "Méditation" constituting the first part of the dévotion Donne focuses his attention on a reality of the material world in order to understand his physical 69 condition, which will in turn provide him with insight on a corresponding spiritual reality in the "Expostulation", the second part of the dévotion. Donne hence begins by praising the complexity of man's body with the now famous phrase: "It is too little to call Man a Utile world; Except God, Man is diminutive to nothing" (19). Then, he goes on to marvel at the constituents of the human body, and delivers a very visual analogy that brings the body and the created universe together: If ail the Veines in our bodies, were extended to Rivers, and ail the Sinewes, to vaines of Mines, and ail the Muscles, that lye upon one another, Hilles, and ail the Bones to Ouarries of stones, and ail other pièces, to the proportion of those which correspond to them in the world, the aire would be too little for this Orbe of Man to move in, the firmament would bee but enough for this star; for, as the whole world hath nothing, to which something in man doth not answere, so hath man many pièces, of which the whol world hath no représentation. (Dévotions, 19) Hère, Donne's identification of the parts of the human body with physical éléments of the earth marks his attempt at anchoring man's temporal self in that part of the created universe which must be experienced sensuously and from which one may dérive higher spiritual wisdom. As Sherwood notes in Fulfilling the Circle, "Donne's consciousness of the body heightens the importance of the traditional microcosm-macrocosm notion in his thought" (16). That is, Donne represents the body as "half of the human composite and the fulfilment of material création", a création in which "Ail material existence points to the body" (Sherwood, 16). The body therefore appears as the perfect mediator between a human's spiritual insight into the significance of the created universe and his understanding of his place in it. In Donne's view, we may argue, the sensés of the body are indispensable to man's compréhension of a universe charged with spiritual meaning. They disclose to him the hiclden messages in the Book of Créatures and hence its relevance to the Bible and salvation. Whereas the lovers' bodies in Donne's poems of mutuality were represented as essential to the expérience of spiritual union, for example in the conceit of the unified soûl in "The Extasie" (11. 49-60), in the passage ofDévotions above, the meditator's sensés enable him to understand the created 70 world and at the same time to go beyond it to grasp the nature of the soûl. Not only the human condition of "The Ecstasie" but the compréhension of the spirit is at stake. In his description of the human compound, Donne does not neglect man's spiritual part which he places, as is fit, among the stars. His thoughts are thus identified with the mythical créatures of the earth, "borne Gyants: that reach from East to West, from earth to Heaven, that doe not onely bestride ail the Sea, and Land, but span the Sunn and Firmament at once; My thoughts reach ail, comprehend ail" {Dévalions, 20). One may certainly discern the structure of the Metaphysical conceit in this analogy which compares the organs of man's body and the thoughts of his mind respectively to the physical éléments of earth and to giants who could reach the outer limits of the cosmos. In Donne's little world, the spiritual part of man, although temporally anchored in the body, is placed among the stars, close to what his era understood as the eternal and infinité in Ptolemaic cosmology, whereas his temporal self, the body, dwells in the world of the sensés. In his fourth méditation, Donne is therefore marvelling "at the union of those contrary forces in himself (73) - at the meeting of the spiritual and the sensuous in him, as he is liberated by the very force that restrains him. Thus, in the first part of Donne's fourth méditation, the human body and the world are juxtaposed in such a way as may remind the reader of many of the Metaphysical conceits in Donne's poetry. Through a conceit founded on paradox, identifiable by its use of the words 'as' and 'so', he créâtes an analogy between the human body and many parts of the universal. The body becomes a microcosm of the macrocosmic universe and the knowledge of one becomes paradoxically the explanation of the other: And then as the other world produces Serpents, and Vipers, malignant, & venomous créatures, and Wormes, and Carlerpillars, that endeavour to devoure the world which produces them, and Monsters compiled of divers parents, & kinds, so this world, our selves, produces ail thèse in us, in producing diseuses, & sicknesses, of ail sorts; venomous, and infectious diseases, feeding & consuming 71 diseases, and manifold, and entangled diseases, made up of several ones. And can the world name so many venimous, so many consuming, so many monstrous créatures, as we can diseases, of ail thèse kinds? (Dévotions, 20) Even in the production of malevolent créatures, man's body - small as it is - proves superior to the world by producing diseases more numerous and oppressive than the monsters that plague the vast earth. Yet as the vipers, monsters, and venomous créatures are to the earth, so are diseases to man. Hence, Donne relies on a reality of the material universe to interpret the type and magnitude of his physical state. Certainly, in this passage, one may easily recognize the structure of "as" and "so" that underlies the Metaphysical conceit, which fonctions hère as a device joining the meditator's body and the temporal universe and makes Donne's interprétation of the expérience of illness possible. In this image of the monsters of the earth and his body, Donne of course does not suspend the opération of his reason. He pursues it assiduously in order to understand the spiritual significance of his physical state. He therefore notes that if animais in the material universe instinctively know how to take care of themselves, man needs the help of a physician to administer the treatments necessary to the improvement of his condition (20). From this observation, Donne extrapolâtes a reflection on the necessity for restorative grâce to purify man from the disease of the soûl: sin. In the "Expostulation", he therefore describes the relationship that unités the sinner to his Creator in terms of the other relationship that ties a man to his physician: In the voice of thy Sonn, Wilt thon he made whole? That drawes from the patient a confession that he was ill, and could not make himself wel. And it is thine own voice, Is there no Phisician? That inclines us, disposes us to accept thine Ordinance (...) In ail thèse voices, thou sendest us to those helpes, which thou hast afforded us in that. But wilt not thou avowe that voice too, Hee that hath sinned against his Make/; tel himfall into the hands of the Phisician, and thou not afford me an understanding of those wordes? Thou who sendest us for a blessing to the Phisician, doest not make it a curse for us, to go, when thou sendest. Is not the curse rather in this, that onely he falls into the hands of the Phisician, that casts 72 himself wholly, intirely upon the physician, confides in him, relies upon him, attends ail from him, and neglects that spiritualphisicke, which thou also hast instituted in thy Church: so to fall into the hands of the Phisician, is a sirme, and a punishment of former sinnes; so as Asa fell fell, who in his disease, sought not to the Lord, but lo the Phisician. Reveale therefore to me thy method, O Lord, & see, whether l hâve followed it; that thou mayest hâve glory, if 1 hâve, and I, pardon, if I hâve not, & helpe that I may. (Dévotions, 21-22) Basing his reflection on a passage taken from the second book of Chronicles (16.12), Donne understands the importance for him to turn to his Maker in adversity and he interprets his physical illness as a sign of the spiritual disease that plagues his soûl. He thus cornes to the realization that, as the patient must acknowledge the dégradation of his physical stateto send for the physician, so must the sinner rely upon God, the Physician of the soûl, and sincerely seek forgiveness to be made whole anew. Tn this passage, the structure of Donne's discourse on the subject of divine grâce is again highly reminiscent of that of the Metaphysical conceit. Donne's compréhension of the spiritual significance of the Book of Créatures, ofwhich his sick body is a part, is mediated through two pairs of things as in the Metaphysical conceit: the sensés of the body are to the expérience of illness as the saving knowledge of the Lord is to the biblical passages presented in italics in his text. Donne's mind hère proceeds from the material world through the sensés of the body, then to the saving knowledge of the Bible, and finally reaches new levels of spiritual insight related to salvation. Donne hence seizes the opportunity offered by physical illness to allow his consciousness to travel between the layers of meaning of human expérience, with each layer easing his passage into the next. Throughout his reflection, the relationship that unités body and soûl plays an important rôle as mediator in the assessment of the expérience of suffering. In Ftdfilling the Circle, Sherwood notes that "human suffering" is "the essential condition of earthly life" (17) for a créature that has doomed itself to seek rédemption eternally for its past sins. In order to reestablish the bond uniting him to his Maker, man must employ "The assembled powers of 73 consciousness" to "evaluate the significance of pain in body and soûl" for pain and death, and "God's contradictory punishment and purification from sin, convert sinful love for the créature into love for God" (Sherwood, 17). The insight the devotional writer like Donne thus gains from his reflection on the expérience of the sensés, and its spiritual significance causes him to turn to God, to surrender his soûl to Him in order to be purified and elevated. Through the movement of his mind from the sensuous and temporal in the "Méditation" of the fourth dévotion to the intangible and spiritual in its "Expostulation", Donne hence remains in touch with the forces immanent in the universe that contribute to the shaping of human expérience at the same time that he goes beyond them. In the saving knowledge he dérives from his méditation on the material world, the teachings of the Bible, and eternal spiritual reality, the reader oï Dévotions recognizes his insistent pleas as a repentant-persona. Moreover, he succeeds in unity with his God. As such, in the acquisition of saving knowledge, as speaker oï Dévotions Donne achieves a sensé of communion with the Divine that distinguishes him from the restless poet-priest of the Holy Sonnets. In the "Prayer", the third part of the fourth dévotion in question, Donne synthesizes the ideas that he developed in both its "Méditation" and the "Expostulation" and prays God to help him live out the meaning he has discovered through his spiritual exercise. In this final volley of his dévotion, one may sensé that a change has taken place in the speaker whose whole self is now turned to good ends. As in "Holy Sonnet 5" ("1 am a little world") and "Holy Sonnet 14 ("Batter my heart"), the speaker has discovered through affliction the path leading back to God. In a direct référence to Christ's sufferings, he therefore states: "With his s/ripes we are healed, sayes the Prophet there; there, before he was scourged, wee were healed with his stripes; how much more shall 1 bee healed now, now, when that which he hath already suffered actually, is actually, and effectually applied to me? Is there anything incurable upon which that Balme dropps? Any 74 vaine so emptie, as that that bloodcannot fil it?" (23) The speaker's redemptive illness enables him to corne to terms with his Saviour in whom he finds the key to spiritual rejuvenation. As Sherwood argues to explain Donne's feelings, Christ's suffering "in the flesh" indeed "points the way to restoration" (9), for his sacrifice redeemed humanity of its numerous sins. In fact, as Smith also argues in relation to Donne, Christ symbolizes the encounter between God and humanity, "for he shared our manhood just so long as he united body and spirit, human élément and divine" (215). He is the "subtle knot" that ties man to heaven, and whose image is replicated in man's dual nature. In the "Prayer", by modelling his life on the idéal represented by his Saviour, the expérience of suffering hence re-establishes in Donne the bond which unités him to heaven. To him, the relationship joining man to God thus articulâtes itself in the space between the différent layers of meaning of our uni verse. Through a method analogous to that of the conceit, he therefore attempts to translate into words the manner in which the temporal and sensuous interacts with the spiritual and eternal in man to bring him back to his Maker and recreate the bond severed by sin. Throughout both his Holy Sonnets and Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, Donne seeks to achieve in his relationship with God the sensé of communion that had characterized his union with the beloved in his exalted love lyrics. Despite his sincère désire for the peace of mind one may dérive from being joined intellectually with God, the stain of both personal and original sin create a chasm between his aspirations and the reality of his condition, and thus prevents him from elevating himself towards his Maker. In his désire to reinstate the ties that joined man to the Divine before the Fall, the speaker of Donne's Dévotions and Holy Sonnets seeks spiritual purification through the intervention of divine grâce. In this endeavour, the repentant-persona uses the Metaphysical conceit to render his expérience of the Divine apprehensible to the understanding and thus confers materiality on an otherwise abstract reality. Donne's intricate 75 conceits, in both the sacred verse and the prose in question, blend poetic wit, metaphysical imagery, sacramentality, sensuousness, and spirituality to depict the flight of his mind from the material world to the eternal realm of the soûl. The Metaphysical conceit hence acts as a bridge that facilitâtes the passage of the speaker's rational intellect from one realm of existence to the next and allows him to reach new levels of spiritual insight. In the saving knowledge the repentant-persona dérives from his investigation of human expérience, one may perceive the hand of the Lord extended towards the pénitent, in Holy Sonnets and Dévotions, showing him the way back to heaven. 76 Chapter IV "No man's an island, entire in itself': Man and Society The close scrutiny of Donne's works reveals a man whose outlook on love, religion, and society is marked, at least on the surface, by the same paradoxes and antithèses as his poetry. As a resuit, his readers hâve often perceived two différent men in him. To many, Donne is the womanizer who grew up into the lover celebrating a mutual love of body and soûl. To others, he is the former young rascal and tormented soûl, who found a certain measure of peace in taking up the ministry in his mature years. To yet others, he is the satirist whose cynicism and incisive criticism of men and their times were replaced by the ideals of Renaissance humanism in his prose works. This last aspect of Donne's gênerai vision of the world is seldom addressed in critical assessments of his works. Only his most devoted readers seem to be acquainted with the humanism that has characterized his thought in his mature years perhaps, one may assume, because this humanism only transpires in his works that are at best challenging to scholars. Donne's move from romantic love to the love of God nevertheless seems to hâve culminated in a love of mankind. However, several critics persist in describing Donne as self-centred. Certainly, 77 compared to his later humanist prose, the "Satires" Donne wrote, perhaps largely in his student days in the 1590s, hâve received a great deal more attention from the critical world. Thèse "Satires" paradoxically show us a man frowning on the baseness of some courtiers striving for preferment in the very circles that he himself sought to enter and was nevertheless trying to expose in verse. His disgust for the society of his time évident in the "Satires" may seem, at best, difficult to reconcile with the humanism of his late forties. The so-called discrepancies that characterize Donne's gênerai conception of mankind may contribute to explain why some critics like Carey and Leishman hâve described him as an unscrupulous hypocrite able to betray even his own conscience in his ruthless pursuit for royal preferment. Others, while emphasizing his often ambiguous relationship with the Elizabethan and Stuart establishments, hâve cast a more sympathetic eye upon the young satirist. Certainly, given his parentage, his middling social status and his original Roman Catholic religious affiliations, Donne's dealings with the society of his time could not fail to be problematic. Not only was he a young Catholic, but he was also a descendant of Sir Thomas More's family, and More had died a martyr in the aftermath of Henry VIII's break with Rome, and he was also the nephew of Jasper Heywood, the head of the underground Jesuits in England in 1581. Earl Miner is one of those critics whose views on this particular matter contrast sharply with Carey's. In The Melaphysical Mode from Donne to Cowley, Miner indeed suggests that Donne's contempt for the court, which he expresses most unequivocally in the "Satires", might hâve originated from the necessity for him to rub shoulders with people who scorned his religion in his pursuit of a secular position. To Miner, Donne's attitude to the establishment was therefore probably only the expression of "his self-questioning hésitation over his search for preferment - an agony that was to recur more evidently before him when he was urged by James 1 and by his friends to enter the Anglican orders" (33). As a young Catholic, Donne must hâve had to struggle harder than 7K anyone else to attract preferment, only to watch his bright prospects crumble when he was jailed after his secret marriage with Anne More in 1602. The ten years of unemployment and financial precariousness that were to follow must hâve exacerbated his already harsh feelings towards a political establishment that was hostile to Catholics. Critics hâve thus frequently contrasted Donne's "Satires" with his later prose works advocating love and charity in order to highlight his so-called progression from the selfcenteredness that supposedly characterized him in his youth to the humanism of his mature years. Still, closer scrutiny of Donne's early works reveals that despite his sometimes difficult relationship with the English establishment, concern for mankind had always been lurking even under the surface of his most acerbic criticisms. This is notably the case with "Satire IV" in which Donne's contempt for the court appears to resuit from the encounter of a young idealistic mind with a world where corruption prevails. Let us note that "Satire" in Donne's day was a genre of poem written in relatively free verse commenting on practically any aspect of contemporary public and private life. The genre had been developed by Latin writers like Juvenal and revived by Renaissance humanists. In "Satire IV" in question, Donne relates a supposed conversation with a courtier who appears as the very epitome of everything that the young satirist despises. He describes this courtier as a man of low moral standards, who debases his human condition by indulging in abject flattery "to win widows, and pay scores" and who, in slander, finds the means to advance in the world (11. 45, 119-121). To the young satirist, this courtier is therefore not a man, but "A thing, which would hâve posed Adam to name" (1. 20). In his analysis of the poem, Miner observes that Donne's attitude towards the courtier in a sensé honours him, for it reflects the "genuinely ambivalent" feelings (38) of a man resisting the corruption of a world he has no choice to enter in the pursuit of his aspirations. His attitude also reveals in him the fear of a young idealist feeling himself "Becoming a traitor", and seeing "One 79 of our giant Statutes ope his jaw/ To suck me in" (11. 130-133). Court intrigues in Elizabeth l's reign certainly did not constitute the most edifying sample of human behaviour in Renaissance England and could not fail to clash with the moral standards of any man unacquainted with practices such as the blackmail and calumny that was habituai with courtiers that "Satire IV" brings up. Nevertheless, despite his contempt for the practices of courtiers, Donne was no misanthropist. As Miner observes, his "Satires" "show an absorption with the public world" (38). Indeed, believed to hâve been written for the most part when he was still a law-student in London (1593-1595) and in the year that preceded his employment as secretary to Thomas Egerton (1597) (Patterson, 119-120), the "Satires" are almost invariably situated in an urban setting, and even when the poet-speaker retreats to the wholesomeness of the private world as in "Satire 1", the "life envisioned as the alternative to the public is a life of contemplation - but of the very public world from which he recoils" (39). The young satirist of the poems is depicted as writing in his study, and consulting the books that adorn his shelves, and he ponders over the works of "Philosophers;/ And jolly Statesmen, which teach how to tie/ The senewes of a cities mystique bodie" ("Satire I", 11. 6-8). Thus, as the lovers in "The Sun Rising" would defme the amorous microcosm in terms of the world they rejected, the satirist retiring in contemplation allows for the public to invade the private. Clearly, in both his "Satires" and poems of mutuality, Donne is deeply involved in the society he professes to renounce and cannot shut the outside world out of his mind. Moreover, in assessing Donne's "Satires", one ought not to lose sight of the didactic intent which is always said to lurk at the back of a satirisfs mind. If, as Dryden later claimed, 'the true end of satire [is] 'the amendment of vices'" (Cuddon, 827), then Donne was perhaps more interested in the fate of his community than he was willing to admit. As Dryden's 80 statement suggests, Donne may hâve felt concern on behalf of his society at least to the extent of wishing for its improvement. At any rate, this is the position defended by Kaskela in "Circles of Love", who explains that the young poet's "concern for and even love of humanity" together with his idealistic belief "that human beings will choose to imitate virtue rather than vice" were the motivating force behind the "Satires" (77). Certainly, both the young satirist and the Dean of StPaul's seem to hâve shared this love of virtue and belief in man's potential for improvement. Thus, Donne's early works hint at a humanism that would colour his later thought, notably in works such as Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, Pseudo-Martyr and Essayes in Divinity. In fact, an in-depth scrutiny of both his early verse and later prose works shows the young poet already playing with some of the concepts he would explore more fully in his later years. The idealistic vision of mankind as forming an indivisible whole conveyed through his later prose works - notably the breath-taking "No man is an lsland" in Dévotions (87) - seems in fact to inscribe itself as the logical fulfillment of a long reflection that has taken him from a considération of the ties that unité two human beings in mutual love to the relationship which relates a man to the Divine and finally to the love of humanity as a whole. If early signs of Donne's emerging humanism may be traced as far back as the "Satires", certainly, faint echoes of it also reverberate throughout the whole body of his love poetry and devotional writings. Be it through the love of a woman, of his Maker, or of mankind, it is indeed through his connection with what lies beyond the boundaries that circumscribe the self that John Donne - the lover, the priest, and the man - finds meaning and purpose. As he once pointed out in a letter to his friend Henry Goodyer, "to be no part of any body, is to be nothing" (Donne, Complète Works, 338). This letter, written in the years of unemployment following his marriage to Anne More, reveal lhat even in his most dejected moments, Donne was already leaning towards this idéal of interrelatedness and intégration he would take years to formulate - a vision of the individual as SI dissolving into the greater body of mankind, itself an intégral and yet always individual part of an order encompassing both heaven and earth. Donne's move from the investigation of the ties that bind in love and worship to the considération of sociological and political matters in later works like Pseudo-Martyr (1610) and Essayes in Divinily (1615) was correspondingly marked by a graduai departure from poetry to the exegencies of discursive texts. With the exception of Dévotions in which, as was argued in the previous chapter of the présent thesis, the method of the conceit remains central to the articulation of Donne's thought, the Metaphysical conceit as an élément of style rarely constitutes the structural backbone of his argument. In thèse works, Donne no longer deals prominently with the rendering of an aesthetic expérience either secular or religious, but rather with the exposition of a humanist vision of the world meant to rally others to his views and to quench the already heated debates then tearing England apart. The balance between the différent religious factions in Donne's time was indeed critical. As Cain explains, the nation that had lurched between several religious creeds in the forty years preceding Donne's birth - that is, between Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, and even "thoroughgoing Calvinism" - was still deeply divided between more than two camps when Donne took up the ministry (85). His awareness of the necessity to restore a certain measure of unity in the population if only to avoid civil unrest may thus hâve prompted his shift to the public mode. In works like, Pseudo-Martyr for instance, he therefore adopts an argumentative and sometimes editorial style (Raspa, Pseudo-Martyr, xiii). Although some critics hâve described this style as somewhat "dull" (Keynes, 4), Donne must hâve thought it better suited to his purpose. Hence, despite a few scattered occurrences, the conceit in his exploration of man's relationship to the rest of mankind and of society is relegated to the background. This of course is not true of his sermons in which the characteristics of the conceit as poetic image recur, but how so is the subject of another study than this thesis. 82 Nevertheless, the study of Donne's prose in question hère reveals the lasting influence of the conceit on his conception of the world and of man's place in it. If the conceit indeed contributed to shape each exercise in Dévotions in 1625, thus modulating the movements of Donne's mind from one realm of existence to the next, its influence on his thought in PseudoMartyr and Essayes in Divinity was of another kind. That is, this influence in Pseudo-Martyr and Essayes is not felt so much in the structure of his argument as in its content. Much of the thought formerly expressed through the metaphysical conceit in the poems of mutuality and devotional verse such as the "Holy Sonnets" and "La Corona" is now in a sensé replicated in Donne's investigation of the ties that unité mankind into a cohérent whole but with a use of the Metaphysical conceit emphasizing meaning rather than figure in the image. In his prose works in question, Donne as the Dean of St-Paul's in fact attempts to show how the relationship of a human being to the divine order détermines his or her relationship with human, social, political, and even religious organizations with ail the antithesis, the paradox, and the pungency of the conceit but as content rather than as image. Donne, who had previously described the ties that bind in mutual love and in worship in similar ways, now seems to envision the relationship Connecting each member of the mass of worshippers to the whole as a way of being rather than as a way of imagining. In his considération of a human being's relationship to mankind, Donne argues for the dual character of body and soûl in the human being and of his or her microcosmic représentation of the macrocosm of the state. The state itself is constituted of the members of the nation as body and the king as its soûl in the temporal universe and both the individual human and the state are each in its own way a microcosm of the macrocosm constituted by Christ and the whole of humanity. In fact, to Donne, the body of society is closely related to the divine order presided over by the Son of God. In the saving knowledge contained in the Scriptures, Donne sees a 83 justification for the order that governs the secular state, which he perceives as a replica of the divine order that groups ail men under Christ. Based on his interprétation of some passages of the Bible, Donne uses the image of the human compound of body and soûl to depict the complex web of relationships that relates an individual to the institutions that govern his society and to the rest of mankind. Through this image, which is central to his epistemological approach to the world, Donne stresses the manner in which each constituent of the nation and of mankind may affect the whole to which it belongs. Consequently, he urges his contemporaries to respect the secular and religious institutions that rule their society, and to lay aside their disagreements in order to live in accordance with Christ's message of love, peace, and charity. In this way, Donne demonstrates how one's understanding of the Scriptures and relationship to the divine order ought to guide one in his interactions with other men. Certainly, texts such as Pseudo-Martyr, Essayes in Divinity, and Dévalions upon Emergent Occasions testify to Donne's vision of interrelatedness and inscribe themselves as the fulfillment of a life-long reflection on the ties that bind in love, worship, and humanity. How so, the méditative structure of the "La Corona" sonnets helps us to understand. Together with the "Satires" (1593-1597), "La Corona" (1607?) constitutes another example of verse predating Donne's prose writings at stake in this thesis in which he explores ideas he was later to develop more fully in his prose. "La Corona" is a méditative exercise constituted of seven sonnets depicting the mind's journey through the events that hâve punctuated the life of Christ, from the Annunciation to the Ascension. Throughout this short sonnet séquence, a poet-priest persona reflects first on the "corona", a crown of poems he is writing, in the first poem and then on the six divine mysteries that hâve marked the life of his Saviour. His purpose is to corne to better grasp the significance for himself of Christ's birth, life, death on the cross, and résurrection. Through his méditation in the seven poems, the poet-priest 84 thus dérives a meaning that will later guide his steps during his passage on earth. As such, the "La Corona" sonnets constitute a perfect example protracted over several poems of how Donne could conceive of an individual as related to a whole segment of Christian history. Thèse sonnets in fact reflect the manner in which Donne describes in prose how a man's relationship with the divine order ought to guide him in his dealings with other men and with the political and religious institutions that govern his society. In "La Corona" as in Donne's later prose, the Scriptures are employed as a model upon which one may rely to assess the realities of the temporal universe, be it the life of a single individual or the hierarchy that governs a nation. As the speaker of "La Corona" reaches a higher degree of understanding, one may thus sensé Donne only one step away from the formulation of the breath-taking vision of interrelatedness which defines each and every human being as part of a nation governed by a king and of the greater body of mankind with Christ as its head. In "La Corona", Donne probes the ties that relate a poet-priest persona to the life-history of Christ by using the méditative techniques devised in the Spiritual Exercises by Ignatius Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits in the sixteenth century. In each sonnet, the poet-speaker contemplâtes a Christian mystery in order to feel its significance sensuously. In "Sonnet 1", which serves as an introduction for the whole séquence, the poet prays for Christ to reward his 'muse's white sincerity" with "A crown of glory, which doth flower always" (11.6, 8). He thus expresses his intent and sets the mood for the entire six méditations on Christian Mysteries that follow, saying: The end crowns our works, but thou crown'st our ends, For, at our end begins our endless rest, This first last end, now zealously possessed, With a strong sober thirst, my soûl attends. (11. 9-12) 85 Thèse Unes reveal the motivating force that lies behind "La Corona". The poet-priest persona will indeed attempt to understand the meaning of the life of Christ culminating in the résurrection, which our own résurrection after death in a sensé will replicate, by allowing his mind to expérience it sensuously. His soûl, "zealously possessed" (1. 11) with the object of his méditation, will thus attend the mysteries that hâve punctuated the life of Christ with a "strong sober thirst" (1. 12). Donne's choice of imagery hère highlights the sensuousness of the meditator's expérience, who is almost made to feel its significance in his flesh. The poet-priest's manner of experiencing a whole segment of Christian history is therefore reminiscent of the third part of an exercise in the Spiritual Exercises, the applicatio sensuum, which consists in "the inward application of the sensés to the picture in the imagination" so as to move the will to embrace the meaning derived from the méditation (Raspa, Dévotions, xxxiii, xxxviii). The poetspeaker will thus attempt to participate in the events that hâve punctuated the life of Christ in order to understand how this segment of Christian history may influence his own existence in the temporal world as well as his enrolment in the Book of the Elect. In this way, "La Corona" focuses on the relationship between a meditator and the object of his méditation in his effort to unravel the meaning of events recorded in the New Testament describing Christ's life and thus give meaning to human life. The poet-speaker's mind hence probes the object of his méditation sensuously in a decidedly Catholic fashion. For instance, in the third sonnet that treats of Christ's Nativity, the poet-speaker turns inward and shifts his attention from the divine mystery of the Incarnation upon which he méditâtes to his soul's expérience of it: "See'st thou, my soûl, with thy faith's eyes, how he/ Which fills ail place, yet none holds him, doth lie? (...)/ Kiss him, and with him into Egypt go" (11. 11-13). In his sensuous appréhension of the object of his méditation, the poetspeaker is made to participate in the expérience he is describing. Through the applicatio sensuum 86 of the Ignatian Exercises, Donne therefore reinforces the connection of the individual with the Christian mystery upon which he méditâtes by making him an intégral part of it. Still, it is in the sixth and seventh sonnets that the relationship between the poet-priest persona and Christ's life is most detailed and its meaning most significant. In "Sonnet 6", the speaker asks his Saviour to "Moist with one drop of thy blood, my dry soûl" (1. 1). Once more, through the use of imagery that highlights the sensuousness of the exercitant's expérience, he illustrâtes the ties that connect the speaking-persona to his Saviour's self-sacrifice for the good of mankind. The speaker's soûl shall be saved as a resuit of the Son's incarnation and life, and by the shedding of his blood on the cross, "Freed by that drop, from being starved, hard, or foui" (1.4). The poet-speaker is thus made to feel his own salvation sensuously. In "Sonnet 7", his address to Christ as "Mild lamb, which with thy blood, hast marked the path;/ Bright torch, which shin'st, that I the way may see" (11. 10-11) suggests the manner in which the expérience described in "La Corona" has changed him by moving his will to action. The poet-speaker now sees in the life and death of the Son the path leading to heaven - a path he is now resolved to take in this world so as to ascend to the next. Hence, Donne's application of methods derived from the Ignatian Exercises makes it possible for him to describe a human's sensory expérience of the significance of a whole segment of Christian history in order to highlight the relationship that ties him to the object of his méditation. As such, "La Corona" constitutes a perfect example of a work in which Donne also conceives of an individual as relatée! to a whole segment of Christian history. Therefore, through the bond that connects him to the Christian Mysteries upon which he méditâtes, the poet-priest persona of "La Corona" cornes to an understanding that moves his will and induces him to follow the path traced by Christ for him to ascend to heaven by salvation. Donne sees a comparable understanding developing in the human being as in Pseudo-Martyr, and 87 Essayes in Divinity as he considers the ties that relate each individual to the secular state, and the state to the divine order that rules both heaven and earth. That is, he uses the Scriptures as a source of insight and guidance to investigate the relationships that connect together the members of a nation and the institutions that govern them. In his argument on behalf of the secular state in Pseudo-Martyr for instance (130-134), Donne's heavy reliance on passages of the Bible hence recalls the method of "La Corona" of understanding the présent by understanding the divine order. He perceives the divine order as grouping ail men under Christ's jurisdiction and thereby as justifying the hierarchy that places a monarch at the head of a nation. In his analysis of Donne's politics, Cain indeed observes that his vision of the monarchy was conditioned by the vision of "God as king and father" presiding "over a patriarchal structure which was by définition hiérarchie" (84). A supporter of the notion of the Divine Right of Kings, Donne explains in Essayes in Divinity that ail members of a Christian state who aspire to a peaceful and religious life ought to submit to their divinely appointed king as they would submit to Christ and should follow his rule, and he justifies the rule of an earthly king as founded on the Ten Commandments God bestowed upon the Israélites in Exodus (98). Less than a few décades before the outbreak of the civil war that would oppose the Puritans to King Charles I - and at a time when the balance of power between the monarchy, the parliament, and the différent religious factions stood on the edge of a knife - Donne thus made a strong statement in support of King James I. In Pseudo-Martyr of 1610, an intricate manifesto in which Donne attempts to convince the Catholics of England to take the Oath of Allegiance to their Protestant king, his argument on behalf of the established order may also be seen as reflecting some of the ideas he had explored through the metaphysical conceit in his poetry. His vision of the monarch, of the ties that unité him to his people, and of the manner in which his subjects ought to conceive of his authority seems consistent with the search for relatedness that had characterized both his devotional poetry 88 and love lyrics. Written "at a moment of extrême political and religious tension between Rome and London", Pseudo-Martyr promûtes the notion of "loyalty to one's uni versai God, to one's Protestant king, and to one's interior self (Raspa, Pseudo-Martyr, xi-xii). In Pseudo-Martyr, Donne's conception of the monarchy reflects that of the Stuart administration, which advocated the Divine Right of kings. To him, the power wielded by the king over his subjects springs directly from the Lord, "For God inanimates every State with one power, as every man with one soûle" {Pseudo-Martyr, 133). In his investigation of the ties that unité the sovereign to his people, the human compound of body and soûl once more serves to illustrate the manner in which two éléments under Donne's scrutiny interact with one another. To him, the prince's authority over his people may indeed be compared to the power the soûl exerts over the body, and attempting to hinder or impose limitations upon him is as pointless as trying to "preclude or withdraw any facultie from that Soûle, which God had infused into the body" (133) of a human being. This Une from Pseudo-Martyr as such echoes the passage in the book of Romans from which European monarchies may hâve derived the notion of the Divine Right of Kings: "Let every soûl be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God" (13:1-2). Moreover, Cain observes that "the founding myths of Christianity", be it Lucifer's challenge of God's authority or Adam and Eve's fall from Paradise, were almost invariably "about the disastrous conséquences of disobedience" (84). The notion of total submission to the king's rule as reflected by the body's obédience to the soûl's, which is paramount in Donne's vision of the relationship uniting a monarch to his people, is rooted in the Holy Scriptures. In addition, in Pseudo-Martyr, not only does Donne justify the authority of the king as head of state, but through his comparison of the relationship uniting a monarch to his people to the ties that bind the soûl to the body, he also attempts to define this subtle knot that 89 makes a nation. The king acts therefore as the soûl of the state and, in order for the nation to live peaceably and religiously, he ought to guide his people as the immortal part of man must rule over the impulses the body for him to entertain any hope of salvation {Pseudo-Martyr, 132). Absolute obédience to the monarch is therefore necessary for the well-being of those living under him. By once more reverting to the ties that unité the spiritual to the material in man to illustrate his vision of the relationship between a monarch and his people, Donne highlights the supremacy of the king as the divinely appointed soûl of the state. Yet simultaneously, his reliance upon the human compound of body and soûl also contributes to delineate the monarch's duty to his people. For example in Pseudo-Martyr, in a référence to the relationship between the Church and the secular powers that rule his society, Donne explains that although the "Soûle can contemplate God herself, yet she can produce no exterior act without the body" (46). The king is "Soûle" and can contemplate God but unless he serves well the political entities below him that constitute his body, his contemplation is frustrated: that is, he reflects badly the divine order he is supposed to image. Such a relationship between body and soûl is indeed central to Donne's epistemology. He employs his idea of it with such consistency that some of its occurrences in both his poetry and prose when considered as a group may contribute to a better understanding of his référence to the king as the soûl of the state. Donne's allusion to the soul's reliance upon the body in Pseudo-Martyr in fact refers us back to the dialogue of the soûls in "The Ecstasy". The dialogue of thèse soûls explains to us by analogy what goes on between a king and his state. In this poem, the soûls of two lovers are united in a perfect state of communion, thus forming one soûl or "abler soûl" (1.43) that hovers above their two bodies. Still, as the lovers celebrate their spiritual union, their communion is broken by their sudden awareness of their bodies lying on the hard earth: 90 But, O alas ! so long, so far, Our bodies why do we forbear? They are ours, though not we ; we are Th' intelligences, they the sphères. We owe them thanks, because they thus Did us, to us, at first convey, Yielded their sensés' force to us, Nor are dross to us, but allay. On man heaven's influence works not so, But that it first imprints the air ; For soûl into the soûl may flow, Though it to body first repair. (...) To our bodies turn we then, that so Weak men on love reveal'd may look ; Love's mysteries in soûls do grow, But yet the body is his book. ("The Ecstasy", 11. 49-60, 69-72) The body is hère as essential to the soûl as the soûl is to the body, for it is through the body that the lovers will live out their spiritual union, and they must corne out of their ecstasy and return to it. This allusion to the relationship of interdependency that unités body and soûl has several logical implications. The lovers' bodies are necessary for them to convey the love they feel for each other, for the soûl is deprived of means to influence the outside world without the body. Similarly, the body of a virtuous man is essential to the accomplishment of his good works on earth for, as Donne points out in Essayes in Divinity, men were instructed by Christ himself to influence those surrounding them for the best - to bestow love and charity upon others (72). If the body is lost without a soûl to guide it, certainly the soûl is left with no occasion of good works without the body. Donne's use of the image of the compound of body and soûl in "The Ecstasy" may serve to put in perspective his vision of the monarch's duty to his people in the later Pseudo-Martyr. Indeed, in the light of its earlier appearance in "The Ecstasy", the récurrence of the analogy between body and soûl in Pseudo-Martyr reinforces the sensé of interdependency Donne wishes 91 to convey as existing between a king and his state. If the king must be obeyed as absolutely and as flawlessly as the body must obey the soûl, then the monarch's good works must be conveyed through his people who, as a resuit of his just rule, will live in a state of peace and happiness. In fact, Donne's view of the ties uniting a king to his subjects also reminds his reader not only of the relationship between body and soûl in "The Ecstasy", but also of the amorous microcosm described in "The Sun Rising". In the last lines of "The Sun Rising", the lady is described as a state and her lover as a prince ruling over her (1. 21). If Donne may be accused of machismo in this passage, the reader must remember that a monarch is nothing without the state he governs. Similarly, the maie lover in "The Sun Rising" could not describe himself as "ail princes" had he not been involved in a love relationship with the beloved who is "ail states" (1. 21). The king therefore dérives his kingship from his people as well as from divine decree. Moreover, as Donne explains in the eighth "Expostulation" of Dévotions, it is the king's duty to "incorporate himself in his people" (43) as the lovers of the poems of mutuality merge with one another perfectly. In other words, to Donne, the relationship uniting a monarch to his people is one of mutuality. In fact, as Donne explains in Dévotions, the divine nature of monarchs "is better expressed in their humility, then in their heighlh", when they consent to "descend, as God, to a communication of their abundances with men" (41). In his delineation of the king's duties to his people, Donne therefore perceives of him as a type of Christ. Christ manifested his divinity when he suffered the humiliation of being incarnated as a common man in order to expérience his humanity's sorrows, and the king must do likewise when his subjects grieve. To Donne, the monarch is thus never so divine as when he calls his people "his brethren, his boues, hisflesh" (Dévotions, 43). As Christ made himself flesh and blood to save mankind, so must the king descend from his supposed height enough to feel the pains that afflict his people and to take them 92 upon himself, saying: "/ hâve sinned, but thèse sheepe what hâve they done? let thine handIpray thee be against me and my fathers house" {Dévotions, 43). In Donne's mind, the king is united to his people as the soûl is related to the body and, by a further analogy, as God is bound to his children through his only son, Christ. There is a subtle knot that joins the eternal realm to the temporal constituting the universe and the links Connecting a king to his subjects is a microcosm of that knot. Without référence to a king and state, Donne had already explored the rôle of Christ as having to suffer like humanity to save it in the fifth sonnet "Crucifying" of La Corona, and his description of this rôle in the poem enlightens us as to how he treats Christ in an analogy with a king in Pseudo-Martyr. Christ, he writes, bearing "his own cross, with pain, yet by and by/ When it bears him, he must bear more and die" (11. 9-10). Hence, his vision of the relationship of this subtle knot which ties a king to his people so as to form a nation echoes some of the ideas he had explores in both his love lyrics and his devotional poetry, and is consistent with the search for relatedness that pervades most of his works. As the poet-speaker of "La Corona" finds in the life of Christ a model to guide his steps in the temporal universe, Donne thus sees in the divine order a justification for the temporal order that rules the secular state and that places the monarch above his people. In his discussion of the laws that govern the state in both Pseudo-Martyr and Essayes, he establishes a similar analogy between the Scriptures and the temporal universe so as to justify the laws that regulate the lives of his contemporaries. Donne in fact perceives a replica of God's divine Law - that is, of the Ten Commandments - in the rules and policies of the state and again as in his argument on behalf of the established order, he uses the image of body and soûl to illustrate how secular and divine Law bind earth to heaven and how civil obédience binds each individual to his nation. In Essayes in Divinity, Donne thus discusses the relationship between secular and divine Law at length. Essayes is a theological, philosophical and moral work containing two main 93 sections recording respectively his careful considération ofthe significance oftwo segments of Christian history, namely those described by the first two books ofthe Bible, Genesis and Exodus, for the modem man. His reflection on divine and secular law predictably takes place in his spéculation on the meaning ofthe events recorded in Exodus - on the punishments inflicted upon the Egyptians and the Israélites, on the significance ofGod's mercy towards them, and on his gift ofthe Ten Commandments to the Israélites. His considération ofGod's justice in the Old Testament hence leads him to reflect upon the notion of justice in seventeenth-century England. Donne hère adopts his own terminology, and désignâtes ail manifestations of divine justice in the temporal universe as "Gods Judgements", which he defines as "ail those laws and directions by which he hath informed the Judgements of his children, and by which he governes his Judgements with or against them" (Essayes, 97). In other words, Donne's définition ofthe notion of divine judgement in his society désignâtes both secular and divine rule, for God's influence manifests itself both in the realm ofthe "profane" and that ofthe "Divine" (97), although under différent guises. In both secular and religious matters, Donne's définition ofthe term "judgement" is threefold. He explains that the word "judgement" in secular matters may refer first to a faculty of the intellect or "the last act of our understanding, and a conclusive resolution"; second, to the type of practical considération men apply on a daily basis so as to make the right décisions; and third, to an act ofthe mind that "serves not only présent practice, but enlightens and almost governs posterity; and thèse are Decrees and Sentences, and judgements in courts" (97-98). Following upon his considération ofthe notion of judgement in the secular world, Donne proceeds with an enumeration of its différent meanings in divine matters. "Judgement" may hère refer, first, to God's "severe and mère justice, (...) deep and unsearchable" that éludes man's understanding; second, to the divine act ofthe mind that "signifies not mère Justice, but as it is 94 attempered and sweetened with Mercy", and thirdly to "the Judicial part of the law" or the Covenant and Commandments the Lord gave to his children, and upon which the "Talmudists" still rely to regulate their daily lives (98-99). Profane and divine judgements thus rest on a common ground that finds its source in the promulgation of God's Law in the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai in Exodus. To this first law God bestowed upon his children in the désert, "ail Laws aspire" (100) - and the edicts governing the secular state are no exception. Hence, to Donne, the wall separating the divine from the secular in légal matters is paper-thin if it exists at ail. Furthermore, Donne explains that the effect of the Ten Commandments upon the children of Israël clarifies for contemporary humans the correct nature of secular laws for the members of any given society. He indeed observes that "one benefit of the Law" for the Jews, "was that it did in some measure restore them towards the first law of Nature: For if man had kept that, he had needed no outward law" (100). Donne hère refers to this capacity man was thought to hâve at a time - in Eden - when he "was to himself a law" (100). It was indeed believed that prior to the appearance of sin on earth, man had the capacity to regulate his own behaviour according to a set of ingrained moral standards. By giving them His Law, from which ail other laws eventually grew, God provided his children once fallen with a set of external parameters upon which they could rely so as to regulate their dealings with each other. To Donne, the laws, decrees, and policies of the state serve a similar purpose as they often "avert men from doing many things, which may, in their fear, be drawn within the compass that [divine] Law" (101). In other words, state régulations constitute a set of external parameters comparable to God's divine Law upon which men may rely to order their lives and monitor their behaviour. In addition, thèse laws are intended to redress faults that fall within the scope of the Ten Commandments, and thus may at times, solely by virtue of their existence, prevent men from transgressing God's divine Decree. 95 Hence, in Essayes in Divinity Donne entertains the notions of personal judgement and secular law and of divine order governing mankind. Through his analysis of the significance of law recorded in Exodus, he demonstrates how a modem individual and a nation may be integrated into a whole segment of Christian history in which heaven and earth are involved. That Donne in both Pseudo-Martyr and Essayes in Divinity saw the divine law revealed by the Scriptures as a justification for the established order governing his society in seventeenthcentury England is évident in his discussion of the monarchy and the secular state. This is true even if in Pseudo-Martyr he expresses a few réservations as to the power of the political institutions that govern the state. Donne explains that human laws and edicts cannot be substituted for divine Law as they are issued by men who hâve natural limitations, but monarchs nevertheless are positioned to the state as the soûl is to the body. In order to illustrate his reasoning, he once more relies on the image of man as a microcosm reflecting a far greater reality. Donne states that "in every particular man considered alone, there is found a double Jurisdiction of the soûle over the body, and of the reason over the appetite" {Pseudo-Martyr, 132) and, in such a créature, the nature of each human being is a microcosm of the relations of a state to its monarch. Moreover, both the human being and his monarch are in turn together microcosms to the yet greater macrocosm of the created uni verse, even if there are things that will always remain beyond their reach within God's province. In this multitude of analogies between microcosm and macrocosm, Donne sees the influence of the monarch on the members of any given society comparable to reason operating within the human individual and, as he aptly puts it: "the power of our reason upon our appetite, is (... ) Regale Imperium; and Kings rule subjects as reason rules that" (132). In this passage, one may discern echoes of "Holy Sonnet 14" ("Batter my heart"), in which Donne's conceit of the battered town establishes a similar comparison. The poet-speaker in the sonnet tells of his fight against sin which has taken hold of 96 his heart, and begs the Lord to intervene and help him surrender to His grâce. He compares the ties uniting the poet-speaker to his Maker with the relationship that binds a usurped town and its rightful lord, and it is this lord who must overthrow the city's defences to free it from the clutch of his enemy (11. 1-6). Reason, which the poet-speaker describes as the Lord's "viceroy" (1. 7) in himself, "proves weak or untrue" (1. 8) and fails to provide him with proper guidance. Looked at in the light of the conceit of the battered town, Donne's statement in Pseudo-Martyr comparing the government of the secular state to human reason suggests that the laws and edicts of the king can in no way be substituted for the divine wisdom of the Scriptures or to God's agency upon the hearts of men. He therefore recognizes that either within an individual or in the state, reason must be aided by révélation, and that even a king must not be "too indulgent to his own Prérogative" {Pseudo-Martyr, 102). As Cain most aptly states, Donne defines "the distance between a tyrant and a monarch in terms of law" (93). lnterestingly, faint echoes of Donne's vision of political institutions and of their limitations are reverberated through King James' address to the parliament (1609) in which he declared that "ail kings that are not tyrants, or perjured, will be glad to bound themselves within the limits of their laws" (King James I, "Kings are justly called Gods"). A firm supporter of the Divine Right of Kings and opponent of any form of behaviour that could lead to civil unrest, Donne hence found in the Scriptures the means to défend and support his king, while reminding him of his human vesture and limitations. Donne's vision of a Christian's duties to the Church is therefore in several respects analogous to his conception of the duty of obédience that binds an individual to the state. In both cases, he indeed stresses the sensé of interrelatedness that ties each constituent to the whole. He conceives both of the nation and of the mass of worshippers as an organic body, presided over simultaneously by a king in this world and by Christ in the next. Furthermore, in his treatment of both relationships, Donne adopts essentially the same approach of scriptural exposition, and thus 97 relies on passages from the Bible in his reflection on both earthly and heavenly matters. Yet in his discussion of the ties that unité a Christian to the Church, Donne's choice of imagery and examples brings his reflection to a more universal level. That is, in his treatment of an individual's relationship with religious institutions, he is not solely concerned with the Church of England of which he became a minister in his mature years, but with the entire Communion of Saints, who include ail Christians living or dead in ail eras of history regardless of their origins or chosen creed. His prose writings in question in fact reveal that, in a society torn apart by quarrels raging among and between religious factions, Donne dreamed of a universal Church in which ail conflicts over theological considérations would simply dissolve in the face of the Lord's message of love and charity. In both Essayes in Divinity and Dévotions npon Emergent Occasions, Donne shows how an individual's relationship with the divine order of this universal Church presided over by Christ ought to inform his dealings with his fellow human beings. Indeed, by stressing the universality of the Christianity and the duty of love and charity incumbent upon every Christian, Donne shows how religion succeeds in moving men to good works while the secular state often appears mined in the task of preventing them from doing wrong. Despite the récent debates that hâve divided the critical world as to Donne's "sectarian affiliations" and true religious convictions (Roston, "Medidative Tradition", 48), his three prose works examined hère testify to the authenticity of his faith in the reformed Church of England. Certainly, the very existence of works such as Pseudo-Martyr suggests that, despite the strong influence of his Catholic upbringing, from his conversion to the Anglican creed and until his death , the Dean of St-Paul's, somehow sought to support "the Protestant cause" (48). Still, despite his apostasy from Catholicism and his commitment to his adopted Church, Donne did not uphold the debates that were tearing Christianity apart in the 1620s, and he quite purposefully seems to hâve refused to take sides in "the polemical wars of his day" (Levy-Navarro, 274). As 98 Roston writes, Donne in fact tried to avoid controversial issues during his ministry and "Where his personal beliefs differed from those of his adopted Church, he was careful to situate himself at the borderline of the new creed without actually crossing it" ("Méditative Tradition", 47). Hence, Donne seems to hâve been mindful of King James' admonition to the priests of the Church of England not to stir up controversy (47). However, Donne's observance of the king's wish to avoid religious récriminations seems to hâve sprung not only from his respectful attitude towards royal authority, but also from the conviction that any single Christian would better heed Christ's message of love and charity by avoiding conflicts that could disrupt the social fabric. As most of thèse disputes revolved around diverging interprétations of the Scriptures, Donne in Essayes voices his discontent against the polemicists who, "for ostentation and magnifying of their wits, excerpt and tear shapeless and insignificant rags of a word or two[from the Bible], from whole sentences, and make them obey their purpose in discoursing" (46). Thèse unscrupulous controversialists, who, through "unsincere translations", would justify their "préjudices and foreconceived opinions", and turn the Scriptures, "which are strong toyles, to catch and destroy the bore and bear which devast our Lords vineyard" into "fine cobwebs to catch tlies; And of strong gables, by which we might anker in ail storms of Disputation and Persécution" make "threads of silkworms" (46). Those who manipulate the word of God to force it into arguments serving no other ends but their own do not contribute to the enlightenment of ail Christians, but rather weaken Christianity by turning an instrument of peace into one of destruction. The word of God ought not to be used for the self-gratification of polemicists, for such uses of the Holy Scriptures distort their purpose. Donne compares thèse polemicists to a General who, "having at last conveyed a town, yet not nearly by force, but upon this article, That in sign of subjection they should admit him to take away one row of stones round about their wall, chose to take the undermost row, by which the whole wall 99 ruined" (47). To him, dissemblers who indulge in futile wars over a word or a comma in the exposition of the Scriptures threaten the very foundations of Christianity - the Word of God. They are to the Church as the gênerai of the taie he talks about and, as a resuit of their ruthless manipulation of the written divine word, they may cause "the building of this great patriarchal Catholick [i.e. universal] Church, of which every one of us is a little chapel" (47), to collapse. Clearly, to Donne, the Scriptures ought to remain unpolluted by religious quarrels, and those interested in their study ought to avoid those topics that may cause dissent, for such disputes run contrary to Christ's message of love and charity, and contradict the very nature of the Church, which unités ail worshippers under one head, Christ. To the poet who, in "Show me dear Christ, thy spouse so bright and clear", describes the Church as a woman "Who is most true, and pleasing to thee [Christ] then/ When she is embraced and open to most men" (11. 13-14), Christ's dominion in the temporal universe spreads far beyond the frontiers set up by the différent religious factions of Europe. As Donne himself explains in a letter written to Henry Goodyer well before he took the ministry: "You know 1 never fettered nor imprisoned the word Religion (...) in a Rome, or a Wittemberg, or a Genevcf {Letters to Severall Persons ofHonour, 29). To him, the différent branches of Christianity "are ail virtual beams of one Sun" (29). To Cain, religious tolérance is the very "cornerstone of Donne's politics" and reinforces another constant in him, which is "his passionate belief in the unity of humanity" (86). Under this one sun, ail Christians, Protestants and Catholics alike, are brothers and sisters and form "One flock" under the guidance of "one shepherd" (Essayes, 56). Nevertheless, in Essayes, Donne recognizes that Christ's flock, although being one under him, is subdivided, as his sheep are "not in one place, nor form" (56). Yet even "that which was strayed and alone, was his sheep", and ought therefore to be considered his children as "any flock which hearken to his voice" (56). 100 To Donne, both Christians and non-Christians are part of the greater body of mankind governed by Christ regardless of their religious beliefs. Indeed, in Essayes, his considération of the plurality of names in the Bible to refer to a single individual leads him to reflect on the diversity existing within this body of humanity governed by Christ. He explains that "if Esau, Edom, and Seir were but one man (...) so Synagogue and Church is the same thing and of the Church, Roman and Reformed and ail other distinctions of place, Discipline, or Person, but one Church, journeying to one Hierusalem, and directed by one guide, Christ Jésus" (58). Donne's inclusion hère of the Jews as part of this Church presided over by Christ is significant. His ail encompassing vision of the universal Church leaves no one in the Judeo-Christian world out, and brings ail forms of worship under one banner. The members of this Church ought therefore to seek unity rather than disparity and to envision themselves as brothers and sisters seeking a common goal. Certainly, Donne's views with regard to the religious institutions of his time set him apart from the polemicists whose discourses were not only a threat to the Church of England, but also to ail the other branches of Christianity, new and old across the face of Europe. While Donne expounds his conception of Christianity in Essayes at length, it is in Dévalions upon Emergent Occasions that he expresses his vision of interrelatedness among men, both Christian and non-Christian, most powerfully. In this highly méditative work, he explains why and how each and every individual's dealings with his fellow human beings ought to be informed by his relationship to the divine order of Christ's universal Church. In the seventeenth 'Méditation", the speaker of Donne's Dévalions hears the sound of the tolling bell that was rung in English parishes when a parishioner was gravely ill, and the sound of the bells at his own illness inspires him to the following thoughts: Perchance hee for whom this Bell tolls, may be so ill, as that he knows not it lalls for him; And perchance 1 may thinke my selfe so much better then 1 am, as that they who are about mee, and see my state, may hâve caused it to toll for mee, and 1 101 know not that. The Church is Catholike, universall, so are ail her Actions; AU that she does, belongs to ail. When she baptizes a child, that action concernes mee; for that child is thereby connected to that Head which is my Head, and engraffed into that body, whereof I am a member. And when she buries &Man, that action concernes me; Ail mankinde is of one Author and is one volume; when one Man dies, one Chapter is not (orne out of the booke, but translated into a better language; and every Chapter must be so translated (Dévotions, 86) It is by virtue of this sensé of belonging to the wholly divine order of the great body of Christ's universal Church which Donne describes hère that an individual may conceive of himself as closely related to the rest of mankind, for ail men share in God through their common origin. In the tolling bell, which "calls not upon the preacher onely, but upon the congrégation" (86), Donne sees a symbol of the intangible ties Connecting a man simultaneously to God and mankind. The sound of the bell thus reminds the sick man Donne of his frail human nature and yet of his inclusion in the divine order presided over by Christ to which ail human beings belong. To Donne, it is in fact the whole of humanity which hearkens to the sound of the tolling bell. In their dealings with one another, human beings ought therefore to be ever mindful of this relationship which connects every one of them to the whole, for No Man is an Iland, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent a part of the maine; if a C/odbee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as if aMannor ofihyfriends, or oîthine owne were; Any Mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee. (Dévotions, 87) Ail men are related, and in the fate of one individual, in the tolling bell that tells of one man's passing, is a message that ail of them must heed. To Donne therefore, "communities are Bodies like human bodies" (Sherwood, 17), which together form one great body under Christ. Donne's description of the relationship that binds ail human beings to the rest of mankind in thèse passages echoes the link that he sees existing between the onlooker to the lovers in "The Ecstasie". In "The Ecstasie" there are the two lovers at the heart of the poem's emotional and spiritual message, but there is also a "third party", a passerby onlooker, who is hypnotically transported by his sight of the lovers. Presti-Russel in fact sees in the relationship uniting the lovers to each other and to the onlooker a symbol of "the idéal of communion so often dramatized by Donne, with its manifest dissolution of dualities", which "frequently entails the dissolution of individual différence, the absorption of the self into a larger whole" (283). As the boundaries circumscribing the lovers' selves disappear, making it possible for their soûls to merge with each other in a state of perfect communion, the onlooker too reaches beyond the limitations of his own individuality and, by witnessing the lovers' "dialogue of one" (1. 74), parts from them "far purer than he came" (1. 28). As the lovers and the onlooker are connected by intangible ties which enable them to share in a common expérience, so does the speaker of Dévotions feel his own inclusion in the greater body of mankind. Through the bond that relates him to the rest of humanity, the speaker hence apprehends the joys and sorrows of other men in the same way that the onlooker in "The Ecstasie" responds to the union of the lovers. As ail members of mankind are so closely related, it is therefore no wonder that Donne urged compassion and kindness towards ail men regardless of their origin or faith. In The Melaphysics o/Love, Smith indeed reports a few lines from one of Donne's Sermons delivered in 1622, in which he reacted to the massacre of Natives by men of the British Virginia Company established in the colonies that became the United-States. In this sermon, Smith writes, Donne reportedly "disregarded the clamour [by the English imperialists] for the Indians to be put down like beasts, and urged our duty to our fellow men in whatever condition we find them" (212). Certainly, in his message to the members of the Virginia Company, Donne was only being consistent both with his vision of interrelatedness among men and with Christ's message of love and charity in poems like "The Ecstasy" and in his later prose works. Thus, by advocating this vision of a universal Church presided over by Christ, of a Church where ail conflicts over theological issues or individual différences would ultimately dissolve tor ail to enjoy a state of perfect communion with each other and with Christ, the idéal of dissolution conveyed throughout the whole body of Donne's writings culminâtes in a unified vision of création. Thus, the influence of the Metaphysical conceit that Donne so heartily used in his poems as a young man about town, with its quest for establishing relationships, may be felt in Donne's investigation of the ties that unité the members of a nation to their political and religious institutions. In Pseudo-Martyr, Essayes in Divinity and Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, one may indeed catch a glimpse of some of the ideas he had expressed through the Metaphysical conceit in a period as early as his so-called 'secular' poems. The idéal of the loss of the self in a greater whole depicted in Donne's prose works dealt with in this thesis may hence be seen as an extension of the imagery of the microcosm and macrocosm of the "Songs and Sonnets" and of course of the Holy Sonnets and "La Corona". The relationship between the lovers of the poems of mutuality, and the yet other relationship between the poet-priest persona of the Holy Sonnets and Dévotions and his little world of grâce, are microcosms of the wider universe in which somehow they try to lose themselves. If, as Williamson suggests, the lover in Donne's poetry is in the priest as the priest may be discerned in the lover (51), certainly, both of them may be perceived in the humanism of his prose writings. There, Donne formulâtes a vision of mankind as closely related to a divine order of which the nation is but a reflection; mankind is as an organic body through which the fate of each and every individual may be felt by the whole. Based on this idéal, he urges civil obédience, respect for the written divine word, and the duty of love and charity incumbent upon every Christian. Through thèse writings, Donne in fact seems to hâve been trying only to convey to his contemporaries the message that underlies the entire New Testament, which may be summed up by thèse words uttered by the Lord Jésus: "That ye love one another, as I hâve loved you, that ye also love one another" (John 13:34). By proposing 104 the Christian idéal of love and charity, Donne was only being consistent with the vision of interrelatedness that had pervaded most of his poetry from the 1590s onwards. In Pseudo-Martyr, Essays in Divinily and Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions, he thus extends his hand outward in an ultimate gesture of love to reconcile his nation with itself and set his contemporaries on the path traced by their Saviour. Conclusion "That subtle knot, which mnkes us man" Throughout this thesis, we hâve sought to delineate the rôle played by the Metaphysical conceit in the formulation of Donne's vision of a unified cosmos. The conceit as an élément of style that probes into the nature of the relationships that unité two sets of éléments is central to his epistemological approach to human expérience. Indeed, Donne envisions the human individual as caught in an intricate web of relationships that confer meaning and purpose to his own existence. In fact, to Donne, the individual self is defined almost exclusively in terms of the manner in which it relates to other human beings, to the divine, or to the political and religious institutions that regulate his society. This focus on relationships throughout the works discussed in the présent thesis thus reinforces Donne's unwavering belief in humanity as forming an indivisible whole. Whether as the lover of the "Songs and Sonnets", as the repentant persona of the "Holy Sonnets", or as the humanist of his later prose works, Donne seems to be constantly reaching out towards something lying outside the boundaries that circumscribe the self. In the vast majority of the works analyzed in the présent thesis, Donne îs in fact almost invariably concerned with the représentation of an idéal state of communion with an outside reality that involves the dissolution of the individual self into a greater whole and the resolution of dualities. This idéal of interrelatedness is articulated in terms of the relationship that relates the soûl to the body - in itself a reflection of the manner in which the spiritual and the material interact in the macrocosm of the created universe. Through the Metaphysical conceit, Donne addresses this "subtle knot" the intangible bond - that ties together the différent constituents of the cosmos which he sees reflected in the invisible ties that link a lover to his beloved, the worshipper to his God, or the human individual to the rest of mankind. As Donne probes the ties that unité the human individual to other human beings, to the divine, or even to the macrocosm of the created universe, the Metaphysical conceit is vital to the formulation of his thought. In the "Songs and Sonnets" and the "Holy Sonnets", the conceit constitutes the backbone of Donne's argument, for it is through his handling of this literary device that he brings together the sensuous and the spiritual in an image that renders an often abstract and intangible reality apprehensible to the human mind. As Donne départs from the realm of poetry in his later years to dévote himself to the writing of highly philosophiçal treatises and religious exegesis, the influence of the conceit is felt more in the ideas he expresses than in the structure of his argument. That is, Donne in Pseudo-Martyr, Essayes in Divinity, or even Dévotions upon Emergent Occasions invests the entire wealth of insight and wisdom he has gained through the writing of his love lyrics and devotional works into the formulation of his vision of the relationship that relates an individual to the institutions that regulate his society and to the rest of mankind. Like the "three-personed God" (1.1) in "Batter my heart", the lover, the priest, and the humanist in Donne therefore émerge in his prose as both a tripartite and a single 107 entity, and each part contributes to a better understanding of the whole - a reality that reflects his unified vision of the cosmos. Bibliography Cited in the présent thesis. 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