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The Analysis Of The Profane And Sacred In John Donne's Poems "The Flea" And "Holy Sonnet 14"

John Donne who is considered to be one of the wittiest poets of the seventeenth century writes the metaphysical poem "The Flea" and the religious poem "Holy Sonnet 14". In both poems, Donne explores the two opposing themes of physical and sacred love; in his love poem "The Flea," he depicts the speaker as an immoral human being who is solely concerned with pleasing himself, where as in his sacred poem "Holy Sonnet 14" Donne portrays the speaker as a noble human being because he is anxious to please God. In the book The Divine Poems, writer Helen Gardner supports this fact as she argues, "His Maker is more powerfully present to the imagination in his divine poems than any mistress is in his love poems" (Pg-2). Overall, it seems that both these poems operate on many different levels as the rhyme scheme in both poems varies from iambic tetrameter and pentameter to the Petrarchan sonnet form. Donne employs wit as well as complex paradoxes, which are symbolic of the strong opposing......


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Approximate Word Count: 1874
Approximate Pages: 8 (250 words per double-spaced page)

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  1. The Analysis Of The Profane And Sacred In John Donne's Poems...

    The Analysis of the Profane and Sacred in John Donne's Poems "The Flea" and "Holy Sonnet 14" John Donne who is considered to be one of the wittiest poets of the seventeenth