Donne's Bio
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THE
PROSE WORKS OF
JOHN DONNE
*'
vt^^&iiJt, 4
(%C. -U/^C
ttteJ^
ff,
try jQut*cv
*-*y
'
U^.
r
*\ *\
t^Av>^ x
CJW5. *
Musaeo 131)
Study
of the
PROSE WORKS OF
JOHN DONNE
BY
EVELYN M. SIMPSON
SECOND EDITION
OXFORD
AT THE CLARENDON
1948
PREFACE
the
first
books, pamphlets,
G202322
PNSAS
Cfllf
PREFACE
vi
it
to
am much
my
most
incisive.
9
from Mr. Wilfred Merton's manuscript, now contains a list
of the available seventeenth-century
manuscripts of Donne's
works. Professor G. R. Potter's edition of the sermon from a
manuscript in Harvard College Library has provided a better
text than that in the
Merton manuscript.
thanks are due to the
Principal and Fellows of Newnham College, Cambridge, for the grant of a Research Fellow
ship to enable me to produce an edition of Donne's sermons
and also to complete the revision of the
present work. The
first edition contained
my acknowledgements to those who
My
a quarter of a
century ago. In the correction of
past mistakes and the addition of new material I have been
helped^me
PREFACE
vii
M.
S.
CONTENTS
Donne's Letter in the Bodleian Manuscript of 'Biathanatos^
,
(MS. e Musaeo 131)
frontispiece
I.
II.
INTRODUCTION
page
III.
DONNE
AS A
MAN OF LETTERS
IV.
DONNE
AS A
THEOLOGIAN
V.
VI.
AND RENAISSANCE
DONNE'S THOUGHT
(i)
VIII.
IX.
X.
....
.
MEDIEVAL
ELEMENTS
12
44
73
IN
112
JUVENILIA
(ii)
VII.
132
BIATHANATOS
149
159
ESSAYS IN DIVINITY
178
203
.241
XI.
THE SERMONS
255
XII.
THE LETTERS
291
APPENDIX
APPENDIX
.........
SERMONS
APPENDIX
INDEX
B.
C. PROSE
CHRONOLOGICAL
WORKS
ARRANGEMENT OF
WORKS ATTRIBUTED
TO. DONNE
337
DONNE'S
339
357
361
INTRODUCTION
the
John Hayward's
Nonesuch Donne: Complete Poems and Selected Prose carried
the process a stage farther by including large portions of the
prose with a popular edition of the poems.
As all this material became available, men began to realize
that Donne was a master of language both in verse and prose.
There
C
is
a vital
Is
love or wonder'
the mind. Prose
these are
fast in
Donne
has
many
sentences
is
*,
aUJDivinity
which stick
arrows
winged
.
but
bell tolls
It tolls
Side
side
Mankinde?
'Methusakm, with
rome of
SI02
all his
INTRODUCTION
with
all
gathered
Again,
shall see my soule rise out
Lily in Paradise, out of red earth, I
an
of his blade, in a candor, and in
innocence, contracted there,
Father/
his
the
of
in
sight
acceptable
'like a
INTRODUCTION
criticism of
De Quincey
He is at the
him
at his best
faultless painter', or
Tennyson's
Maud
moments.
c
Sarto,
the
'Faultily faultless,
He
is
him always
outlets,
difficult.
own words he
ln
self".
his
[Donne's]
He would
startle
INTRODUCTION
4
difficult coasts
And
communion of two
souls:
We like
And we
said
nothing
all
the day.
number
He
compares
love within
a gingerbread figure,
a
of
the
Newfoundland,
compass, God. And one can
stationary leg
never doubt his sincerity. . . .'*
an
.angel,
the
Gosse ends
'And
of
Mary Magdalen,
account of Donne's
life
we leave him,
so
human
was, in
his
five,
beings, as
Nation,
xii.
825.
ii.
290-1.
INTRODUCTION
when Donne
INTRODUCTION
O my insatiate soule,
And
.
He was
still
seeking,
when
few years
later
he implored;
clean
Even
2
3
will
be done.*
INTRODUCTION
am two
For
fooles, I
loving,
and
know,
for saying so
In whining Poetry; 1
To morrow when
like
phemies:
of the Virgin Marie
it
The
Woman s
trifle
FooU
(ibid. 16).
INTRODUCTION
He kept
Hee
Taught
To
his loves,
Thomas Carew's
Here
The
Here
it
home
lies a
fit
universall
lies
Apollo's
Gods
Priest. 2
own
impurity of his
1
Walton
2
x.
own imagination,
An
380).
INTRODUCTION
from the
half-expressed
which he is describing. 2
fear that
He
any
it
may be
his
own
fate
of Hell in no
physical or material torments but in the agony of a soul cast
out from the presence of God, which
might have been its
and light.
Yet these dark moments did not last. Donne
pressed on,
in spite of fears and
forebodings, to the goal of his pilgrimage.
We learn from many passages that he found inexpressible
life
When
tip
his
the
own voice;
mouth of the burning
"Especially
and so
LXXX Sermons,
76. 777.
INTRODUCTION
io
comfort for
God
now
and
his prayers
his bedside it
INTRODUCTION
He
11
II
is
reflectedLso....^.fip.^y
1>n
like
Donne,
^^-wn r^3
is
a necessary
preliminary to a right understanding of the work
itself. He stands at the
opposite pole from a dramatist like
Shakespeare, whose individuality is merged for most readers
LXXX
and would
Letters
to
Severall Persons
of Honour written by John Donne* edited by
Sir Tobie Mathew's CoUtction
of Letters (published
See^also
contains a number of Donne's letters.
1660),
which
iii.
DONNE'S LIFE
13
who became
1574. According
descended from a very ancient
family in Wales' perhaps the Dwnns of Dwynn in Radnor
shire, but more probably the Dwnns of Kidwelly. 3 Donne
came, however, of a distinguished family on his mother's
side.
She was the daughter of John Heywood,
epigram
matist and interlude-writer, and his wife
Joan, the sister
of William RasteU, the famous jurist, who was the son of
to
Walton he was
John
'lineally
Rastell, controversialist
Heywoods had
all
sister
Romane
Doctrine'* 4
Donne's father died in 1575/6. Walton says that 'his mother
and those to whose care he was committed were watchful
to improve his knowledge, and to that end
him
appointed
1946.
3
Pseudo-Martyr, Sig.
11 1,
DONNE'S LIFE
14
Heywood, an Oxford
scholar,
obliged,
He
imagin'd Martyrdome'.
1
To
this early
training
of geometrical
imagery in
The
hungry
poems
(e.g.
Upon
Heywood's
of
Biathanatos, p. 17.
DONNE'S LIFE
15
As soon
Donne found
as to its tenets, led him away from any Christian communion, yet all
the while he nourished a kind of dormant religiosity, ready to break
forth into flame as soon as the tumult of the senses and the enraged
2
curiosity of life had been somewhat assuaged by experience.'
1
I. A. Shapiro
published the results of his detailed study of the Black
Books and Admission Registers of Lincoln's Inn in two articles, 'John Donne
and Lincoln's Inn 1591-94', in T.L.S, 16 and 23 Oct, 1930.
Gosse,
i.
27, 28.
DONNE'S LIFE
16
and profound
4
I596. At any rate, in June 1596 Donne engaged himself
for foreign service in the expedition to Cadiz, and he was
which
is
Walton,
An
1.
46 (Grierson,
i.
377)-
See
also
DONNE'S LIFE
17
to Sir
was
its
physical wit
f*
He
cries
at their best
Mummy,
possest.
1
See the articles by Sir Edmund Chambers and Sir Herbert Grierson in
Modern Language Review, v. 492; vi. 153, 397, and Grierson, Poems, ii. 141.
Sparrow (op. cit. 125-7) 8ums UP t ^ie results of their discussion.
2
Ben Jonson affirmed that Donne wrote aU his best pieces (of poetry) ere
s
old'.
DONNE'S LIFE
i8
Or
again:
If them beest borne to strange sights.
Things invisible to see,
And
sweare
No where
Lives a
woman
true,
and
faire.
Though
Though shee were
And last,
till
true,
her,
letter,
Yet shee
Will bee
False, ere I
wonder by
my troth,
Did, tillwelov'd?*
found with
is
Grierson,
i.
8.
absorbing
Ibid. 7.
DONNE'S LIFE
19
Donne
De Quincey
is the
solitary critic of note who has praised
diamonds
'Massy
poem.
compose the very substance of
his poem on the Metempsychosis, thoughts and descriptions
which have the fervent and gloomy sublimity of Ezekiel or
Aeschylus, whilst a diamond dust of rhetorical brilliancies is
strewed over the whole of his occasional verses and his prose.' 3
Most readers, however, will agree with Grierson: 'In no
poem is the least attractive side of Donne's mind so clearly
revealed, that aspect of his wit which to some readers is more
repellent, more fatal to his claim to be a poet, than too
subtle ingenuity or misplaced erudition the vein of sheer
this
De Quincey
Drummond
of Hawtbornden,
8.
DONNE'S LIFE
20
More.
Donne's marriage
course of his
life.
spent much of her time at her aunt's house, and was in fact
considered almost as an adopted daughter. When Lady
Egerton died in January 1600, Ann remained at York House
and managed the establishment, though she was then only
much
'with
3
great Ornament'.
Ann were
naturally thrown
own
Thomas announced
his
Brackley.
p. 17.
DONNE'S LIFE
21
by either party
During 1601 Ann came up to town several
and Donne contrived to meet her in private. At last
.
times,
Sir
3J:
thls,tim<* fitnrJ
high
in
inducingJEgertpn to dismiss
service, _b]^tjlspm caused Donne and, the two
he
to
arrested-^mdthTOW
Brookes
of breaking the civiljind the canon law by marrying a girl
without heJ^iather's consent. There followed a wretched
period of uncertainty for Donne. Sir George tried to secure
a legal decree rendering the marriage null and void, but
Donne's penitence and entreaties at last caused him to
withdraw his opposition, and after some months the marriage
was confirmed by the ecclesiastical courts, and in process of
time Ann, who had been kept in durance at her father's
house, was allowed to join her husband.
Their prospects, however, were not bright. Donne's
reckless living had squandered most of his property and
involved him in heavy debts ; Sir George refused to give his
daughter anything more substantial than his blessing: Donne
had lost his post as the Lord Keeper's secretary, and though
t_p
DonneJromJbis
Sir George, now that his anger was appeased, besought his
brother-in-law to take back the culprit, Egerton only
answered that it was at Sir George's request that he had
Dr. John Sampson suggests that George Gerrard, who was a close
may have formed the link between Donne and the Earl
friend of Donne's,
vii.
94).
DONNE'S LIFE
22
and
of passionate petitioners'.
For some time Sir Francis Woolley, a kinsman of Ann's
and a friend of Donne's, gave them a home at his own house.
After a while Donne rented a small house at Mitcham and
divided his time between it and rooms in the Strand, where
he collected material from canon law and the Fathers for
the use of Thomas Morton, afterwards Bishop of Durham,
who was then engaged in controversy with the Roman
party.
Donne's
He
now
comfort;
they were to a certain extent dependent on the
this time. 1
to them in
charity of friends, and as children were born
it became increasingly difficult to make both
succession
rapid
ends meet. The house at Mitcham was small and damp.
1
'I
fire side in
my
Parler,
and
in the noise
of three game
some children; and by the side of her, whom because I have transplanted
into a wretched fortune, I must labour to disguise that from her by all such
honest devices, as giving her my company, and discourse, therefore I steal
from her, all the time which I give this Letter, and it is therefore that I take
so short a list, and gallop so fast over it.* Lettets (265 x), pp. *37> 138.
'Sir you would pity me if you saw me write, and therefore will pardon me
if I write no more: my pain hath drawn my head so much awry, and holds it
so, that mine eie cannot follow mine hand I receive you therefore into my
prayers, with mine own weary soul, and commend myself to yours*' Ibid,,
;
cannot say the waightyest, but truly) the saddest lucubration and
nights passage that ever I had. For it exercised those hours, which, with
extreme danger of her, whom I should hardly have abstained from recom
pensing for her company in this world, with accompanying her out of it,
encreased my poor family with a son.' Ibid., p. 147,
'I have occasion to sit late some
nights in my study, (which your books
*It is (I
make a prety
though
am
pp
31, 32.
DONNE'S LIFE
Donne
letters
suffered
'from
from frequent
23
illness,
my hospital at Mitcham'.
There came
circumstances. In 1607
as
think
though not eminent, may not, being assisted with Gods grace and
humility, render me in some measure fit for it: but I dare make so
dear a friend as you are my Confessor; some irregularities of
my life,
visible to some men, that though I have, I thank
God,
have been so
be reconcilable to that
rule, it
is
at this time so
perplexed about
it,
,'
Gosse points out that the wording of this speech has not
the peculiar ring of Donne's style, but no doubt need there
fore be thrown on the general trustworthiness of the narra
tive. The speeches which Walton records are
clearly not
but
the
substance
of
reported verbatim,
general
represent
Donne's conversations reproduced in Walton's own phrases,
though the use of the first person is retained throughout.
1
The account
his Life of
LXXX
DONNE'S LIFE
24
161, 162,
a ertain
Gosse,
l6
i.
J^
?,
father in
God
Walking Libra
Donne ,
DONNE'S LIFE
25
some
details to
Tor
his
(i.e.
Walton's account.
Daughter of
Secretaries place
most of his own
all
this
.',
DONNE'S LIFE
26
when
King James
his
it
am
restore
2
it
then.'
DONNE'S LIFE
27
one not
easily
Emigration
mind as
a possible
from
his
in literature a
won
Litany
When wee
Only
are
to vent wit,
real
James
DONNE'S LIFE
28
or there
is
Nor
in
since that I
Must dye
To
use
my
Thus by
at last,
'tis
best,
selfe in jest
fain'd deaths to
visiting
Grierson,
I.
39.
Donne composed
*
Ibid. 18.
DONNE'S LIFE
29
diplomatic post.
It has repeatedly been stated that Donne took an active
part in the proceedings of the divorce suit which the Countess
of Essex brought against her husband in 1613 in order that
she might marry Rochester. This statement is due to a
confusion of John Donne with Sir Daniel Donne or Dunne,
D.C.L., who was then Dean of Arches, and was one of the
commissioners who tried the Essex divorce case. In the
Harleian Manuscripts (MS. 39, fol. 416-31) there is a
'Discourse written by S r Daniel! Dunn doctor of the civell
Lawe of the whole prosecution of the Nullitie betweene
the Earle of Essex and his wife the Lady Frauncis Howard'.
There is also a paper in the Stowe MSS. Parliamentary
Record, no. 95, 'Miscellaneous legal collections' (Hist. MSS.
Comm.y Report 8, part iii, p. 226), headed Dr. Donne's
compendium of the whole course of proceeding in the nullity
of the marriage of the Earl of Essex and the Lady Frances
Howard 5 Dr. Donne is here Daniel Donne again; John
Donne did not receive the doctorate till 1615. Gosse ascribed
both these papers to John Donne, and devoted a number of
pages (vol. ii. 19-28) to what he thought to be Donne's
complicity in a shameful intrigue, although he described it
as *a subject which the biographer of Donne would willingly
c
DONNE'S LIFE
3o
The
by the
countess.
condemned
April
5
7 June 1614. It appears from a letter to Goodyer that
him
Donne's constituency was offered
by the Master of the
Edward Herbert had
Sir
Rolls, Sir Edward Phelips, and that
also offered him a seat. During the short life of this parlia
ment Donne was a member of several committees, but there
is no record of his taking
part in a debate. The speedy
dissolution of Parliament was a blow to Donne's political
hopes. His rather servile expressions of devotion to Somerset
failed to procure him any office. According to Walton, the
favourite asked King James to bestow on Donne the post
of a clerk of the Council who had lately died, but the king
refused his request, saying: *I know Mr. Donne is a learned
Gosse went so far as to conjecture (ii. 87) that Donne's supposed activity In
the nullity suit might have hindered his preferment to a bishopric in later years.
2
Athen&um, 1 1 Nov. 1899, followed by a note in the same, 1 6 Dec. 1899.
3 Letters
*
T.L.S., lo Mar. 1932, p. 172.
(1651), p. 1 80.
5 Letters
(1651), pp. 169-71, Shapiro has given the first satisfactory
explanation of a passage which had puzzled Donne's biographers.
DONNE'S LIFE
31
DONNE'S LIFE
32
struggles of heart
and
will,
thy Mercy, or advancing this before that. And as, though thy self
hadst no beginning thou gavest a beginning to all things in which thou
wouldst be served and glorified; so, though this soul of mine, by which
I partake thee, begin not now,
yet let this minute, O God, this happy
minute of thy visitation, be the beginning of her conversion, and
shaking away confusion, darknesse, and barrennesse; and let her now
produce Creatures, thoughts, words, and deeds agreeable to thee.
let her not produce them, O God, out of any
contemplation,
cannot
(I
say, I da a, but) Chimera of my worthinesse, either because
I am a man and no worme, and within the
pale of thy Church, and
not in the wild forrest, and enlightned with some glimerings of Nat urall
knowledge; but meerely out of Nothing: Nothing pre[e]xistent in her
1
selfe, but by power of thy Divine will and word,'
And
or
done against thy known and revealed will. Thou hast set up
many
and kindled many lamps in mee; but I have either blown
candlesticks,
that
real change.
He
stated; 'There
is
DONNE'S LIFE
them
Thou
33
mercy,
To
as I
my
mee
mee
London. 5
Now',
says Izaak
Walton,
'the English Church had gain'd a second St. Austine, for, I think, none
was so like him before his Conversion : none so like St. Ambrose after
it
and
if his
infirmities
of the one,
his age
had the
excellencies of the other, the learning and holiness of both. And now
all his studies which had been occasionally diffused, were all concentred
he had a new calling, new thoughts, and a new
in Divinity.
Now
2
3
Dedicatory
epistle to Devotions
A
by John Hayward in the
Nonesuch Donne, shows that the exact date was 23 Jan. The Bishop of
London was John King, father of Henry King, who later became Donne's
friend and poetic disciple.
5102
n
DONNE'S LIFE
34
each troubled
tidings of Remission to repenting Sinners; and peace to
and
care
all
with
himself
these
he
soul. To
diligence ; and now,
applyed
such a change was wrought in him, that he could say with David,
Oh how amiable are thy Tabernacles^ O Lord God of Hosts! Now he
declared openly, that when he required a temporal, God gave him a
to be a door-keeper in the
spiritual blessing. And that, he was now gladder
house of Godj then he could be
ments* 1
His
first
to
at
Paddington, then a
and the
village outside London. It has not been preserved,
earliest of Donne's sermons which we possess was that
2
preached on 30 April 1615, before the queen at Greenwich.
In the spring of 1616 he was presented to the living of
reached the
1
ways.
Though Donne had not yet
of
his power as a preacher, his
height
This
is
many
full
p. 37.
n.
ii.
no,
Donne
it after
l$4> 155,
speaks of 'the
Mrs.
Donned
DONNE'S LIFE
35
1
He speaks of sin as
bondage and
flesh,
it
and the
any of
can.ati.11
loathes
a thin
devil haveliad
his hearers.
lust as wdLaa-.th.ev.
He
and
has ]rnna^^TTihi>iVvn.
Ifcjs
apartjromj^j^^^
as"much^ower over
no
prirlp ;
as
the
over
"hal-r^rl.,
wh o
h a a, 1 ved
has sinned and
cloit(giedjceclii aft
.....
him
,i
who
...struggled,
ofjpsace.
loveliness. 2
LXXX
XXVI
LXXX Sermons,
12. 123.
DONNE'S LIFE
36
A holy thirsty
fed,
But why
Dost wooe
And
My
But
whom
2
3
241,
i.
330.
DONNE'S LIFE
infancy. On her death
assurance never to bring
37
'a
voluntary
He
died in 1639.
Donne married
Bridget
Physic (Gosse,
ii.
297).
DONNE'S LIFE
38
The Emperor
Palatine. 1
made
December
it
was
sovereign,
crowned
and
at
after
Prague
late in 1619,
congregation.
XXVI
Walton,
An
Donne (Grierson,
i.
377).
DONNE'S LIFE
39
Latin.
Another
close friend
or the Rev,
DONNE'S LIFE
4o
were
was
full
say of him,
Thus the
home
An Elegie
W.
Milgate showed that in the summer of 1628 Donne was associated with
the Bishops of Ely and St. Davids, and with Sir Charles Caesar and others
who were commissioned to examine the proceedings of a Prerogative Court
of Canterbury in a lawsuit. In June 1629 *he sat at Lambeth on a commission
consisting of Laud, himself, and the Bishops of Winchester and Norwich,
to decide a dispute which had broken out between the
Bishop of Salisbury
and the Dean and Chapter of that diocese' (Gosse, iL 262-3)*
DONNE'S LIFE
41
it
him onely
much
doubted
so
flesh as
his strength to
XXVI Sermons,
p. 71.
26. 411. (Deaths Dutll> pp. 42, 43.)
DONNE'S LIFE
42
lowed.
fol
last
He
employments.
stanza to the
itself felt
from the
last.
And what
By
Therefore that he
may
raise
Professor G. C.
poem was
Grierson,
i.
368, 369,
BONNE'S LIFE
43
And
satisfied
LXXX Sermons,
1640),
sig.
6, verso.
Ill
DONNE
OF
all
AS A
MAN OF LETTERS
Donne
know the
of his
life is
and
friends,
who was
last resort
also
or biographer.
And
with
commentator
lack of artistry,
flaws
century literature.
If, however, we admit frankly that we shall never solve
the ultimate riddle of Donne's
genius, we can yet learn
much from the study of his mental
and of the
development
which influenced him. As a man
fascinating figure. He came of a literary
of letters he
is
45
we
To Mr. S. B. (Grierson,
I.
MS.
212).
on
JOHN DONNE
46
Wotton. There
is
French literature
earlier work.
also
An Essay
on Donne's
poor attempt at a form
had a considerable
of Valour
is
effect
G4
Ignatius
iii,
p. 58.
pp. 316-17.
Keynes, op. cit., no. 317, and Harvard College Library. Sotheby has
advertised a copy of Guicciardini's Propositioni di stato as having belonged
6
to Donne's library.
7
Mario
Donne
'Montaigne*] in
47
took the idea of a mock library which
is the basis of Catalogus Librorum Aulicorum* and there are
references to Rabelais in the Satires, the letters to Wotton,
and the lines which Donne contributed to Coryat's Crudities. z
The form, and method of Ignatius bis Conclave seem to have
been derived in part from La Satire Me'ni<ppee* published
anonymously in Paris in 1594, and frequently reprinted
during the next twenty years. Grierson4 suggests that the
first four lines of Donne's Fourth Satire owe
something to
R^gnier's imitation of Horace. There is a reference to
Ronsard in the additional sentences found in one of the
$ Donne
owned a few French
manuscripts of the Problems
books which are still in existence, among them the old farce
Fou et Sage, 6 and Histoire remarquable et veritable de ce qui
s*est pass/ par chacun iour au siege de la ville
d'Ostende(i6o$J
This bald summary suggests that it was chiefly the satirists
and the essayists who influenced Donne's work. Rabelais,
Montaigne, the Satire MJnippe'e, and R^gnier in French,
Rabelais that
Donne
(11.
11-13).
Grierson,
i.
398
quod
est sequutor, ut
tu
JOHN DONNE
48
all satirical.
Donne
can thus
far
ys, in Spaine,
that in
position therefore; he
is
an Englishman of the
late Elizabethan
and
owned by Donne
has been
of
Latin
boots from
preponderance
49
Virgin
Mary.
,'
This
list
Ibid., p. 256.
Letters (1651), pp. 103-4.
of Melchior de Santa Cruz, as
4 Letters
(1651), p. 299.
5
Sermons, 18, 176.
LXXX
JOHN DONNE
5o
ham
Two
in Biatbanatos.*
quoted in
advocacy of regicide
5
Regis Institutione, and Alfonso de Castro,
who wrote Variae materiae morales incboatae. Acosta, a,
Spanish Jesuit, is quoted in the Essays in Divinity** for his
work on the evangelization of the American Indians, and
Biathanatosi
in his
De Rege
et
and
8.
LXXX,
sal.
I.
LXXX,
Ibid,
19. 184.
and L,
P- 68 -
2. c. 9.
32. 314.
15. 126.
51
lypse.
as 'a
Donne
siderable
amount of room on
investigation.
As
man
Latin
of letters
classical writers.
the
the
work of Lucretius,
We
LXXX,
am
15. 151.
Indebted to
little
2 Ibid.
49. 489.
M.
P.
Ramsay
(op. cit.,
Appendixes
Donne had
clearly read,
who influenced
JOHN DONNE
52
He
King of the
calls 'the
Poets',
is
to Donne's
known
letter 6
Donne
he
he
introduces two lines from the Odes with the words sayes the
1
1651 edition, p. 57: *Nec bene promeritis capitur, nee tangitur ira* from
651, and *Nil semine egeret . ferre omnes omnia possent
subito exorirentur
2
3
. .
i.
molem,
et
magno
1 60-8
1).
LXXX, 48. 482; 'The greatest Poet layes the greatest levity and charge
that can be laid, to this kinde of people, that is, In contraria> that
they change
even from one extreme to another; Scinditur incertum studia in c&ntraria
vulgus \Mn. ii. 39]. , . Neither was that Poet ever bound up by his words,
that hee should say In contraria, because a milder or more modified word
.
Grierson,
is
really true.*
7 Sat. II.
386.
i.
iii.
LXXX Sermons^
39.
53
As
Poet', and elsewhere quotes him as the learned
for Martial, he is quoted seven times in the Paradoxes and
Problems, once in the Essays in Divinity, and at least twice
Poet'. 2
tf
in the Sermons*
his
qualities,
Juvenal is
which contain a reminiscence of Sat.
admirable
less
his coarseness
Age of rusty
Some
iron !
xiii.
28-3 1
better wit
it
Injustice
A
is
is
.4
Numina.
so
*
3
was the
satiric quality
LXXX
LXXX,
57- S79-
ix.
29, 30,
For the
full list
Martial' following
4
6
Grierson,
i.
my
169.
p. 41.
This is from Sat. x. 112, 113. See also L, 20. 172, where
the famous 'Maxima debetur pueris reverentia* is quoted.
JOHN DONNE
54
on his pages. 1
Donne had also some knowledge of the by-ways of Latin
literature. John Sparrow has given an account in 'A Book
from Donne's Library' 2 of the volume Epigrammata et
Poemata Vetera, edited by the French scholar Pithou, which
is now in the Bodleian
Library. It consists of two parts,
the first of which contains four books of miscellaneous
their appearance
Essays in Divinity :
1
For Seneca see LXXX, 39. 387; 70.
713; XXV7, 2. 19; 6. 75 ft passim.
For Cicero, Essays in Divinity, p. 69, and
LXXX, 48. 478. For Pliny's
Natural History, LXXX, 61. 617 and I, 50,
466.
2
The London Mercury, xxv. 171-80
and
4
(Dec. 1931).
P. Ramsay,
op. cit., p, 295. The passage is
the marginal reference is 'De
leg.
M.
9*.
Ramsay, op.
cit,,
p. 295.
on
p.
74 of Biathanatos,
55
'The greatest Dignity which we can give this world, is, that the
tea of it is eternall, and was ever in God
and therefore these
Idteas and eternall impressions in God, may
boldly be said to be God',
for nothing understands God of it self, but God; and it is
said,'
Intellects Jynges d fatre, inulligunt et ipsa\ And with Zoroaster
(if
I misconceive not) Jynx is the same as Idata with Plato?*
.
The
r/
S.
as
Donne
recognizes
in
man
acknowledge
God, for he does not allow God Counsaile, and Wisdome, and delibera
tion in his Actions .... And therefore he, and others of the Fathers
read that place, (which we read otherwise) Quod factum est, in
if so
vita erat'i that is, in all their Expositions, whatsoever is made, in
time,
was alive in God, before it was made, that is, in that eternall Idea'
and patterne which was in him.' 2
OracuL
LXXX
*
5
Cap.
i,
par* 6.
LXXX Sermons
>
2. 13.
JOHN DONNE
56
To whose
1
Cubes, th'are unstable; Circles, Angular.
directly
the medium
Thomas Aquinas and the other Schoolmen. For the
use of Aristotle we note Donne's reference to the
Aristotle in Latin,
and
Ethics in Biathanatos:
caught men by two baits, Ease and Honour* Against them who would
dy to avoid Miserie, Hee teaches Death to be the greatest misery which
LXXX
57
by some
fanciful,
JOHN DONNE
58
is
Thus he
of the Righteous, that embraces Death as a Sleepe, was graving all his
All his publique actions were the lights, and all his private the
shadowes of this Picture.' 4
life;
LXXX Sermons,
2. 14;
maps,
LXXX,
XXVI Sermons,
59
is
known couplet
Met
This
is
it
freshness
Grierson,
I.
268,
we
indeed: but the childe being still'd, and the Mother pleased, then she saith,
so shall we kill the Wolf, the Wolf shall have none of my childe, and then the
Wolf stole away. No metaphor, no comparison is too high, none too low,
too triviall, to imprint in you a sense of Gods everlasting goodnesse towards
?
you.
3
JOHN DONNE
60
In
As
stiffe
two
House*
so
it
just,
I begunne,*
Resurrection there
The most
striking
Grierson,
i.
50, 51.
example of
this is
of
61
man
againe in the
1
glorification thereof in the Resurrection.'
March
24, 1616':
all
soules bee,
infused, harmony,
did'st continue so; and now dost beare
2
part in Gods great organ, this whole Spheare.
But
A
c
the world a great and harmonious Organ, where all parts are
sit idle and hear it?' 3
play'd, and all play parts; and must thou only
ls
The comparison
of
attempt to square,
God
is
sermons.
Eternall
And
God,
(for
whom who
ever dare
new
Seeke
Thee, who
art cornerlesse
and
infinite).
.*
'God
is
a circle, himselfe,
circle,
In
all
Sermons,
Grierson,
i.
i.
2
3.
348.
Grierson,
i.
XXVI Sermons,
LXXX Sermons, 2.
271.
24. 343.
14.
JOHN DONNE
62
remember
'Christ Jesus
us
a sea,
distrust in
all
in his
it is
Gods mercy.' 1
What
Shall be to
Thy
face; yet
When Donne,
George Her
Our
in
old Coat
Yet may
lost,
with
so
go ....
my first
Serpents hold,
God gives new blessings, and yet leaves the old ;
The Serpent, may, as wise, my pattern be;
5
poison, as he feeds on dust, that s me.
And as he rounds the Earth to murder sure,
I,
this,
My
My
may
have shak'd
1
off
my self,
XXVI Sermons,
and
am
meat
my
new
creature, and
am
not
now meat
19. 281.
i.
352.
Ibid. 399. For an account of the circumstances of the composition of
these verses, see Walton, Life of Donne and
Life of George Herbert.
Grierson,
63
.
The creeping Serpent, the groveling Serpent, is
Craft; the exalted Serpent, the crucified Serpent, is Wisdome.
That creeping Serpent, Satan, is war, and should be so; The crucified
Serpent Christ Jesus is peace, and shall be so for ever. The creeping
Serpent eats our dust, the strength of our bodies, in sicknesses, and
our glory in the dust of the grave The crucified Serpent hath taken
our flesh, and our blood, and given us his flesh, and his blood for it.' 1
:
Again, the
Hymne
to
God my God,
in
my sicknesse,
contains
my Physitians
Cosmographers, and
on
That
Flat
I their
Mapp, who
lie
my
die,
my West;
In
all flatt
Maps
(and I
am
'Who
thither;
Grierson*
i.
368.
JOHN DONNE
64
Merits, to the body of the Gospel of Christ Jesus, and conforme thee
to him, and thy West is East.' 1
The
made
subtlety.
when
altogether out of their account, it is best to put forth such a small ragg
of sail, as may keep the bark upright, and make her continue near one
go forward
LXXX
LXXX Sermons,
55. 558.
65
marred by offensive
lines or phrases,
out of keeping with the general tone of his work. 1 The witty
depravity of the early poems is, of course, a diff erent matter,
but this bad taste is found here and there in his more serious
work. Though Donne may lay stress on the 'inglorious and
contemptible vilification' of man in the grave, and may
unveil with scorn the rottenness of human grandeur, he
never forgets that man as man is worthy of honour, for the
Divine spark still burns in him. He loves to remind his
hearers that Christ took not on Him the nature of angels,
but took on Him the seed of Abraham. 2 Like Pascal, he
knows that man is greater than the external universe, though
it should overwhelm him.
'Man
is
an abridgement of
all
as
some Abridgements
are greater, then some other authors, so is one man of more dignity,
then all the earth,
Sinne hath diminished man shrowdly, and
.
brought him
and living for ever with God, (for otherwise, our immortality were the
heaviest part of our curse) exalt this valley, this clod of earth to a noble
.
Consider the dignity of man in his nature, and then, in
heighth.
.
the Sonne of God his assuming that nature, which gave it a new dignity
and this will beget in thee a Pride that God loves, a valuing of thy
selfe above all the tentations of this world. '3
1
On
radical
prose, but
2
ii.
87, '. . , that strange bad taste, some
delicacy, which mars not only Donne's poems and lighter
even at times the sermons'.
want of
LXXX Sermons,
SI02
28. 284.
JOHN DONNE
66
The morbidity
It
is
like
his
as
qualities
went
a craving for
satisfy.
life
The
i.
237).
67
Gosse, i. 260.
No short extracts can give any adequate idea of this side of Donne's
genius, but I add a few sentences as samples. Further illustrations will be
2
25- 375-
'Man is not all soule, but a body too; and, as God hath married them
together in thee, so hath he commanded them mutuall duties towards one
another; and God allowes us large uses of temporalitiessings, and of recreations
too.' L Sermons, 38. 351. 'And this is one
strange and incurable effect of
this opinion of wit, and knowledge, that whereas
every man murmurs, and
then I,
sayes to himself, such a man hath more land then I, more
money
practise then I,
LXXX Sermons,
30. 296.
JOHN DONNE
68
of those timid souls who were troubled by the harsh Calvindoctrines of many of the Puritan divines. 1 His own
conviction that it is wrong to ascribe conduct to God which
we should unhesitatingly condemn in man saved him from
acquiescing in the theory of 'reprobation'. His theology was
sometimes illogical, but perhaps it was none the worse for
that. The attempt to treat man's knowledge of God as an
istic
Donne
Who
The
Her
Wee
With womens
milke,
But
in him; to
Cf. Satire
iii.
77.
69
A while from
it
hence.
benefit,
lively tast
you hold
And
But thus
Riding
much
intimate affection which Donne felt for his friends, and also
of the way in which they treasured his letters. We might
have expected so original and independent a genius to be
as isolated in life as he was in poetry, but on the contrary
he seems to have been one of the most sociable of men. He
Grierson,
advice, for
we
i.
183, 184.
difficulties.
JOHN DONNE
70
candid
critic.
Walton has
left
an inimitable description of
saw it
and
Mankind
without pity
relief'
This account seems at first to suit ill with the poet of the
and the cynical Progress of the Soul, but at bottom,
Donne was always a lover of his kind. His fierceness was due
to the occasional exasperation of a particularly sensitive
temperament. Cynicism was the cloak with which, as a
young man, he tried to hide his feelings, but as age approached
he dropped the disguise. Mankind including womankind
was always his proper study. He was no poet of Nature; like
Dr. Johnson and Charles Lamb, he was never so
happy any
where as in London. In his youth he frequented theatres
and amusements of all kinds,* and though later he denounced
Satires
Dunne, who
"Old Acquaintance
. . .
Mr. John
leaving Oxford, liv'd at the Inns of Court, not dissolute but very
neat: a great Visiter of Ladies, a
great Frequenter of Plays, a great Writer
of conceited Verses".'
71
sional
like
Women
JOHN DONNE
72
freedom which
'First passion,
is
between them/ 1
Thus Donne
or Meredith,
minds with
is
poles apart
as
Richardson
who have
a skill
IV
DONNE
AS A
THEOLOGIAN
DONNE nor
most of
JOHN DONNE
74
St. Paul's.
Did
home
he interpret
some
respects
and toamodera
.in .ojlwrs.
And though
his
THE THEOLOGIAN
75
LXXX
LXXX
By Mr.
The Progress e of the Soule sets forth the one heresy, zn.&Juvenilia the other.
For a further discussion of this point see Husain, The Dogmatic and
R. B. (Grierson,
i.
387).
76
JOHN DONNE
Talk (1835),
i.
168.
THE THEOLOGIAN
love
*I
my
Saviour
And
as Christ,
I see
him
made
as
77
my
salvation,
by
an actuall death, I see those hands stretched out, that stretched out
the heavens, 1 and those feet racked, to which they that racked them
are foot-stooles I heare him, from whom his nearest friends fled,
pray for his enemies, and him, whom his Father forsooke, not forsake
his brethren; I see him that cloathes this body with his creatures, or
else it would wither, and cloathes this soule with his Righteousnesse,
or else it would perish, hang naked upon the Crosse And him that hath,
;
him that
is,
that voyce
my
you, all you that passe by ? Behold, and see, if there be any sorrow,
like unto my sorrow, which is done unto me, wherewith the Lord hath
to
afflicted
I
tion in that love, but I love lesus, and there is a tender compassion
and I am content to suffer with him, and to suffer for him,
in that love,
by
my prevarication.' 2
is
The
faith
1
This passage on the Crucifixion should be compared with Donne's poem
treats the same subject, especially
Goodfriday, 1613 (Grierson, i. 336), which
11.
21-9:
I behold those hands which span the Poles,
turne all spheares at once, peirc'd with those holes
Could I behold that endlesse height which is
Zenith to us, and our Antipodes,
Humbled below us ? or that blood which is
The seat of all our Soules, if not of his.
Could
And
Made
By God,
JOHN DONNE
78
5
hand
all
doing.'
the world a great and harmonious Organ, where
all
parts are play'd
play parts; and must thou only sit idle and hear it ? Is every
body else made to be a Member, and to do some real office for the
sustentation of this great Body, this World; and wilt thou only be no
member of this Body ? Thinkest thou that thou wast made to be Cos
'Is
and
all
343.
THE THEOLOGIAN
As in
79
in the heart.
his
congregation
'
Gods House
There he
you come
company, to
devotions,
while
2 Ibid.
7.
3
as 75).
JOHN DONNE
8o
in his
the same
rence
He
station,
rebuke for
who
those
refuse to kneel
in church:
c
Now, and here, within these wals, and at this houre, comes Christ
unto you, in the offer of this abundance; and with what penuriousof devotion, penuriousnesse of reverence do you
saies David, God standffth in the
Congrega
stand there, and wilt thou sit? sit, and never kneele?
nesse, penuriousnesse
God
but
as
whom
whom I meane;
from
that they
us, as,
it
L Sermons, 50. 470, 471. With this compare Walton's remark about
George Herbert, that 'if he were at any time too zealous in his sermons, it
was in reproving the indecencies of the people's behaviour in the time of
1
Divine
Service'.
THE THEOLOGIAN
81
never saw Master nor servant kneele, at his comming Into this
Church, or at any part of divine service
kneeling is the sinners
posture; if thou come hither in the quality of a sinner, (and, if thou
do not so, what doest thou here, the whole need not the Physitian)
put thy selfe into the posture of a sinner, kneele.' 1
I
Many
'God wrapt
Parents ;
tian milke at
world, was the voice of Christians; and the first Character, that I was
taught to know, was the Crosse of CHRIST IESVS. How many
children that are borne so, borne within the Couenant, borne of
Christian Parents, doe yet die before they bee baptized, though they
me
the seale
'
LXXX Sermons,
no. 7, preached upon Christmas Day, pp. 72, 73 (mis75 in the Folio).
Sermon of Commemoration of the Lady Danvers, pp. 79, 80,
numbered
2
5102
as
JOHN DONNE
82
Thus
for
Donne,
as for
by which
God,
minute,
soul of mine,
this
Grierson,
i.
322.
XXVI Sermons,
Ibid., p. 221.
8. 119.
THE THEOLOGIAN
83
mercy to my sin, other sinners may see how much sin thou
canst pardon/
If Donne had chosen to leave us a record of the experiences
which led up to and followed his conversion, he might have
written a spiritual autobiography of surpassing interest. But
he never attempted the task, and later writers must be
content to try and piece together some of the fragments
of personal experience which are scattered throughout the
mass of the poems, sermons, and letters. We are left with
many gaps and obscurities, and it is difficult to mark out
clearly the various stages through which he passed. The
world around noted the change in him, and friends like
Walton observed his growth in holiness and detachment
from earthly things. Such a transformation does not take
place without many agonies of heart and soul. The process
of purgation is painful to even the holiest of Christians, and
to Donne, with his strong passions and vivid memories of
his earlier sins, it must have caused the keenest suffering.
In the nineteenth Holy Sonnet he describes the fluctuations
1
of his spiritual
life
As humorous is my contritione
As my prophane Love, and as soone forgott
As ridlingly distempered, cold and hott,
As praying, as mute; as infinite, as none.
I durst not view heaven yesterday; and today
In prayers, and flattering speaches I court God
Tomorrow I quake with true feare of his rod.
So my devout fitts come and go away
:
Like a fantastique
Those
are
my
Ague
best dayes,
when
own
'I
past experiences :
throw
my
selfe
downe
in
my
2
Ibid., p. 217.
Chamber, and
I call in,
and invite
i.
331).
JOHN DONNE
84
God, ami his Angels thither, and when they are there, I neglect God
and his Angels, for the noise of a Flie, for the ratling of a Coach, for
the whining of a doore; I talke on, in the same posture of praying;
Eyes lifted up; knees bowed downe; as though I prayed to God; and,
God, or his Angels should aske me, when I thought last of God in
that prayer, I cannot tell: Sometimes I finde that I had forgot what
I was about, but when I began to forget it, I cannot tell. A memory of
a straw under my
yesterdays pleasures, a feare of to morrows dangers,
if
None of us hath got the victory over flesh and blood, and yet
we have greater enemies then flesh and blood are. Some disciplines,
but for these
some mortifications we have against flesh and blood
I know not where to watch them, how to
and
principalities,
powers
.
I
passe my time sociably and merrily in cheerful
conversation, in musique, in feasting, in Comedies, in wantonnesse;
encounter them,
and
deviation, and vaine repetition, and I pray giddily, and circularly, and
returne againe and againe to that I have said before, and perceive not
that I do so ; and nescio cujus spiritus sim^ (as our Saviour said, rebuking
his Disciples, who were so vehement for the burning of the Samaritans,
you know not of what spirit you are) I pray, and know not of what spirit
I am, I consider not mine own
purpose in prayer; And by this advan
w0rr,The seducing
pray not onely negligently, but erromously, dangerously, for such things as disconduce to the glory of God,
and my true happinesse, if they were granted. Nay, even the Prophet
spirit,
the
spirit
of error, and
820,
THE THEOLOGIAN
85
that
nesse,
hath
laid
powers and
me upon my last
my
am
repent;
a little
Of Elements, and
Donne
4
sought to destroy all available copies. But his reputation as
a poet was considerable, and his verses had enjoyed a wide
1
2
3
Sonnets,
Ibid. v. 1-4,
iii.
5-8.
10-14 (Grierson,
i.
324).
Walton, Life (1675), p. 53. 'It is a truth, that in his penitential years,
viewing some of those pieces that had been loosely (God knows, too loosely)
scattered in his youth, he wish't they had been abortive, or, so short liv'd
that his own eyes had witnessed their funerals.' Ben Jonson, Conversations
with William Drummond, 'and now, since he was made Doctor, repenteth
highlie, and seeketh to destroy all his poems'.
JOHN DONNE
86
circulation in manuscript
Doubtless
successful.
which gave
it
communes
own
soul:
And
as
thou
art
with sinne;
But though he believed that his past sins had been pardoned
he often expressed his fear of a relapse. And it is clear that,
however spotless Donne's outer life became, he had to
wrestle through many years with thoughts and desires which
he regarded as sinful. It is this conflict of the lower with the
higher self, of the spirit with the flesh, that gives a strange
intensity to all Donne's devotional work, whether in poetry
or prose.
The
Donne
1
Rom.
22-4.
Holy Sonntts,
likely to fall.
iv.
At times
9-14 (Grierson,
i.
323).
THE THEOLOGIAN
he writhed under the thought of himself
expresses this fear in his
I
have
My
Hymn
to
God
87
as a lost soul.
He
the Father:
selfe,
that at
my
and heretofore;
seemed to him
a lack of faith.
This
'diffidence', as
Donne
spirits.
He
Hymn
LXXX
accompanied,
a faintnesse
times, with an extraordinary sadnesse, a predominant melancholy,
of heart'.
4
e.g.
LXXX Sermons, 7.
67;
JOHN DONNE
88
flock.
souls,
Thus
he adds:
When
his
mercy;
sure, that
manifested thy selfe to him, who, in the diffidence of his sad soule,
thought thee gone for ever, wilt never depart from mee, nor hide thy
selfe from me, who desire to dwell in thy presence.' 1
They have
tried to
subdue their
sinful flesh
by prolonged
Donne's
history,
though
He
showed
a rigorous
self-discipline,
disapproved of *uncommanded and in
human flagellations and whippings' as dishonouring the
body. Retirement into a cloister or a cell seemed to him
generally to be a retreat from the enemy, not a victory,
though he was willing to admit that some might have a
vocation for such a life. 2
Natural affections seemed to him to be implanted by
God, and therefore to be honourable so long as they were
husband for his wife, of a father for his children. In all these
relations he was tender and devoted. He found in them a
stepping-stone to heaven, a rung in the ladder by which he
might ascend to the love of God. He was a faithful and
generous friend, repaying in his prosperity the kindness
in years of misfortune.
Similarly,
335.
THE THEOLOGIAN
89
he retained
as designs
'Love, in Divinity, is such an attribute, or such a notion,
who
and
that
the
in
us
one
communicates,
to
Trinity;
person
person
and applies to us, the other two persons, that is, The Holy Ghost:
So that, as there is no power, but with relation to the Father, nor
wisdom but with relation to the Son, so there should be no love but
in the Holy Ghost, from whom comes this pureness of heart, and
the love of this pureness
consequently the love of it necessarily: For,
it self, and no man hath it, except he love it.
this
of
pureness
part
All love which is placed upon lower things, admits satiety; but this
love of this pureness, always grows, always proceeds: It does not
in purging us of old habits, but
onely file off the rust of our hearts,
a daily polishing of the heart, in an exact watchfulness,
to
proceeds
and brings us to that brightness, Ut i$se videasfaciem in corde, et alii
videant cor in facie (Augustine). That thou maist see thy face in thy
heart in thy face; indeed, that to
heart, and the world may see thy
Nor can this pureness of
be
all
one
face
and
heart
both
may
both,
attain'd to, be preserved, but by this
means
these
heart, though by
affection of Love, that puts a true value upon
noble and
is
incorruptible
it,
it
above
all
other things,' 2
Pauls
superiority)
spiritual passion.
JOHN DONNE
9o
The mercy
love.
we come
then at the
inchoation
',
is
afforded here.' 4
all
What
Anthem doth he
His Rye-bread
Manna, and
is
his
Beefe
is
at peace
is
with
God?
too,
new percep
Wordsworth, or
for
1
Donne's
disciple
Vaughan,
LXXX Sermons,
it
(Grierson,
30).
66. 672.
THE THEOLOGIAN
a sense
something
far
91
sublime
more deeply
interfused,
Whose
And
And
preaching
garden to praise
God
with her,
so that
George Fox seeing the whole creation opened to him
these in their own way express one
all things became new
in the endless
movement of the
2
and could use language proper to the mystical experience.
1
LXXX Sermons,
15. 146;
XXVI Sermons,
13. 181.
JOHN DONNE
92
may and
should be.
*It may be mentall, for we may thinke prayers. It may be vocall, for
we may speake prayers. It may be actuall, for we do prayers. ... So
by the circumstances,
2
ringly to the givers will.'
qualified
we must
aske conditionally
and
refer-
Donne held
my
Gardner
2
on
this subject,
THE THEOLOGIAN
93
Donne
certainly
of prayer which
all
tell
Should we read
Ibid., pp.
HI-I2.
XXVI Sermons,
3. 31.
228-9).
JOHN DONNE
94
his
is
himself?
contemplation
There is, however, a splendid passage in one of the great
Easter sermons which suggests that Donne had some experi
ence of the ecstasy of mystical contemplation.
.
'If I
owne
say,
state) if I
veines,
my
can
my purposes,
that
all
my sins
must
sin, I
know
all
The Scale of Perfection, ed. E. Underbill, pp. 6-1 8. Hilton insists that
the 'third part of contemplation' is given
by the grace of God where He will
'but it is special, not common. And also
though a man which is active have
the gift of it by a special grace, nevertheless the full use of it
may no man have,
but he be
is
i.e.
LXXX Sermons,
27. 273-4.
man
THE THEOLOGIAN
95
Donne
'There
is
but in their
fantasie.' 2
CLTTO TTJS
TO TTVpp6v.
'ESwp
XXVI Sermons,
JOHN DONNE
96
argued that Christ suffered not the very torments of very hell,
because it is essentiall to the torments of hell, to be eternall, They
were not torments of hell, if they received an end; So is it fairely
fairely
Adam
Mount,
shall
God
Thus
is
clear that
made him,
Donne
of Aquinas.
3
THE THEOLOGIAN
97
next are not violently sundered from one another. The light
of glory has its dawn here, though the noon-tide must come
hereafter. 1 The joy of heaven begins on earth, in the vision
which the pure in heart see, even now, of the Eternal Truth
and Goodness.
*The pure in heart are blessed already, not onely comparatively,
that they are in a better way of Blessednesse, then others are, but
actually in a present possession of it for this world and the next world,
are not, to the pure in heart, two houses, but two roomes, 2 a Gallery
to passe thorough, and a Lodging to rest in, in the same House, which
are both under one roofe, Christ Jesus; The Militant and the Trium
phant, are not two Churches, but this the Porch, and that the Chancell
of the same Church, which are under one head, Christ Jesus so the
Joy, and the sense of Salvation, which the pure in heart have here,
is not a
joy severed from the Joy of heaven, but a Joy that begins in
:
us here,
on,
and
thither,
an infinite expansion.' 3
Donne was
Com
thanksgiving.
'Yet thou must heare
'Heaven
is
here; here in
LXXX Sermons,
Which
3
5102
Gods Church,
Thinke then,
in his
Word,
in his Sacra -
12. 122.
my
brings a
LXXX Sermons,
his loudest
is
11.
85, 86:
soule, that
death
is
but
Groome,
12. 119.
JOHN DONNE
98
ments, in
his
Gospel, The
is thy Viaticum.
in his
own
experience
the Church.
worship offered by
saying:
Hymne
the
Hymn
to
God
as
have
the
Father]
my
of joy that possest my Soul
restored to me the same thoughts
the power of Church-musick!
sickness when I composed it. And,
the Affections of tny heart and
that Harmony added to it has raised
and I observe that I
and
zeal
of
gratitude;
quickened my graces
and Praise to
this publick duty of Prayer
alwayes return from paying
of mmd, and a willingness to
'The words of
this
[i.e.
God, with an
^inexpressible tranquillity
2
leave the world.'
One
the nineteenth
beginning about
the body ot
consider
and
to survey
year of his age seriously
Reformed
the
betwixt
Divinity as it was then controverted
researches
Donne's
of
account
and the Roman Church'. The
is
and
accurate,
supported
given by Walton is substantially
in Pseudo-Martyr, but the date
statements
own
Donne's
by
Walton con
can hardly be right, as Dr. Jessopp has shown.'
the
believed
he
this search,
tinued, 'Being to undertake
Roman
the
of
defender
Cardinal Bellarmine to be the best
of
and therefore betook himself to the examination
cause,
his Reasons.
as
had
haste,
hath now
then Dean of Gloucester (whose name my memory
with
many weighty
the Cardinals works marked
lost)* all
were be
observations under his own hand; which works
dear
a
most
to
as a Legacy
queathed by him at his death
ante
have
must
Friend.' 5 Dr. Jessopp observes that Walton
dated this period of study by a year or two, and that Donne's
1
3
s
XXVI Sermons,
5.
72.
IS, '6.
Walton, op.
Anthony Rudd.
cit., p.
S5-
THE THEOLOGIAN
99
Grierson,
i.
157.
dis
JOHN DONNE
too
ordination.
He
calls it 'that
are
by
Gods Mercy
later
).
THE THEOLOGIAN
101
clear.
Is
Doth
Grierson,
i.
330.
It
this sonnet,
till its
arrangement
2
is
JOHN DONNE
io2
prevalent.
fire,
it heresie,
by the
Spirit of
we admit them
of Sacrament,
own
as
Calvin
Schools, their
is.
Rtsponsio, cap.
vii.
THE THEOLOGIAN
103
that from their first Conversion, they have had an orderly derivation
of power from one to another, we can as justly and truly say of our
Church, that ever since her first being of such a Church, to this day,
she hath conserved the same order, and ever hath had, and hath now,
those Ambassadours sent, with the same Commission, and
same means, that they pretend to have in their Church.' 1
by the
God hath
cannot derive,
necessity.'
Ibid., p. 369.
LXXX Sermons,
5. 42.
JOHN DONNE
io 4
more
He
will not
Monica,
condemn
though he
his example,
in
or
still.' 4
LXXX Sermons,
12. 112.
Ibid. 2. 18.
Ibid. 5. 46.
4 Ibid.
5. 50, 51.
5
to
Perron,
i.
viii;
Answers
Two
LXXX
5;
XXVI
God for
the
is,
really to offer
up
THE THEOLOGIAN
105
in
when
And they, who doe not provide duly for the Baptisme of their children,
children die, have a heavier accompt to make to God for that
if their
child,
1
then
if
LXXX Sermons,
God will
have not yet manifested that to thee: Grieve not at that, wonder
not at that, presse not for that ; for hee hath not manifested that, not the way,
not the manner of Ms presence in the Sacrament, to the Church/
leisure, if he
2
?
JOHN DONNE
io6
to starve. God can preserve the child without Milke\ and he can save
the child without a sacrament ; but as that mother that throwes out,
and forsakes her child in the field, or wood, is guilty before God of the
child,
if
Against those
mas day.
God,
amongst the Gentiles before, may, before they are aware, become Sur
and Controllers upon Christ himself, in the institution of his
greatest scales for Baptisme, which is the Sacrament of purification
by washing in water, and the very Sacrament of the Supper it self,
religious eating, and drinking in the Temple, were in use amongst the
Gentiles too. It is a perverse way, rather to abolish
Things and Names,
(for vehement zeale will work upon Names as well as Things) because
they have been abused, then to reduce them to their right use,' 4
veyors,
LXXX Sermons, 8.
Sermons, 7. 56.
80.
2
Calvin, Institutes, lib. iv, c. x, 14.
4 Ibid. 12, 112.
THE THEOLOGIAN
On
107
pathy,
This summary has been retained from the first edition of my book. Since
appeared, Dr. I. Husain has made a more detailed analysis in his Dogmatic
and Mystical Theology of John Donne (pp. 1-42), which supports my view.
2
See my discussion of the date of Catalogus on pp. 151-3. The antiProtestant items were probably written some years earlier, but he did not
omit them in the 1611 revision.
it
to her and
stilted phrases
JOHN DONNE
io8
persons.'
Thus
Fathers
'And
1
I
L
as
who
LXXX
Sermons, 6, 53.
single sheep in many nations; Jobs, and
and
not
yet not in the Covenants,
'God had
servants, and
sheep,
yet
brought into his flock. For though God have revealed no other way of salva
tion & us, but by breeding us in his Church,
we must be so far from
yet
Church, as though God could not, in the largenesse of his power, or did not,
in the largenesse of his
he never
mercy, afford salvation to some,
whom
THE THEOLOGIAN
selves in this distribution,
109
consisted best with the nature of his mercy, that as his Saints had
suffered temporal! calamities in this world, in this world they should
it
Church. Nor
is
foundation
amongst
am
is
whom
in
Donne's
letters.
LXXX Sermons,
of Sir
Thomas Browne
those that beleeve not in Christ, that is, say some, since his Nativity, and, as
Divinity affirmeth, before also; which makes me much apprehend the ends
of those honest Worthies and Philosophers which died before his Incarnation.
It is hard to place those soules in Hell whose worthy lives doe teach us vertue
on earth; methinks amongst those many subdivisions of hell, there might have
bin one Limbo left for these: What a strange vision will it be to see their
and their imagined and fancied
poeticall fictions converted into verities,
Furies, into real Devils ? ... It will therefore, and must at last appeare, that
salvation is through Christ; which verity I feare these great examples of
all
have no
how
JOHN DONNE
no
two
first
of these he says:
*A few hours after I had the honour of your Letter, I had another
from my Lord of Bath and Wells' (i.e. Laud, who was then Bishop
of Bath and Wells), 'commanding from the King a Copy of my
Sermon. I am in preparations of that, with diligence, yet this morning
I waited
upon his Lordship, and laid up in him this truth, that of the
B. of Canterburies'
now put
says
have
into
When
See Gosse, ii. 242, 243. The Archbishop had refused to license the
Affelk Caesaum of Montague, afterwards Bishop of Chichester, who was
favoured by the King and Laud. *It appears that Archbishop Abbot had just
preached a sermon of a very Low Church character, which had offended the
King, and that Charles I and Laud, putting their heads together after Donne's
sermon, had come to the conclusion that the Dean of St. Paul's was preparing
to support the Archbishop' (Gosse),
2
Letters (1651), pp. 305, 306.
4 Ibid.
pp. 306, 307.
Ibid., p. 308,
THE THEOLOGIAN
in
be assured thy
life is
stainless
Gosse,
ii.
246.
V
MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE
ELEMENTS IN DONNE'S THOUGHT
Donne
IN
his prose
readers.
is
he ex
J
pounded ?LIs he a mediev^dis^^
^^
T\
^v
--^~.w^''Tw M *^
two
the
last
books
nave
During
thirty-five years
appeared
on Donne championing two different points of view on this
subject* Both of them are learned and well documented,
full of
quotations from Donne's works and from the sources
on which he drew. The earlier is Miss M. P. Ramsay's
thesis for the Paris doctorate, Les Doctrines mMi/vabs chez
f
fc
Miss Ramsay
asserts
to the
lij^JPfll^^
the Renaissance. *JoRn IJbntie,
^
est fonci&re-
sa
1
fagon d'envisager 1'Univers.'
travers le
moyen
connaisse
les
essentiels
.
de
sa
pens^e;
Son plotinisme
*0n
se
elle est
lui vient
to aut
la
ce
ttat
it
assigns
Korjt^a jja
vei^
Jimilarjp
*^
- -*"
-.~*~ gtVtrtrt'o
-*
3
bymedieval times.
UnH^uFtedly Donne's thought is based on a firm con
viction of the existence of God, and he sees God
everywhere
in the Universe. In his method of
expounding this great
reality he followed the Schoolmen in their respect for the
*
""
Ramsay, op.
3
Ibid., p. 128.
cit.,
p. 128,
Ibid.,
DONNE'S THOUGHT
113
Obsequus
^T^TT
allegorical
method of interpretation
as well as
LXXX
ii.
42-5, 192, 197, 201.
on Hooker by
285-8)
quotes the attack made
pp.
certain Puritans for his deference to the Schoolmen, and Taine's criticism of
de citations
Jeremy Taylor, *pas logicien, pas analyste, pedant, surcharg6
a demi enfonc dans la boue du
grecques et latines, de divisions, etc. ...
Ramsay, op.
cit., p.
moyen
5102
282. Grierson,
cit.,
age'
T
DONNE'S THOUGHT
ii4
held before
'God alone is all; not onely all that is, but all that is
if he would have it be.' 1
'God is not tyed to any place; not by essence; Implet
not,
all
that
might be,
God
and
fills
fills
every place,
implet, (Augustine),
that place in himselfe.' 2
'This way, our Theatre, where we sit to see God,
it
et continendo
by containing
3
is a God; and the poorest worme that
creeps, tells me that.'
'Sometimes we represent God by Subtraction, by Negation, by
saying, God is that, which is not mortal!, not passible, not moveable:
Sometimes we present him by Addition; by adding our bodily linea
ments to him, and saying, that God hath hands, and feet, and eares,
and eyes; and adding our affections, and passions to him, and saying,
that there
*
-*
Sermons, n. 85.
Ibid, 44. 440, 441.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
115
is
infused
created, and created when it is infused,
so at her going out, Gods mercy is had by asking, and that is
asked by having.' 5 And in a sermon preached on Trinity
Sunday, 1627, he declares: 'Our soules have a blessed per
soules shall no more see an end, then God, that
petuity, our
hath no Beginning; and yet our soules are very far from
when
it is
56
being eternal.
are
medieval doctrine
thjt^
Sonnets,
the
of
confHry'ele^^
tion,
whereaFtE^'$*** T*
^xfrwiW..,^,*!,* ,>'VB|i**'**' .f
"
imff
'
~|ll
111.11111
""
T '""'"""
"I""-
soul,
-
Sermon preached
See Essays in Divinity (1651), pp. 176-7: 'God is all-efficient-, that is,
hath created the beginning, ordained the way, fore-seen the end of every
cause thereof/
thing; and nothing else is any kind of
p. 137).
4
s
LXXX Sermons,
51. 514.
Letters (1651), p. 53.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
u6
What
If our
Love
c
ln Heaven we doe not say, that our bodies shall devest their mortality,
so as that naturally they could not dye; for they shall have a composi
tion still; and every compounded thing may perish; but they shall
a preservation, as
know
soule,
by God.'*
'Man, before hee hath his immortall soule, hath a souk of sense,
and a soule ofvtgitation before that. This immortal soule did not forbid
1
2
3
LXXX Sermons,
To
19. 189.
the Countesse of
Salisbury,
11.
160-2 (Grierson,
i.
256).
LXXX Sermons,
74. 755.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
other soules, to be in us before, but
with
all
it;
no more
when
117
no more sense? 1
vegetation,
interested
inthe
great
scieii^
wJy^^aTl^Katea by^^C^^micus^^^^^M^jQ^f
C. M. Coffin in
This has been^v^ked^
his book, to which I am indebted for a number of points
made in the succeeding pages. He declares *He (Donne)
-
the
represents
-^^effort of the late Renaissance
Jr 5 **-'*'--'*.
mind
to
*<^ifw^^^-^^
make an
sacrific
adjustment tQ,iJ. jrorlc^^
3
of
the
and
for
reason.'
its
emotion
~~~-'ing:
regard
equal"cE]m,s
V' 'r^
^
Towards the clo^^^Wtliis book he definitely challenges Miss
Ramsay's view:
'
HU*
<J3|U-L
'jj
'
-flf
"
'i
""
""?
*"
"'^T^ijiriffHilliinij
we
. .
iii.
14,
Coffin, op.
cit.,
p. 6.
112.
early
DONNE'S THOUGHT
n8
home with
and the
activi
ties
Perhaps
would be
it
Donne
a mistake to describe
as either
of jthe Renaissance. We
Into
cannot divide history
rigTSTperlods wffKout doing
violence to the truth. The MiddUL-AgS? ^ n ge e <i on long
men kept the frameafter the Renaissanjpjy^ad^
of the
^earlier idfeas ofth^Univej
man
a medievalist or^a
typical
*"
still
chai^
changing was the spirit in |^glyMn^j^^pachfid the dogmas
of the Schoolmen and thqfTtolemaic theo^i^
Thirty years after Donne's deatlTMHt on built up PafaSue
Lost on the Ptolemaic cosmogony, while allowing the Copernican theory to be stated as a possible alternative by the
i
Donne
among contemporary
poets in
of the changes
pereaptaea*^
about. 'And newPhilosophy
_^_3iscov^
caflsall in douBt', he cried
despairingly, and continues
his
well direct
And
men
him where
to look for
it.
's
freely
spent,
in the Planets, and the Firmament
They seeke so many new; they see that this
When
Is
his Atomies.
all
Relation,
.*
Grierson,
i.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
119
discoveries^JCplerand
Galileo.
>>
Jr.
'"*
of thought which
philosophy rejected th^
Schoolmen. The
of
the
had been the^accredited topi
the
medieval ^pE^
description of the
accepted
and
Aristotle
world
natural
Ptolemy, and had been
given by
their subtlety could
which
deductions
the
with
'satisfied
^^>rmeth^
,
data'. 1
elaborate
Now ca^Co^nicus,
The Middle
Ages
every sort olfrev^^^
of
reason.,,,Ihe
in
the
believed
had
pure
power
passionately
new
solution.
Donne
tEFmMie^^
to go
a telescope] as
^
it is
proaro
to allude to
was
2 It
[Galileo]'.
received a copy
bettered^this man
early
*
3
i.
486-7.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
120
this reference
:
College Library.
(At edition),
Biatbanatos, p. 146.
cic
DONNE'S THOUGHT
121
TEo5e^Sjv
What
starreT
era^S^t^xerH^T"*"^
place jt^^^
till
they doubt,
thosestarres goe out.
.
the
5
? treatiseT
It
had
first
new
star in
been obseTvSITn^^
And
Two
or three
And
then make up
hundred yeares to
see't againe,
same poem,
movements of the
c
heavenly bodies, which, observ'd in divers ages' had caused
men to 'finde out so many Eccentrique parts, Such divers
downe-right lines, such overthwarts' and to divide the stars
course' of the
Donne
continues
And
New
starres,
eyes.
Grierson,
Lost,
3
i.
247.
Compare Milton's
ii.
Tuscan
Artist', Paradise
288.
Coffin, op.
4
cit.,
p. 124.
Grierson,
i.
235.
Ibid. 239.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
122
all
He
is
work
a
in the Essays in
marginal reference
The fullest discussion of the implications of the Copernican theory occurs in Donne's prose satire, ^ I maims his
Conclave. Here come the great innovators to claim a place
f
*"~~*
"""'"*
in Lucife??TiTnH TtTCBiV"
r
which, onely they had title, which had so attempted any innouation
life, that they gaue an affront to all antiquitie, and induced
doubts, and anxieties, and scruples, and after, a liberty of beleeuing
what they would; at length established opinions, directly contrary to
*to
in this
all
established before.' 3
is
particularly lively:
Coffin, op.
cit., p. 85.
Ignatius his Conclave (1611), p. 6.
Grierson,
I 238.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
123
(first
edition,
1624),
pp. 544-5:
am
up,
am
carried in a giddy
and
circular motion, as I
stand?*
Similarly, in
1
2
3
one of
new Astronomic
is
'methinks the
we which
are a
Op.
cit., p.
88.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
i2 4
little earth,
which
is fulfilling,
us'. 1
towards
And now
they think of
new
ingredients.
2
3
is
Grierson,
Animal
reference
4
i.
259.
'And
p. 50.
as
Cardan
The
sayes
sepultuiri]?
*De Subtil, lib. 5'.
is
Coffin, op.
cit.,
pp. 167-71.
it
DONNE'S THOUGHT
125
Thus
My fire of Passion,
sighes of ayre,
Which my
and
in a verse letter
materialls bee.
was only
It
mo
She
carries
desire
Whether
Donne
much
took
branch
9fj5cien^^
the yoi^L^ma^ifi^erest
Dr. S^anm^
W
/
<& /
U"tUt'i ^M-WiWfl'W'fw-inW
^
in
life. In the poems, letters, and
aroused
was probably
early
J
"L
sermons there are many references, some 01 mem to tne
traditional medical lore derived from Hippocrates and Galen,
and others to the new theories of Paracelsus and his followers.
The fullest account is in one of the letters:
.
-,
'
,,,
'
JL
,/t.t ,<""
*-*
/f"*MJii"'t'f*",Sy
*f-<tf,t'4
/*
in Physick,
'This, as it appears in all sciences, so most manifestly
that
but
which for a long time considering nothing,
plain curing and
the world at last longed for some
and
but
by example
and
precedent,
how these cures might be accomplished.
This produced Hippocrates his Aphorismes; and the world
slumbred or took breath, in his resolution divers hundreds of years.
Then Galen rather to stay their stomachs then that he gave them
certain canons
rules,
and arrested
enough, taught them the qualities of the four Elements,
them upon this, that all differences of qualities proceeded from them.
And after, (not much before our time) men perceiving that all effects
in Physick could not be derived from these beggerly and impotent
1
Grierson,
i.
65.
Ibid. 181.
Ibid. 256-7.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
iz6
sympathy,
much
to his honour.' 1
of
Donne
Henry Wotton:
Onely
In
his
ists
and that
'Diseases
cures
there
.^^
all
But
if this
all
sorrow
The
quintessence,
stuffes, paining soule or sense ....
insistence
i.
33,
and note
in
ii.
Keynes, op.
4
30.
Ibid.,
ii.
cit.,
144.
p. 178.
DONNE'S THOUGHT
127
of physick, (for the true and proper use of physick is to preserve health,
and, but by accident to restore it) we embrace that Rule, Medicorum
iheoria experientia est [in margin, Taracels'], Practice is
a Physicians
study; and he concludes out of events: for, says he, He that professes
himself a Physician, without experience, Chronica de futuro scribit, He
undertakes to write a Chronicle of things before they are done, which
is an irregular, and a
perverse way. Therefore, in this spirituall physick
of the soule,
we
will deal
^^^
'
There
are
no
there
passages, so that
little later
he
Why
raises
grasse
is
other questions
greene, or
why
is
t)f
flow,
substances.3
our blood
is
red,
man ^of
Donne shows
himself a
:
2
3
11.
271-6.)
DONNE'S THOUGHT
128
1
ing of Hebrew words, which he quotes, than to the Greek
of the New Testament. He sometimes refers to the orthodox
Jewish commentators, but he took more interest in the
This name,
speculations of the Cabbala (or Kabbalah).
which had originally been applied to the Jewish oral law as
opposed to the written law, was used from the thirteenth
century onwards to denote a school of heretical Jewish
With thy
1
number
five;
LXXX
true
M.
to
Mr. R. W.',
6
Grierson,
i.
11.
29-32 (Grierson,
61.
i.
210);
XXVI Sermons,
25. 370,
DONNE'S THOUGHT
And women, whom
With
Ten
this
129
doth represent,
be
number
content;
mysterious
this flower
women may
take us
all
all.
number
Divinity
Number
but to
my equals,
.' 3
p. 14.
5102
Ibid., p. 98.
i 3o
DONNE'S THOUGHT
'
Pico's
mathe
ythagorean
world was handed on through Plato, the Neo-platonic
tradition, and the Christian Renaissance philosophers, in
whose minds it was sometimes associated with the cabalistic
belief in the mystical value of numbers. Since Copernicus
'indicated that the historical basis of his work was to be
found in the doctrine of the Pythagoreans', this revival of
the belief in the ultimate importance of mathematics is
real
reafly~
the3^
or the"jearttt jrouaji^e % su, .JlftjyajjLe^
who*-*
could see the philosophical
a Aphilosopher, fcut
anaet ,~*^*
w
-S
*****"<*'
^JCT---.'Z^r '?^'v^^
*V-*, .
of
the
new
scientific
discoveries*
implications
-
LivmgJ.n^an
DONNE'S THOUGHT
131
clearlyJ^jJJSy^
knowledge
When
By
Grierson,
i.
259-60.
VI
(i)
JUVENILIA
^HE
JL
or certaine
L Donne. London,
Anno Dom.
1633.
lines
corrected'.
'JUVENILIA'
133
Archbishop
dissidiis.
Non
1
Calendar of Domestic State Papers, Charles /, ccclxxiv. 4. The document
was printed in full by Dr. Grosart (Fuller Worthies' Library, 1873, vol. ii,
p. Hi) and was reprinted by Sir Herbert Grierson (Poems, vol. ii, p. bcvi).
Thomason bought
his
DONNE'S PROSE
134
&
vjd.
Stephens then warden
This last entry indicates that in 1650 it was intended that
the Sheaf of Miscellany Epigrams should be issued as a
separate volume. Much controversy has been aroused by
.
Wood
or Bois-le-Duc. 1
le-Duc
on the town
Mayne may
in 1587, 1600,
have tricked the
composed as well as translated by Jasper Mayne, or, finally, that they might
have been the work of the John Done who composed Polydoron. Gosse
(op. cit., i. 16-17) inclined to the belief that they were the work of Jasper
Mayne, who was a witty divine and the author of certain successful comedies,
and who was celebrated for his mystifications and practical jokes.
2
Grierson, vol. ii, p. kx.
'JUVENILIA'
135
found
lately
among Donne's
papers.
The
printed in 1650
it is
entirely in prose.
This 'Newes'
Donne
is
My
it
DONNE'S PROSE
136
The
Overbury volume.
Dr. Keynes has distinguished two
edition of the Paradoxes. 1
issues
of the 1652
The
Keynes, op. cit., pp. 61-5, One issue contains a short passage on
3
which is omitted in the other issue. Dr. Keynes treats the issue without
the passage as the earlier, but would author or publisher go to the
expense
of re-setting the first quire merely to add a few clauses which have no
parti
cular bearing on the subject ? On the other hand, if the
passage was misinterpretable, as it seems to me, the author might remove it for fear of
verso
offending his patron. The sentence runs thus: *. . . if they [i.e. the essays con
tained in the volume] could present to your
Lordship the youth and beauty
ofHellen, or the courage and strength of Hector they could not have found a
',
more
you
Stromata,
I.
viii.
<n>wfat *Aroa-
'JUVENILIA'
137
Sir
in
Press.
Paradoxes
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XL
A Defence of Womens
That
That
That
That
That
That
That
That
That
That
Inconstancy.
Women
ought to Paint.
by Discord things increase.
Good is more common than
all
things
kill
Euill.
themselues.
Women.
possible to find some vertue in some
Old men are more fantastike than Young.
Nature is our worst guide.
only Cowards dare dye.
a Wise man is known by much laughing.
the gifts of the Body are better than those of the Minde.
it is
Problems
I.
*
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
Why
Why
Why did the Diuell reserue lesuites till these latter Dayes
Why there more Variety of Greene, than of any other Colour
Why doe Young Lay-men so much study Diuinity
Why hath the Common Opinion afforded Women Soules
Why are the Fairest falsest
Why Venus Starre only doth cast a shadow
Why is Venus Starre Multinominous, called both Hesperus and
?
is
Vesper 1
X.
Why
are
new
officers least
oppressing
The
DONNE'S PROSE
from the first Paradox, A Defence of Womens Inconstancy',
138
will serve as a
sample.
'That
Women
Inconstancy
is
euery thing
as
The Heauens
most reason are the most intolerable 1 in their designes, and the" darkest
or most ignorant, doe seldomest change; therefore Women
changing
more than Men, haue also more Reason.
Inconstancy is a most
commendable and cleanly quality, and Women in this quality are
.
farre
more
their mutability.
can bespeake the change of the Moone a great while beforehand: but
I would faine haue the learnedst man so skilful, as to tell when the
simplest Woman meaneth. to varie. Learning affords no rules to know,
much lesse knowledge to rule the mind of a Woman* ... To conclude
therefore this name of'Inconstancy which hath so much beene
poisoned
with slaunders, ought to be changed into variety > for the which the
world is so delightfull, and a Woman for that the most delightfull
2
thing in this world/
;
intolerable.
The
1652 edition reads inalUrable > which does not suit the
context.
2
Juvenilia (1633),
sig.
3-B
verso*
'JUVENILIA'
theme which Donne was
139
things
kill
'To
affect,
owne
who
suicide
Fortiter
ille facit,
But
taught and practised among our Gallants, that rather than
our reputations suffer any maime, or wee any misery, wee shall offer
our brests to the Cannons mouth, yea to our swords points: And this
seemes a very braue and a very climbing (which is a Cowardly, earthly,
and indeed a very groueling) spirit. Why doe they chaine these slaues
to the Gaily es, but that they thrust 2 their deaths, and would at euery
loose leape into the sea ? Why doe they take weapons from condemned
men, but to barre them of that ease which Cowards affect, a speedy
death. Truly this life is a Tempest and a warfare, and he which dares
dye, to escape the Anguish of it, seemes to me, but so valiant, as he
which dares hang himselfe, lest he bee prest to the wars. I haue seene
it is
Ibid., sig.
2 verso-C
2
3.
thrust,
an old form of
'thirst'.
DONNE'S PROSE
140
Juvenilia (1633),
2
sig.
D 4~E
I.
i verso. I have
Ibid., sig.
adopted the reading of the best
scripts in this sentence, as the meaning is obscured by the
manu
corruption of the
'JUVENILIA'
out
evil,
141
design.
And
again:
is perfect; How
appeares that? For all bis ways are
ludgement, sayes Moses in his victorious song. This is Perfection,
*
'Gods work
That he hath
disorders are
The
Problems,
like
Why
The
his
Masque of Beautie
Had those, that dwell in error foule,
And hold that women haue no soule,
:
Said,
To
this
Women
Ben appends
a note:
4
A much
LXXX Sermons,
Mary Magdalene*
2
17. 170.
earlier reference to
thesis
(1567),
Sig.
3.
DONNE'S PROSE
42
women
dare not displease them, but giue them what they will ? And so when
some call them Angells, some Goddesses, and the Palpulian Heretikes
wee descend so much with the streame, to allow
make them
Bishops,
them
soules.' 1
in the negative)
is,
in possession
soul.' 2
*
C. C.
sig.
Webb points
LXXX Sermons,
2$. 242.
'JUVENILIA'
into English, literature.
143
as a literary
form
who
published
them
in 1593 as
The Defence
of Contraries.
and
it is difficult
He drew some
Lando. 2
of his
source
stimulating
than Lando, and he was also indebted to Erasmus 9 Praise of
* the standard
Folly
example of a great Latin paradoxical
much more
satire.
When Donne wrote 'An Essay of Valour' the essay was also
new form in English. The Essais (1580) of Montaigne
1
See R. E. Bennett, Tour Paradoxes by Sir William Cornwallis the
Younger', Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature, xiii. 219-40.
Cornwallis was a friend of Donne, to whom he addressed some playful verses
about 1600.
2
Mario Praz, Secentismo e Marinismo in Inghilterra, p. 13, compares
Lando's title, 'Non e cosa biashnevole 1'esser bastardo' with Donne's 'Why
have Bastards best Fortune?' but this is by no means an exact parallel.
3 There are two
quotations from Martial's epigrams in Paradox 3, two in
Paradox to, one each in Paradoxes 6, 8, 9, and one in Problem 8. See my
Garland for John Donne,
appendix 'Donne's Reading of Martial' in
PP-44-94 Paradox 10
(Juvenilia,
Erasmus to put this as his
she
verso):
which moved
DONNE'S PROSE
144
Hall produced
which was first
attempt to reproduce the character-sketch
devised by Theophrastus in Greek. Sir Thomas Overbury
and his circle took up the idea, and as Donne's 'characters'
were first published in the Overbury volume, it seems likely
that Donne wrote them in competition with other members
of the circle. The 'Character of a Scot' reflects the annoy
ance felt by the English at the appearance of a number of
of James I during the
needy Scots gentlemen at the Court
his
reign.
early years of
Portions of the Juvenilia have been preserved in no less
than sixteen seventeenth-century manuscripts, all of them
The best of these give
independent of the printed texts.
of 1633 contain many
editions
two
as the
us valuable
help,
a
Evidently Henry Seyle had merely poor
to
which
from
print.
manuscript copy, not autograph,
When John Donne the younger published Paradoxes,
Problemes, Ess ayes, Characters in 1652 he did nothing to
which had
improve the text of those paradoxes and problems
sent to the printer a copy of
already appeared. He evidently
the 1633 second edition, adding to it some extra material
from a manuscript not in his father's autograph. This
material was certainly genuine, but the manuscript was a
which were
poor one, containing a number of blunders
the
editors of the
text.
Even
the
in
printed
perpetuated
Oxford Dictionary were puzzled by the word 'pluminaries'
in Problem 13: 'Embroiderers, Painters, and such Artificers
of curious vanities, which the vulgar call Pluminaries? The
Oxford editors, finding no other instance of the word in
c
number
worker or dealer in feathers'.
English, explain ?
of manuscripts read 'Embroyderers, Paynters, and such
Artificers of curious vanityes, which Varro and the vulgar
edition call Plumarios\ The 'vulgar edition' is the Vulgate,
which has plumarii 1 in Exodus xxxv. 35, a passage on which
Donne comments in one of his sermons. 2 Similarly the
corrupt passages.
XXVI Sermons,
I. I.
162, 27).
'JUVENILIA'
145
as
much
1
For a number of additional examples see my
Donne's Paradoxes and Problems', Review of English
2
3
article
'More MSS. of
Studies, x.
288-300.
DONNE'S PROSE
146
stages of revision
b7 Donne.
It
may seem
strange that he
and Greene
a covering letter
accompanied by
from Donne to
a friend,
We
of colour in costume
Melancholy, weare blade;
:
when
lusty,
Greene;
Modern Language
'JUVENILIA'
147
in 1598
and
his
marriage
in
flashes as these
have been
This letter
is
is a fragment of another
paradox, 'Hee
sandwiched between the two fragments from
Donne's known paradoxes. R. E. Bennett (op. cit., p. 310) has argued that
this represents a lost paradox by Donne, upholding the wisdom of weeping
as a pendant to Paradox 10 which declares 'That a Wise Man is knowne by
much Laughing'. This is possible, as Donne had already produced two
Paradoxes (nos. 5 and 9) arguing the case for and against suicide. Since
1
that weepeth
is
most
wise',
Manningham
difficult
it is
Poems (1633),
misprinted
p. 361.
as sorry.
(p. 88)
Surry [Surrey]
is
DONNE'S PROSE
148
end with a probleme, whose errand Is, to aske for his fellowes.
pray before you ingulfe your selfe in the Progresse, leave them for
mee, and such other of my papers as you will lend mee till your
l
returne.' 1
There
is
Donne
a problem:
'Else let this probleme supply, which was occasioned by you, of women
wearing stones.
Though their unworthlnesse, and your own ease
be advocates for me with you, yet I must adde my entreaty, that you
let goe no copy of my Problems, till I review them. If it be too late,
at least be able to tell me who hath them.' 2
.
49
(ii)
who had
his letters, 2
MS.
will
be found
infra,
150
DONNE'S PROSE
many contemporary
has them, that they may undergo a final revision. 1 The date
of the letter seems to be 1611, as in it Donne speaks of a
projected visit to the Continent, probably the visit to
'.
Poems (1633), p. 352: Interim seponas oro chartulas meas, quas cum
sponsione citae redhibitionis (ut barbare, sed cum ingcniosissimo Appollinari
loquar) accepistL Inter quas, si epigrammata mea Latma, et Catalogus
librorum satyricus non sunt, non sunt ; extremum juditium, hoc est, manum
ultimam jamjam subiturae sunt. Earum nonnullae
Purgatorium suum
passurae, ut correctiores emanent.'
2
Sir E. K. Chambers, Poems of Donne
(ii. 310).
151
Edmund
this
was
a licence
which was
Condaue Ignati
is
it is
of a different type.
DONNE'S PROSE
I52
and the
item in the
list
refers to a
3
is
first
153
bitter attack
written
when
the
memory
Bacon's
patron, was
already
Catalogue shortly before his visit to France in 1611 with
Sir Robert and Lady Drury. There is no reason to think that
the Drurys were friends with Donne before 1610, but in
that year their only daughter Elizabeth died, and Donne
wrote his elaborate poem, The Anatomy of the World (pub
lished in 1611), in her honour. The Drurys proved kind
DONNE'S PROSE
154
his
exposed to the
Court
then
how
and
155
letter, by Philips.
Thomas
He
Philips or Phelips
deciphered
skill
intercepted letters
in this art,
1 6.
'English Law- vacations. Holiday exercises of
on the Art of forming Anagrams approximately
Davies
John
Posies
and
to engrave on Rings.' 4
true,
No.
quibus
ignorantiam
secur&
fateri
poteris,
libros
aliis
inventu
difficiles
.
Hunc ergo catalogum ad usum tuum exaravi, ut his paratis
.
exquirere.
libris, in ornni pene scientia, si non magis, saltern aliter doctus, quam caeteri,
.
Tythagoras ludseo-Christianus,
eundem,
Numerum
99
et
66 verso
folio
Foxe
MS.
esse
Picum?
MS.
DONNE'S PROSE
156
As faithful as I find*.
Of Apocryphal Knights, one book by Edward
19.
2
Prinne, slightly amplified by Edward Chute*
Edward Prinne was one of the followers and dependants
this Posy,
No.
vol.
Chute.' There
is
'Seditious
no
Sir
List of Knights.
ing posy
2
is
i.
ii. 1 06.
The
follow
13,
T>e militibus Apocryphis per Edw* Prinne Kb, unus, per Edw. Chute
paulo amplior factus.'
3
'Caput aeneum Fran. Baconii de Roberto primo Anglia rege.*
157
which moved
John
like
Hugh
Plat
of it
is
satiric,
The
full
158
DONNE'S PROSE
VII
BIATHANATOS
date of the composition of Biathanatos is uncertain.
cannot be earlier than 1606, for it contains a reference
THE
It
Pseudo-Martyr
style
in the authorities
quoted inclines us to think that there can
have been only a short interval between the two works. 1
The
curious one.
title is a
The word
should be Biaiotha-
selfe
he explains in
From
his preface.
his earliest
youth he had
PMLA.
Ixii.
set
up
in type.
DONNE'S PROSE
160
much
my
Book Biatha
SIR,
I had need do somewhat towards you above my promises; How
weak are my performances, when even my promises are defective?
I cannot promise, no not in mine own hopes, equally to your merit
towards me. But besides the Poems, of which you took a promise,
I send you another Book to which there belongs this History. It was
written by me many years since; and because it is upon a rnisinter-
easily
',
withdraw your love from me, you will finde so many unworthinesses
in me, as you grow ashamed of having had so long, and so much, such
a
thing as
in Cbr. Jes.
J.
At some
Donne.'
BONNETS PROSE
i6z
kill it self; that is, not bury it self; for if it should do so,
those reasons, by which that act should be defended or excused, were
also lost with it. Since it is content to live, it cannot chuse a whole-
therefore
somer
Tour very
lover
Donne.'
less
It
is
'BIATHANATOS'
163
cally, wliicli
p.
ofcqiinor differences.
pany
till
Thomason
records
The entry runs thus: 'Master War. Scale. Entred for his copie tinder
the hands of Master Rushworth ,and Master Whitaker warden a tract called,
Biothonatos a declaracon of that paradox or thesis that selfe homicide is not,
1
DONNE'S PROSE
164
to 'be violated
War,
my
braines) by their
use of the Committee;
the
for
sequestred,
more eminently to hover over this,
(and al-most
my
all
continuall
my
Books
allarums
two dangers
being then a
appeared
Manuscript; a danger of being utterly lost, and a danger of
being utterly found; and fathered, by some of those wild
Atheists, who, as if they came into the World by conquest,
other mens Wits, and are resolved to be learned,
would fairely have enclined
?z
them, to a more modest, and honest course of Hfe.
One of the copies of the first edition in the University
a Warden
etc
vjd.' 'Master War. Scale* is Henry Scale or Seyle, who was
of the Stationers' Company, 1646-7, and who had previously printed Donne's
owne
all
Juvenilia.
1
BiatbanatoSy
fl"
verso~H 4.
<BIATHANATQS'
Library,
165
Tor 7 e R
fc
11
Edward
Carter,
Esq
S r,
I haue, here, sent you a Booke, that
may, per aduenture, giue you
some entertainement out of the noueltie of the subiect, but that is not
in this Parish I
my owne vse,
man and
neuer preached./
1
According to the Stationers' Register, Scale's rights in the book were
transferred to Moseley on 13 June 1649.
2 Pelecanicidium contains a curious mixture of
prose and verse. The first
book opens thus 'Stay, Desperate Souls Let 's have a word or two Examine
Well, what you but Once can do!' It then exhorts lovers, 'great spirits',
:
the melancholy, the jealous, 'the bloody murtherer', 'the curious zealot',
and other would-be suicides, to pause and consider their ways. After this
we have a verse narrative 'A horrid, yet true Story of one that hang'd
himself, upon his Knees, with a Bible on a Stool open before him, and a
Paper to
signifie that
he had repented.'
The
DONNE'S PROSE
i66
it
S.
afterwards
'BIATHANATOS
by death; Stay therefore
he
call;
as
167
Gods
to be loath to go
leasure
when he
till
cals.' 1
He
of death. And
such a manner
it
passiuely in his owne death, and in
he slew with himselfe) as was subiect to interpretation
hard enough. Yet the holy Ghost hath moued S. Paul to celebrate
2
Sampsonm his great Catalogue, and so doth all the Church.'
(consider
those
it
actiuely, consider
whom
'Beza, a man as eminent and illustrious, in the full glory and Noone
of Learning, as others were in the dawning, and Morning, when any,
the least sparkle was notorious, a confesseth of himself, that only for
the anguish of a ScurfEe, which over-ranne his head, he had once
these thoughts in me, or that a brave scorn, or that a faint cowardlinesse beget it, whensoever any affliction assailes me, mee thinks I have
it selfe
2
3
LXXX Sermons,
19. 191-2.
DONNE'S PROSE
168
who dy
a
B. Doro-
tbeus doc-
mn
b
'
'
Bosq.
'
cone, z. 1
perchance was such, that almost his very fall is justified and accepted of
b
God.] For, to this end, saith one , [God hath appointed us tentations,
that we might have some excuses 1 for our sinnes, when he calles us to
account^
A little later
Donne shows
clearly
enough that
his inten
Tribares.
I-
*,
part,
cap- 17-
h.
<*
5. 2.
is
Ta k en?
prejudged man, and the lazy affectors of ignorance, will use the same
calumnies and obtrectations toward me, (for the voyce and sound of
the Snake and Goose is all one) yet because I thought, that as in the
d
poole of Bethsaida, there was no health till the water was troubled,
so the best
way
de
veritate, as
pro veritate,])
Filesa-
cits
de
Our stomachs are not now so tender, and queasie, after so long
feeding upon solid Divinity, nor we so umbragious and startling,
having been so long enlightened in Gods path, that wee should thinke
f
any truth strange to us, or relapse into that childish
in which
age,
a Councell in France forbad Aristotles
Metaphysiques, and
punished
autborit.
Epts.
p-
x.
7-
2
3
quotations
is
a feature
MS,
'BIATHANATOS'
reader,
169
regarded
as excessive.
here,
parison.
Because
a proposition
end.
my
who acknowledge
as
Pliny doth,
Epist.
[That
to
chuse rather
scholastique
and
made account
naturall
to
men
doctrine.' 2
is
'This
is3
and
my way;
my end is
to
remove
scandall,
For certainly
his
and
1
4
6
7
it is all the
This
is
to find
any innocent^
Biathanatos, p. 23.
MS.: 'Judgement*.
MS.: 'apply them that'.
Biathanatos, pp. 23-4.
MS.: 'pardon me
this opinion'.
4,
DONNE'S PROSE
i;o
may
may
be
be
'BIATHANATOS'
171
good.
enjoined.
e
as distinguished
'Homicide
is
in Atrocibus
wayes, by
4.
i.
by Tolet.
it selfe.'s
Donne admits
it is difficult
that
to see
how
self-homicide
first
interpreted
of
life.
Don Cameron
Donne's
list
of
Valerius
and Fulgosius.
2
MS.: 'interpreted'.
5
Ibid., pp.
4
Aduise, by
classical suicides to
MS.:
compendia
like
those of Textor
4
commandement, by
'by
117-18.
e
selfe'.
Helpe, or by y Act it
Ibid
;>
P- 9 1 -
Permission, by
Pre~
DONNE'S PROSE
172
something which
Donne
we
2
could, and should doe.'
Aquin.
12.
2r *
q.
'
32.
in equall danger,
give this to
of those
spiritual reason.
cases,
such
as
In
this section
vowed
in his
Donne adds
Selfe-Homicide
him bread/
*And
,
yet, though he sales he killed
he
to
him but Indiscretion.^ He
himselfe,
imputes nothing
adduces also examples of extraordinary fasts
among them
'the Monkes in Prester
Ms
Dominions*, who 'fast
John^
and
stand
all
that
time to the chinne in
strictly fifty dayes,
friar *a
water'. 6 Finally,
1
MS,:
'his*.
Ibid., p. 128.
Ibid,, p. 129.
as his
fol.
298,
'BIATHANATOS'
173
[A man must
1
I>T
communicate person,] 1
'
a Clem.
C
I.
nstit A. Cat.
'
r 7.
who
and put
Sir,
it
have
kill'd
it is all
you, answered,
one, for if
God
would have had mee eate honey, he would have directed thy
hand to honey.' 2 Donne declares that it was still the custom
4
strongest examples. Few readers were likely to have much
for
the
'holy old man' mentioned above, but the
respect
Donne
*...'
gives as his
Reg-
r:
semel*
Biathanatos, p. 131.
Ibid., p. I3Q.
b Sextus
many
of
stubbornly maintain his Proposition still, though by many experiences 7
new Stars, the reason which moved Aristotle seems now to be utterly defeated?
[marginal references Kepplerus de Stella Serpent, cap. 23]. Ibid., pp. 145-6.
MS:
R^g:
lur:
Q1 d
<,
DONNE'S PROSE
174
Baron,
Manyroty*
upon the
pose,* celebrates
is not certain,
(yet the Authors are Beda, Usuardus,
b
and
Barronius*
Latinorum
Ado,
c&terf) Or else, says Sayr
(as
sayes)
vou mugt answer
s h e was
brought very neer the fire, and as good
as thrown i n: ^ r e l se th at s ^e was
provoked to it by divine inspiration.
I, g
c 7.
num. 1 1.
But, but that another divine inspiration, which is true Charity, moved
MS.
the beholders then to beleeve, and the Church ever since to acknowThesaur.
i ec
jg e> t iiat s k e ^id therein a Noble and Christian act, to the speciall
^ ^or ^ G
^ this act f hers, as we^ as an 7 other, might have been
y
Sayr.
Tbesaur.
^^
n.
?i
Baron,
Mart.
6.
Baron-
Mar-"
tyrolo:
And
^n^
cap. 7.6.'
De
I-
3-
Virg. directly
when
Saint Ambrose?
upon the
themselves in
may
away
all
offence.
Here is no
leave
difficulty; for
many waies
no escape to
my
to death
I will
breast, least it
not trust
withdraw
my hand least
it
selfe: I will
MS.rApolloma*
MS.: Baronius.
'BIATHANATOS'
175
'And then having drest her selfe as a Bride, and going to the water,
Here, sayes she, let us be baptized; this is the Baptisme where sinnes
are forgiven, and where a kingdome is purchased: and this is the
makes
baptisme after which none sinnes. This water regenerates this
us virgines, this opens heaven, defends the feeble, delivers from death,
and makes us Martyrs. Onely we pray to God, that this water scatter
us not, but reserve us to one funerall. Then entred they as in a dance,
;
hand
in hand,
their
Thus Donne
might
so scandalize
himselfe.'*
He
of
all
Ibici -> P-
Biathanatos, p. 182.
BONNETS PROSE
176
is
demned by the
honoured
text,
as a
though
St.
is
not con
Thomas Aquinas
speaks of
admits that Aristotle and
cowardly. Donne
Augustine also regarded suicide as a form of cowardice,
but he points out that Augustine acknowledged a certain
greatness of mind in Cleombrotus and Cato, who both slew
death
his
as
St.
themselves.
This third part has an introductory and a concluding
chapter, in which Donne leaves the consideration of parti
tf
And
way: forbidding
it
earnestly
all
Biathanatos, p. 207.
3
MS.
'diuerting'.
MS.
Successions'.
'BIATHANATOS*
177
Akor.
dzo. 65.
is
"
*
always give
light
(for that
is
accidentall,
burneth naturally,
kindles in us, (as he doth
but
it
and
it
must have
as
work upon,)
which the Devill
aire to
as
which
differ
precept given upon any more then two, God and our neighbour^ So that
the other which concerne our selves, may be pretermitted in some
occasions.
and m rtdidecayed and languished, cries to us, [Nutant parietes, The walls
tate
the roofe shake, and would* st not thou goe out? Thou art tyred in a
and wouldst thou not goe home ?] I will end with applying
pilgrimage,
'
Cf.
without
2
LXXX
This
is
clearly a misprint.
3
5102
is
presented to us by
fire,
but
fire
light.'
The
is
c
act. de
cons,
VIII
is
AS
a close
A CONTROVERSIALIST
connexion between Biathanatos and
Pseudo-Martyr, though at
to be little in
first
sight there
would appear
fact the
In Biathanatos
link.
Donne
kill,
point
many
virgins
that he
on the ground
by the Pope.
They promise their followers a martyr's crown if insubordina
tion is punished with death
by the civil power. Donne argues
is not
martyrdom but suicide. God has
given to lawful princes an authority of which no
Pope can
dispossess them. Englishmen are bound to own the
King
as their
rightful sovereign, and in the apostle's
words, 'those
who resist shall receive to themselves
5
condemnation . To
'PSEUDO-MARTYR'
179
to
modern
critics,
but
this
is
Pseudo-Martyr.
2
of
Pseudo-Martyr,- which appeared in i6io, was the first
were
Some
Donne's prose works to be published.
yet
years
to elapse before Donne took orders in the Church of England,
but he had already done a considerable amount of contro
versial work in defence of the Anglican against the Roman
quick
The
late
Apologia
Doctrine in the Case of Conspiracy and Rebellion (1605); Apologiae Catholicae
DONNE'S PROSE
180
Walton
discoursing
the taking of those Oaths; apprehended such a
usually urged against
in his stating the Questions, and his Answers to
clearness
and
validity
to bestow some time in
them, that his Majesty commanded him
to write his Answers
then
and
a
into
the
method,
Arguments
them: and, having done that, not to send, but be his own messenger
and bring them to him. To this he presently and diligently applied
them to him under his own
himself, and within six weeks brought
the
Book bearing the name of
now
be
as
printed;
they
handwriting,
drawing
to
2
Pseudo-martyr, printed anno i6io.'
it
confines the
one or two
details
from the
LXXX
by
'PSEUDO-MARTYR'
181
upon themselves
siastical policy.
known Roman
controversialists,
such
as
Bellarmine, Baro-
Pseudo-Martyr. Wherein out of certaine Propositions and Gradabe remembered that Donne had studied for three years at Hart
had left the university without taking a degree.
2
*Causa est quod huic Academiae maxime ornamento sit ut eiusmodi viri,
optime de republica et ecclesia meriti, gradibus Academicis insigniantur.'
1
It will
Gosse,
i.
DONNE'S PROSE
82
tions,
AUegeance.
Deut. 32.
15.
But be
lob. II.
But
oh that
5.
to right.
2.
In the time of his tribulation, did he yet trespasse more against the
Lord, for he sacrificed vnto the gods of Damascus, which plagued him.
London
Printed by
W.
command of James.
'The influence of those your Maiesties Bookes, as the Sunne, which
all corners, hath
wrought vppon me, and drawen vp, and
exhaled from my poore Meditations, these discourses: Which, with
all reueirence and deuotion, I
present to your Maiestie, who in this
also haue the power and office of the Sunne, that those things which
you exhale, you may at your pleasure dissipate, and annull; or suffer
them to fall downe again, as a wholesome and fruitfull dew, vpon your
Church and Commonwealth. Of my boldnesse in this addresse, I
most humbly beseech your Maiestie, to admit this excuse, that hauing
obserued, how much your Maiestie had vouchsafed to descend to a
conuersation with your Subiects, by way of your Bookes, I also conceiu'd an ambition, of ascending to your
presence, by the same way,
and of participating, by this meanes, their happinesse, of whome,
penetrates
'PSEUDO-MARTYR'
183
heares in
vs in
The
(in
which
am
also interessed) I
must
he
will
Grounds handled
and greater branches,) hath endured and suffered more in their per
sons and fortunes, for obeying the Teachers of Romane Doctrine,
1
Pseudo-Martyr^
sig.
3.
DONNE'S PROSE
i8 4
then
it
hath done.
who
knowledge,
life,
shall
this, as a carnall
as
or
may
'In which, I haue abstained from handling the two last Chapters
vpon diuers reasons; whereof one is, that these Heads hauing beene
caried about,
desired
by
For the
first
assist, as
to assault.
and perfited
Kingdome
his
house vpon
are.
is busiest to
attempt
of
Grace, (not forbearing our Sauiour himselfe) so an ordinary
strength
Instrument of his, (whose continuall libels, and Incitatorie
bookes,
his
it
absolutely, as a
body
it,
forme which
his
handling thereof at
'PSEUDO -MARTYR
185
'One thing more I was willing the Reader should be forewarned of;
which is, that when he findes in the printing of this Booke oftentimes
a change of the Character, hee must not thinke that all those words or
sentences so distinguished, are cited from other Authors; for I haue
done it sometimes, onely to draw his eye, and vnderstanding more
thereof.
intensly vpon that place, and so make deeper impressions
6
And in those places which are cited from other Authors (which hee
shall know by the Margine) I doe not alwayes precisely and superwas
stitiously binde my selfe to the words of the Authors; which
because sometimes I collect their sense, and
impossible to me, both
or their opinions, and the Resultance of a
express their Arguments
whole leafe, in two or three lines, and some few times, I cite some of
their Catholique Authors, out of their owne fellowes, who had vsed
the same fashion of collecting their sense, without precise binding
themselues to All, or onely their words. This is the comfort which
my conscience hath, and the assurance which I can giue the Reader,
that I haue no where made any Author, speake more or lesse, in sense,
then hee intended, to that purpose, for which I cite him. If any of
their owne fellowes from whom I cite them, haue dealt otherwise, I
cannot be wounded but through their sides. So that I hope either
mine Innocence, or their own fellowes guiltinesse, shall defend me,
from the curious malice of those men, who in this sickly decay, and
in euery citation as
declining of their cause, can spy out falsifyings
a
in a iealous, and obnoxious state,
Decipherer can pick out Plots,
:
The
reference
is
to Sir
Edward
an object of attack.
Pseudo-Martyr, sig. 1T I and 2.
Parsons wrote two books on this subject:
to the fifth fart of Reportes Lately set forth by Syr Edward
(1) An Ansvvere
The ancient and
the
Cooke Knight,
Kinges Attorney General Concerning
moderne Municipal! lawes of England, which do apperteyne to Spirituall Power
and lurisdiction. . By a Catholicke Deuyne. Matth. 22. v. 21 Reddite qua
Imprinted with licence, Anno
sunt Casaris Casari; et qucs sunt Dei Deo.
1
Domini 1606.
(2)
M. Thomas Morton
concerning
DONNE'S PROSE
86
The
That
xiii.
to
the
all
Kings of Fraunce,
And not
this
Oath,
is
any
of our Kings, can giue the Pope any more right ouer the
England, then ouer any other free State whatsoeuer'
Kingdome of
'And if they'
[i.e.
Roman
certaine imputations
of wilfull falsities objected
P. R. intituled of
There is also
side] 'will
be content to
to. .
T. M. in a treatise
of
Mitigation
adjoyned apeece of a Reckoning
with Syr E. Cooke,
about a Nihil dicit, and some other
points uttered by
him in the late Preambles to his sixt and Seaventh Partes
of
Reports.
1609.
1
Keynes (op. cit., p. 5) points out also that the pagination of sheets
.
and Aa
125,
is
number of
press, e.g. I
numbered
as 121,
124,
'
'PSEUDO-MARTYR'
187
things, so in
any one
my
science,
my
selfe,
me:
to
My
my
my
my
my
an
present
iurisdiction
eye.
so lowe, as to take
knowledge of me,
1
Donne expressed the same desire several years later in Essays in Divinity.
See the passage quoted on p. 230.
DONNE'S PROSE
i88
my
iustly
by laying me open
as
he
is
is
he
is
indifferent affections.
that I write.' 1
Pseudo-Martyr,
sig.
3 verso.
'PSEUD O -MARTYR'
189
claim to temporal jurisdiction. To offer our liues for defence
c
but to
to heare
3
your God hath given you. Amen.'
Ibid. sig.
Ibid. sig.
2
3.
1-2.
Ibid.
sig.
C 4~D
i.
DONNE'S PROSE
i 9o
Such
may be
Chapter
I,
and
against other,
deliuered this lewell, resume it againe: So, till it please the Lord,
and owner of our life to take home into his treasurie, this rich Carbuncle
our soule, which giues vs light in our night of ignorance, and our
darke body of earth, we are still anguished and trauelled, as well with
a continuall defensiue warre, to preserue our life from sickenesses, and
.other offensiue violences; as with a diuers and contrary couetousnes,
sometimes to enlarge our State and terme therein, sometimes to make
it
so
surfets, or
1
licentiousnes, or reputation.'
The
tell thee,
nothing against
vs,
though
it
'PSEUD O -MARTYR'
191
humour
Atheistical?
(p. 106),
Dunns
Lucianicall
and
critic
will
that
is
he hath some
scanned and sifted by learned men, and require much more substance,
then his skambling studyes, and superficial! knowledge can affoard.'
'So that
you
see into
what
a quicksand (as I
may
say) or
quagmire
of absurdity es
to
mire.' 2
It
Fitzherbert, Supplement
to
DONNE'S PROSE
of Henri IV in Ma 7
Ig2
the assassination
both in
pamphlets were published
Numerous
1610.
Rege,
June
Parliament of Paris. 1
but
is a satire of the Luciamc kind,
Ignatius bis Conclave
went directly to
it is not necessary to suppose that Donne
Lucian for his model. It is more likely that he was inspired
by the famous Satyre Mfaifpe'e, published anonymously
in 1595, Le Supple
1594, and by its supplement, published
lune?
des
nouvelles
ou
regions de la
ment du Catholicon,
that the
the
on
attack
its
for
Jesuits
It is not, however,
its
for
but
referencesjx
jh^jngw
interests
book now
readers,
.
>
astronomy'
and^^
stowed3 that it 'must have JDeenwritten later thaiT*Pseudoof its composition cannot be
Martyr, and that the date
in i6io.4
1
Therejirejlsaa^
French works
3
Gosse,
i.
are
enumerated in
detail
by
Coffin, op.
The
from
pp. 201-3.
257, 258.
cit.,
preface
Jan. to 2
is
The work
satellites
concludes with a
observed by Galileo
Mar.
Gosse in
his
who
called
it
193
whole
1
of the
Q^r^^^S^Ml^xst
taken by
his time.
Internale^^
shows that Ignatius
his Conclave must have followed
Pseudo-Martyr, and could
not have been written as early as 1608, the
year to which
Dr. Jessopp assigned it. 1 There is a reference to his 'other
Book' (i.e. Pseudo-Martyr) in the epistle, 'The Printer to
the Reader'.
T>oest thou seeke after the Author ? It is in vaine; for hee is harder
to be found then the parents of Popes were in the old times :
yet if
thou haue an itch of gessing, receiue from me so much, as a friend of
to whom he sent his booke to bee read, writ to me. "The Author
"was vnwilling to haue this booke published, thinking it vnfit both for
"the matter, which in it selfe is weighty and serious, and for that
"grauity which himselfe had proposed and obserued in an other booke
"formerly published, to descend to this kinde of writing. But I on the
"other side, mustred my forces against him, and produced reasons
"and examples.
" ... At last he
yeelded, and made mee owner of his booke, which
"I send to you to be deliuered over to forraine nations, farre from the
"father: and (as his desire is) his last in this kinde. Hee chooses and
"desires, that his other book should testifie his ingenuity, and candor,
"and his disposition to labour for the reconciling of all parts. This
"Booke must teach what humane infirmity is, and how hard a matter
"it is for a man much conuersant in the bookes and Acts oflesuites, so
"throughly to cast off the Jesuits, as that he contract nothing of their
"naturall drosses, which are Petulancy, and Lightnesse. Vale.'
his,
'259-80,
3 (1940),
Society's
Jessopp,
2
The
only copies
in the University
3
(Acton Collection).
SIOZ
Keynes, op.
Library, Cambridge
pp. 8-12.
cit.,
DONNE'S PROSE
i 94
We
find
The edition, however, can be exactly dated.
that the book was entered on the Stationers' Register on
24 January 1610/11 to the publisher, Walter Burre.
etc.
d
.
vj
?
.
The
Vbi
varia
De lesuitarum Indole,
De nouo inferno creando,
De Ecclesia Lunatica instituenda,
per Satyram congesta sunt.
Duobus
Accessit
& Apologia
pro
lesuitis.
&
Omnia
Collegio Sor-
The
first
English edition
is
A-G 12 The
.
a small
title
duodecimo volume
runs thus:
Hell
way
Concerning
The Disposition of lesuits, The Creation of a new Hell, The establish
:
More, and
Dunstones Churchyard.
1611.'
195
S^m
1680.'
i.e
GiuHo Clemente
Scotti.
DONNE'S PROSE
I9 6
vision of hell,
astromaaicd
discovenS^TGaE^
""""
us~to^^
*I
My
little
had
liberty to
late
of it, who
to be silent, then to do Galileo wrong by speaking
to
neerer
come
to
him,
hath summoned the other worlds, the Stars
who (as
and giue him an account of themselues. Or to Keller?
Braches death, bath
himselfe testifies of himselfe) euer since Tycho
should be done in heauen
new
no
that
his
thing
into
received it
care,
must take place; and
without his knowledge. For by the law, Preuention
of
Syfaeus
De
stella
inCygno.
I am content they
therefore what they haue found and discoured first,
to take from me,
vouchsafe
Yet
this
first.
they may
speake and vtter
in their circuit.
where
Elias
or
find
shall
any
Enoch,
that they
hardly
When
had surueid
al
The Larke by
busie
may
safely say
that
all
my
earliest
From Joannis
annum
MDC
762).
197
To
it is
which the
^
de
DONNE'S PROSE
198
made
~
In the scheme of the universe. Lucifer is puzzled
whether to grant or deny the astronomer's claim, but
Ignatius Loyola, who is near the Devil's chair, is determined
'^ i3SS^^p&S^S^K^ry
/r^h^f)H^ws"lroti[W
give more
t
may
very well be
of
'But for you,' says Ignatius to Copernicus, 'what new thing haue
gets any thing ? What cares hee
whether the earth trauell, or stand still ? Hath your raising vp of the
earth into heauen, brought men to that confidence, that they build
new towers or threaten God againe ? Or do they out of this motion
of the earth conclude, that there is no hell, or deny the punishment of
sin ? Do not men beleeue ? do they not liue iust, as they did before ?
Besides, this detracts from the dignity of your learning, and derogates
from your right and title of comming to this place, that those opinions
of yours may very well be true. If therfore any man haue honour
who opposed
time was creeping into euery mans minde. Hee onely can be
Author of all contentions, and schoole-combats in this
and
no greater profit can bee hoped for heerein, but that for
cause;
such brabbles, more necessarie matters bee neglected. And yet not
onely for this is our Clauius to bee honoured, but for the great paines
also which hee tooke in the Gregorian Calender,
by which both the
peace of the Church, and Ciuill businesses haue beene egregiously
troubled: nor hath heauen it selfe escaped his violence, but hath euer
since obeied his apointments so that S.
Stephen, lohn Baptist, and all
the rest, which haue bin commanded to worke miracles at certain
at that
called the
appointed daies, where their Reliques are preserued, do not now attend
the day come, as they were accustomed, but are awaked ten daies
till
1
XIII. P.M.
restituti Exflicatio,
published at
Rome
in 1603.
199
businesse.' 1
con-
VST""
"""^
*-
'
^^W^& J^
!
that,
The
(if
they be Papists)
may haue
the
teachings
The whole
passage
is
in Donne's best
satiric vein.
'Lucifer signified his assent [to the decision of Loyola]; and Coper
without muttering a word, was as quiet, as he thinks the sunne,
nicus,
when he which
Lucifer said:
And who
But when hee vnderstood that it was but the webbe of his name,
hee recollected himselfe, and raising himselfe vpright, asked what he
had to say to the great Emferour Sathan, Lucifer, Belzebub, Leuiathan,
Abaddon. Paracelsus replyed, It were an iniurie to thee, 6 glorious
Emferour, if I should deliuer before thee, what I haue done, as thogh
al those things had not proceeded from thee, which seemed to haue
bin done by me, thy organe and conduit yet since I shal rather be thy
trumpet herein, then mine own, some things may be vttered by me.
Besides therfore that I broght all Methodicall Phisitians, and the
:
3 Paracelsus
was actually known by this formidable list of
(c. 1490-1541)
names. His medical researches, and his curiously complex character, that of
a medical reformer who was also a mystical philosopher with a dash of the
charlatan about him, attracted Donne's imagination strongly. 'Hohenheim*
is the correction of the errata list for 'Bohenheim'.
DONNE'S PROSE
200
art it selfe into so
much contempt,
my
Art, nor fixed rules might be established, but that al remedies might
be dangerously drawne from my vncertaine, ragged, and vnperfect
experiments, in
triall
whereof,
carkases?' 1
He
You must not thinke sir, that you may heere draw out an oration
to the proportion of your Name; It must be confessed, that you
attempted great matters, and well becomming a great officer of
make a man, in your
Lucifer, when you vndertook not onely to
Alimbicks, but also to preserue him immortall. And it cannot be
doubted, but that out of your Commentaries vpon the Scriptures, in
c
which you were vtterly ignorant, many men haue taken occasion of
2
erring, and thereby this kingdome [is] much indebted to you.'
increasingly scurrilous.
to thinke of
the beholder
desperate of returne:
Jbid., p. 26,
201
saw Machiauel often put forward, and often thrust back, and
at
1
last vanish.'
number was
inuenus
may
throughly instructed himselfe of all the hills, woods, and Cities in the
new world, the Moone. And since he effected so much with his first
Glasses, that
himselfe satisfaction of all, and the least parts in her, when now being
growne to more perfection in his Art, he shall Jiaue made new Glasses,
and they receiued a hallowing from the Pope, he may draw the Moone,
boate floating vpon the water, as neere the earth as he will.' 3
like a
which
is caused in hell
by a report brought by
soul
that
the
arrived
newly
Pope intends to canonize
a great noise
Ignatius.
2
Ibid., p. 93.
4
Though Donne did not indulge in the usual poetic flattery of Elizabeth
during her lifetime, he wrote of her with the greatest respect after her death.
See XXVI Sermons, 24. 351-2, and Chamberlain's comment (quoted by
Sydereus.
DONNE'S PROSE
202
last, after
with a
I returned to
earth.
my body;
which
Which
his trembling
Crowne,
is
paradoxical vein:
is it time to come
'Now
is, it is
time
which
saies
any thing to
this
Apology, hee hath my leaue; and I haue therefore left roome for three
or foure lines: which is
enough for such a paradox: and more then
lungius, Scribanius, Gretzerus, Richeomus, Cydonius, and all the rest
Apologies, and almost tyred with a defensiue warre,
are able to employ, if
they will write onely good things, and true, of the
lesuites.
.'
IX
ESSAYS IN DIVINITY
Essays in Divinity have perhaps less literary value
than the Devotions or the Sermons, but they are of great
importance for those who wish to study the development
of Donne's thought. They are linked
THE
n^^versarus y which
Ignatius bis Conclave, andthe
ancTwith'tKe
Sermons
whtchfoBSwd them.
preceded them,
j^^
They
It is thought fit to let thee know, that these Essayes were printed
from an exact Copy, under the Authors own hand and, that they were
the voluntary sacrifices of several! hours, when he had many debates
betwixt God and himself, whether he were worthy, and competently
learned to enter into Holy Orders. They are now published both to
testifie his modest Valuation of himself and to shew his great abilities
:
Fare-well.'
This, however,
is
less
number of
Gosse,
ii.
321
is still
December
tache d'&rire
les
Essais ie Tbtologit'
DONNE'S PROSE
204
much
saries
but
it is
and Ignatius
less
his Conclave.
satisfaction
mind
certain fundamental
religious problems. In this respect
fitting as a companion piece to the Anniversaries than as a
up
they are
more
prelude to
his assumption of
holy orders. Donne has been confronted, through a study
of the new philosophy
rendering the old conception of a unified world scheme
entirely hopeless, with the necessity of discovering other means
whereby the
natural world may be
significantly related to a new universal order.
Donne
for
philosopher.'
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
before Donne's ordination
a
most
as a
205
1
proof of his orthodoxy,
is
Roman and
He
remarked: 'When
There
disappointment.
and no more.' 4
The book
itself,
if
last
1
Gosse, ii. 63. On the previous page Gosse states: It is more than probable
that Abbot, who was very well informed, was aware, as Donne feared that
he might be, of Donne's activity for Somerset in the business of the nullity.
Very possibly the documents which Donne drew up for the favourite, and
which still exist, had passed under the eyes of Abbot.' As we have already
seen, these documents were written by Sir Daniel Dunne and not by Donne
(see p. 29 supra) and the mere composition of an epithalamium for a marriage
which had been graced by the King's presence could hardly have been a valid
reason for refusing ordination to Donne. Incidentally we may notice that
Abbot had nothing to do with Donne's ordination. The right of conferring
Orders is vested in the diocesan bishop, and Donne was duly ordained by
John King, Bishop of London, the diocese in which he was to serve.
2
Abbot had the temerity to write a protest in 1622 to King James against
the latter's proposed decree of toleration for Catholics, in which he inveighed
against *that most Damnable and Heretical Doctrine of the Church of Rome,
the
3
Whore
of Babylon
9
.
Essays in Divinity,]),
no.
Gosse,
11.63.
DONNE'S PROSE
206
charge. It
frailty
his Image, as
There
passage
is
2
Medals, permanently and preciously delivered.'
a gentleness which is very pleasant in such a
as this
Death
is
Essays, p. 7.
Ibid., p. 145.
of thy
happy
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
207
we
could be delivered of
all
habit of sin, in
with being
my
Medicine, allowest
me
to be
my Physician.'
shown by
and
certain of the Divine Poems on the one hand, and with the
early Sermons on the other.
The verbal links with the two Anniversaries are worth
enumeration. In The first Anniversary Donne had written:
is
Vouchsafe to
A last,
still
in their
memory.
Grierson,
i.
245.
DONNE'S PROSE
ao8
This
is
'Have they furthered, or eased thee any more, who not able to
consider whole and infinit God, have made a particular God, not only
of every power of God, but of every benefit I . . Out of this pro
.
ceeded Dea
is
expressed in the Sermons:
able to consider God so; not so entirely, not
not
were
'The Gentiles
in pieces, and changed God into single
God
broke
but
altogether;
a
made
and
fragmentarie God of every Power, and Attribute
money,
in God, of every blessing from God, nay of every malediction and
.JW^came to be a God, and a Fever came to be
judgment of God
a God.'4
these parallels 5
is
the likeness in
fire.
Grierson, i. 263.
Essays, pp. 204-5.
Essays, p. 41. Jessopp points out the reference to Juvenal, Sat. xv. 10.
*0 sanctas gentes quibus haec nascuntur in hortis Numina.'
3
4
5
LXXX Sermons,
50. 502.
smaller example
may be found
in
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
And
as these starres
209
Strung on one
Her through
Whose quick
The whole
Starres'
world.
which Kepler_an^^
us
as
when
heaven
lookes
on
with
new
But,
eyes,
Those new starres every Artist exercise,
What place they should assign to them they doubt,
Argue, and agree not
till
He no longer appended
Essays
planets,
c
and
So that
them,
is
this
this
all
between
in Cicero's words; 4 and the corporeal and visible image and son of the
invisible God, in the description of the Academicks: which being but
hath been the subject of
one, (for Universum est omnia versa in unum)
1
Gods labor, and providence, and delight, perchance almost six thousand
1
Grierson,
i,
Ibid. 247
(A Funerall
256-7.
Elegie, 67-70).
reference to the text on which Donne is meditating, Genesis
'In the beginning God created Heaven and Earth.'
3
Cicero,
De Natura Deorum,
lib.
ii.
c. 6.
I.
i:
DONNE'S PROSE
210
compass
and
nearer regions are illustrated with the Planets, which work so effectu
that they have often stop'd his further search, anc
ally upon man,
been themselves by him deified. ... Of the glory of which (i.e. the
shall best end in the words oj
world), and the inhabitants of it, we
SiracWs Son,s When we have spoken much, we cannot attain unto them,
but the sum of all is, that God is alU A
Donne goes on to
are these
[i.e.
kings
Coffin, op. cit., p. 84, n. 54, comments on this passage and translates
the words of Gilbert in his De Magnete (VI. iii. 218) thus: 'Leaving out the
ninth sphaere, if the convexity of the Primum Mobile be duly estimated in
proportion to the rest of the sphaeres, the vault of the Primum Mobile must
in one hour run through as much space as is comprised in 3000 great circles
of the Earth, for in the vault of the firmament it would complete more than
1800.'
2
Dr. Jessopp was the first to point out that here also Donne is following
The Ptolemaic catalogue of stars gave 1,022 as the total number.
This passage should be compared with Donne's attack in Biathanato*,
p. 146,
Gilbert.
on
'Aristotles Schollers'
who go on maintaining
new stars.
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
211
her vaults, and caverns, the bed of the winds, and the secret streets
and passages of al rivers, and Hel it self, though they [marg. ref.
Munster 1. i.e. 16.] afford it three thousand great miles, are but as
so many wrinkles, and pock-holes.' 1
This passage
closely linked
286-301, in
'warts'
and
'pock-holes' :
still
Doth not
The
Moone would
floating
If under
all,
might thinke
shipwracke there, and sinke
Of th>
earth? 2
'the
round
the rising of the dead from earth and sea, 5 the dyeing of
souls in Christ's blood which makes them white, 6 the
the foundation
description of Christ as 'the Lamb slain from
See also LXXX Sermons, 73. 747, where there is a reference
same passage in Sebastian Munster' s Cosmograpbia which inspired the
conjectures about hell in The first Anniversary.
1
Ibid., p. 74.
to the
2
3
Grierson,
Holy
i.
240.
vii. I
and Rev.
vii. 14.
DONNE'S PROSE
2I2
1
in Divinity open with
of the world'.
Similarly the Essays
with references on
continue
and
iii.
Rev.
to
a reference
7,
5
'the last great fire (Rev.
to
61
i. 8, on
Rev.
to
page
page 31
to have
xx. 9, io, 14, 15), on page 63, 'some have prayed
the
to
Multi
on
vi.
them'
113
Hils fall upon
page
16),
(Rev.
and
could
none
which
number',
the
tude in white before
Lamb,
vii. 4,
sealed
were
which
them
144,000'
(Rev.
9),
the 'number of
xx.
Last
the
to
168
11-13).
(Rev.
and on page
Judgement
Donne had a special affection for the Book of Revelation,
a number of sermons on texts taken from it
and
preached
(e.g.
and
LXXX Sermons,
nos. 19
32).
no longer
'this
rotten world', as
Donne had
called
it
in
he now
*The first Anniversary, but
terms it. We hear nothing in the Essays of the decay and
disillusionment which occupy so much of the Anniversaries.
Donne is absorbed in studying the eternal purpose of God
in the world, and in contemplating the mercy, power, and
justice of God. As yet we have no discussion of those
distinctively Christian doctrines of the Incarnation and the
Atonement, which were to occupy so large a place in the
Sermons. These are implicit in much of the argument, but
'this glorious world', as
Holy
Sonnets, xvi. 5, 6,
Essays, p. 217.
Essays, p. 219,
See
and Rev.
also
xiii. 8.
Sonnets, xix.
i-n and
ii.
7, 8
Essays, p. 221.
and
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
for the
213
the Creator
of the Universe.
I.
many.
first
Divell; and presently the woman; who in the next chapter proceeded
further, and first durst pronounce that sacred and mystick name of
Name, quod
For
my Name
is
in him-, but
he
tels
it is.
But
since,
necessity hath enforced, and Gods will hath revealed some names.
For in truth, we could not say this, God cannot be named, except
God
could be named.'
Rabbins have made one name of God, of all his names in the ScripThough lacob seeme to have been rebuked for asking Gods
'tures;
The marginal reference is 'Dial. Asclep? It was probably from the works
of Patricius (Fran. Patrizzi, 1529-97) that Donne derived his knowledge of
the works attributed to the fabled Hermes Trismegistus.
1
DONNE'S PROSE
214
do
when he
a miraculous
is
worke
his
name.' 1
is another
passage in which the
of
is
the
argument
reproduced in almost identical
Essays
words. It is too long to quote in full, but it begins in the
Essays with the words, 'This is the Name, which the Jews
stubbornly deny ever to have been attributed to the Messias
c
in the Scriptures', 2 and in the sermon, This is that name
which the Jews falsly, but peremptorily
deny ever to
have been attributed to the Messias, in the Scriptures/ 3
An undated sermon preached at Lincoln's Inn, and there
fore belonging to the earlier part of Donne's ministry, con
tains a passage in which a verse of Canticles is
applied, as
it had been in the
Essays, to the divisions of the Christian
we
read:
*In the
first
constitution of the
Roman Empire
men would
In the
XXVI Sermons we
read:
LXXX Sermons,
50. 501.
The marginal
restrain
references are to
Judges 13. 18, and Exodus 23. 20, references which are
margin of the parallel passage of the
2
them, from an
also
Essays.
LXXX
3
Essays in Divinity, pp. 47-9.
Sermons, 50, 502,
4
Essays in Divinity, p. 112, and Fifty Sermons, 21. 183.
3
Essays in Divinity, p. 143.
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
215
expensive, and wastful worship of their Gods, every man was so apt
to exceed in sacrifices and such other religious duties, til that law,
Deus
religious
?I
is
occupied by the
By the
late
fc
fc
Fleet-street.
1651.'
To
To
A 8.
In
this
Thomason bought
sufficiently startling,
XXVI Sermons,
II. 160.
in the British
Museum
lacks
(shelf-mark E. 1362)
his reprint
of 1855.
DONNE'S PROSE
216
in
more Heavenly
things.
verses of Genesis
and Exodus
two chief
wider questions
be
raised. Thus
which
and
of philosophy
might
theology
the
first
on
verse of
book
the
he begins
by meditating
and
created
Heaven
God
the
EartV,
Genesis, 'In
Beginning
and his first reflection is that true humility does not preclude
God
do not therefore sit at the door, and meditate upon the thresh
I may not enter further; For he which is holy and true,
because
old,
and hath the key of David, and openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth
and no man openeth; hath said to all the humble in one person, / have
'I
strength.
an open
door,
it, for
thou hast a
little
have
defen
they open but a litle wicket, and he that will enter, must stoop and
humble Hmselfe. To reverend Divines, who by an ordinary calling
are Officers and Commissioners from God, the great Doors are
open.
Let me with Lazarus lie at the threshold, and beg their crums. Discite
d me, sayes our blessed Saviour, Learn of me, as Saint Augustine enlarges
not to do Miracles, nor works exceeding humanity; but, quia
it well,
Therfore
it is not such a
groveling, frozen, and stupid
should
Humility,
quench the activity of our understanding, or
make us neglect the Search of those Secrets of God, which are acces-
Sapientia.
as
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY
217
sible.
strain,
Donne
divides
we
I. The
The person, God: 3. The Action, He created:
And 4. the Work, Heaven and Earth we will speak of two or three
other things, so many words. Of the Whole Book', Of the Author of
those first 5 Books; And of this first book.' 2
"Before
time,
In
the beginning: 2.
In the
first
us the
us the
2
3
Ibid., pp. 7, 8.
Donne
these opinions
gives only a qualified approval to
of Sebund,
fifteenth
medicine at Toulouse. His great work was the Liber naturae sive creaturarum,
in which he declared that the book of nature and the Bible were both divine
He is now best known by
revelations, the one general, the other specific.
in book ii, chap, xii of the Essais.
him
for
Montaigne's 'Apologie'
DONNE'S PROSE
2i8
him
in
questions
&
Donne
The
ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
light,
then
his firebrands
219
of Contention,
and
curiosity'.
reject
it.
'But since our merciful God hath afforded us the whole and intire
why should wee tear it into rags, or rent the seamless garment ?
him (Moses) in a wine-presse, and squeeze out Philosophy
To
book,
put
and particular
.
all
on the
essay, Donne begins his meditation
on the
a
based
i.
text
the
of
substance
(Genesis
i) by
prayer
of
his
favourite
the
of
first four chapters
author,
Confessions
In the next
St.
Augustine:
it;
thy
from
all eternity,
when
own
words,
me in thy beloved Servant Augustine's
greatest. Let
with an humble boldnesse he begg'd the understanding of this passage,
but is gonfrom me to thee; if he were here, I would
say, Moses writ this,
he
hold him, and beseech him for thy sake, to tell me what he meant. If
com
I
should
but
Latine,
would
he
if
frustrate my hope;
spake Hebrew,
should I know that he said true? Or when
prehend him. Butfrom whence
1
DONNE'S PROSE
220
/ knew
it,
is
me
to
say confidently
to
1
Moses, Thou say'st true?
He
eternity.
He
no certain conclusion.
Beginning was, is matter of faith, and so, infallible.
matter
was,
treason, and therefore various and perplex'd.
In the Epistle of Alexander the Great to his Mother, remembred by
Cyprian and Augustin, there is mention of 8000. years. The Caldeans
have delivered observations of 470000 years. And the Egyptians of
looooo. The Chinese* vex us at this day, with irreconciliable accounts.' 4
'That then
When
this
it
is
Summa
Theol., pt. i,
mundum incoepisse sit
xlvi,
articulusfidei (Affirm.).' In the
margin of the Essays the reference is wrongly
Quaest.
given
as
part
art.
ii.
'Utrum
ii.
Essays, p. 29.
ibid., p. 33.
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
221
first
infancy did not speak to us at all (by any
she began to speak by Moses, -she spake not plain,
but diversly to divers understandings; we must return again to our
strong hold, faith, and end with this, That this Beginning was, and
before it, Nothing. It is elder then darknesse, which is elder then light;
And was before Confusion, which is elder then Order,
how much
Authors;) and
when
by
Of which,
them.
and enjoying one another-, Things, which if ever they had ended,
had begun; And those be terms incompatible with Eternity. And
therefore Saint Augustin says religiously and exemplarily, 1 If one ask
me what God did before this beginning, I will not answer, as another did
merrily, He made Hell for such busie inquirers: But I will sooner say,
I know not, when I know not, then answer that, by which he shall be
Spirit,
too
not what he
is.
But
as
who keep
safely
application.
DONNE'S PROSE
222
somewhat which
For
asset, Deus essem.
but
sive;
God is
say
and
by degrees,
^succes
acquired knowledg
faith which can receive it all at
and
only
impartible,
all
is
1
once, can comprehend him.'
Donne then
'God
is
particular
in his word, when he speaks of a body, and of passions,
'
and that the same objection applies to their
like ours'
God in Hieroglyphicks,
reverend silence, who have
God
expressed
ever determining in some one power of God, without larger
2
which
extent', while the practice of the Roman Church,
and
man
between
exalts the saints into intermediaries
God,
Ibid., p. 42.
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
223
then thou canst utter. For if thou couldest express all which them
seest of God, there would be somthing
presently beyond that. Not
that God growes, but faith doth. For, God himself is so unutterable,
that he hath a name which we cannot pronounce.' 1
of the
Name
God
of
also perceptible. 3
*To make our approches nearer, and batter effectually, let him that
not confess this Nothing, assign somthing of which the world
was made. If it be of itself, it is God: and it is God, if it be of God;
will
who is
is
For to say, as one doth, 4 that the world might be eternall, and yet not
be God, because Gods eternity is all at once, and the worlds successive,
will not reconcile it; for yet, some part of the world must be as old as
God, and infinite things are equall, and equalls to God are God. The
a
it is
greatest Dignity which we can give this world, is, that the Ides of
5
in
.'
ever
God.
and
was
eternall,
.
The last
Ibid., p. 43.
Ibid., p. 52.
5, pros. 6.
5
cit.,
DONNE'S PROSE
224
as
overpraysing
is
kind
the reader
thought
is
infinite, hast
enabled
which
though
I partake thee,
begin
let this
mine, by
minute,
O God, this
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY*
225
Thou
the seeking, nor grudge the missing of the Conveniencies of this life
I so esteem
:
was first made, and then my Soul, but in the next my soul shall be first,
and then my body, In my Exterior and morall conversation let my
first and presentest care be to give them satisfaction with whom I am
seest
mingled, because they may be scandaliz'd, but thou, which
first relation be to thee,
hearts, canst not: But for my faith, let my
because of that thou art justly jealous, which they cannot be. Grant
these requests, O God, if I have asked fit things fitly, and as many
more, under the same limitations, as are within that prayer which
meat for all tasts, and served to the appetite
(As thy Manna, which was
of him which took it, and was that which every man would) includes
all which all can aske, Our Father which art, etc?*
1
5102
DONNE'S PROSE
second part of the book deals with the first verse of
the first chapter of Exodus: 'Now these are the Names of
the Children of Israel which came into Egypt.' Donne sees
in this verse an epitome of the whole book of Exodus. He
of his favourite image of the
opens with a characteristic use
The
circle :
1
ln this book our entrance is a going out: for Exodus is Exitus. The
is
whatsoever
and
is
works
Gods
Meditation upon
so, is
infinite;
it selfe, anH is every where beginning and
into
returns
and
Circular,
the Jews (the children of
ending, and yet no where either: Which
the Law, as we are by Grace y his second) exhis first
God
c
by
spouse
press'd in their
may
we must
seek his Image in his works, or his will in his words; which,
whether they be plain or darke, are ever true, and guide us aright.
the Office of direct
For, as well the Pillar of Cloud, as that of Fire, did
contribute their helpes,
fewest
where
oftentimes,
Expositors
Yea,
ing.
the Spirit of God alone enlightens us best; for many lights cast many
shadows, and since controverted Divinity became an occupation, the
Distortions and violencing of Scriptures, by Christians themselves,
have wounded the Scriptures more, then the old Philosophy or
Turcism? 2
Donne
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY
227
Donne
tory, yet as Saint Bernard did almost glory, that Okes and Beeches
his Masters, I shall be content that Okes and Beeches be
were
my
schollers,
and witnesses of
my
1
solitary Meditations.'
whole,
named
differently
In
his
Burial.
'Amongst men,
all
all
means which
we have trusted with the preserving of our Names, putrifie and perish.
Of the infinite numbers of the Medals of the Emperors, some one
happy Antiquary, with much pain, travell, cost, and most faith,
beleeves he hath recovered some one rusty piece, which
deformity
makes reverend to him, and yet is indeed the fresh work of an Im
postor.
'The very places of the Obelises, 2 and Pyramides are forgotten, and
the purpose why they were erected. Books themselves are subject to
the mercy of the Magistrate: and as though the ignorant had not been
enemie enough for them, the Learned unnaturally and treacherously
contribute to their destruction, by rasure and mis-interpretation.
But Names honoured with a place in this book, cannot perish, because
the Book cannot. Next to the glory of having his name entred into
the Book of Life, this is the second, to have been matriculated in this
Register, for an example or instrument of good. Lazarus his name is
3
enrolled, but the wicked rich mans omitted.'
.
? 'Obelises* in
the text.
DONNE'S PROSE
228
sions, distractions, rents, schisms, and wounds, by the severe and unrectified Zeal of many, who should impose necessity upon indifferent
things, and oblige all the World to one precise forme of exterior
worship, and Ecclesiastick policie; averring that every degree, and
minute and scruple of all circumstances which may be admitted in
either beleif or practice, is certainly, constantly, expressly, and
obliga
torily exhibited in the Scriptures; and that Grace, and Salvation is in
this unity and no where else; his Wisdome was
mercifully pleas'd, that
those particular Churches, devout parts of the Universal!,
which, in
our Age, keeping still the foundation and corner stone Christ
Jesus,
should piously abandon the spacious and specious
super-edifications
which the Church of Rome had built therupon, should from this
variety
of Names in the Bible it selfe, be provided of an
That an
argument,
sheep
under one Shepherd, Christ; yet not of one
fold, that
one place, nor form. For, that which was
and
that
is,
much more
strayed
fold,
not in
alone, was his
is,
any
flock
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
229
from which we are by Gods Mercy escaped, because upon the founda
tion, which we yet embrace together, Redemption in Christ, they had
built so many stories high, as the foundation was, though not de
stroyed, yet hid and obscured; And their Additions were of so danger
ous a construction, and appearance, and
misapplyableness, that to
tender consciences they seem'd Idolatrous, and are certainly scandalous
and very slippery, and declinable into Idolatry, though the Church
be not in circumstantiall and deduced points, at unity with us, nor
it self;
(for, with what tragick rage do the Sectaries of Thomas and
Scotus prosecute their differences ? and how
impetuously doth Molinas
and his Disciples at this day, impugne the common doctrine of grace
and freewill ? And though these points be not immediately fundamentall points of faith, yet radically they are, and as neer the root as
most of those things wherein we and they differ ;) yet though we branch
out East and West, that Church concurs with us in the root, and sucks
her vegetation from one and the same ground, Christ Jesus; who, as it
is in the Canticle lies between the brests of his
Church, and gives suck
on both sides. 1 And of that Church which is departed from us,
disunited by an opinion of a necessity that all should be united in one
form, and that theirs is it, since they keep their right foot fast upon the
Rock Christ, I dare not pronounce that she is not our Sister; but rather
as in the same Song of Solomon's, We have a little sister^ and, she hath no
brests: if she he a wall, we will build upon her a silver palace? If there
fore she be a wall, That is, Because she is a wall; for so Lyra expounds
those words, as on her part, she shall be safer from ruine, if she apply
her self to receive a silver 'palace of Order, and that Hierarchy which is
most convenient and proportionall to that ground and state wherein
God hath planted her; and she may not transplant her self: So shall
we best conserve the integrity of our own body, of which she is a
member, if we laboriously build upon her, and not tempestuously
and ruinously demolish and annull her; but rather cherish and foment
her vitall and wholsome parts, then either cut, or suffer them to rot
Cuticulam.
or moulder off. As natural!, so politick bodies have Cutem,
The little thin skin which covers al our body, may be broken without
pain or danger, and may reunite it selfe, because it consists not of the
chief and principiant parts. But if in the skin it self, there be any
solution or division, which is seldome without drawing of blood, no
art nor good disposition of Nature, can ever bring the parts together
again, and restore the same substance, though it seem to the ey to have
sodder'd it self. It will ever seem so much as a deforming Scar, but is
in truth a breach. Outward Worship is this Cuticula: and integrity of
',
&
Cant.
i.
2
13.
Cant.
viii. 8, 9.
DONNE'S PROSE
23 o
faith the skin it
self.
And
if
the
first
is
my thanksgivings
greatest Mercies to
to
God,
me, that
9.
Cant.
iv. 16.
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
and draw those to
us,
whom
231
own
us.' 1
His
justice.
Of
Ibid., p. 129.
DONNE'S PROSE
232
1
the expensive dignifying of images,
our
for
left
charity, then those
and relicks, what other exercise is there
the
our
of
and
of
both
nearer images
selves,
poore ? Be mercifull
God,
no greatness retard
Let
is mercifull
father
in
heaven
as
then,
your
Let no smalthou wert above want.
as
thee from
'Now
that
we have removed
though
nesse retard thee: if thou beest not a Cedar to help towards a palace,
if thou beest not Amber, Bezoar, nor liquid gold, to restore Princes;
or to feed a bird; or thou art
yet thou art a shrub to shelter a lambe,
giving,
2
a plantane, to ease a childs smart; or a grasse to cure a sick dog.'
leave
it as
duties, to
well as we found
it, (for,
serve
it
else.'*
Dig
and
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
233
O my poor lazy soul, and thou shalt see that thou,
a little deeper,
all
then
mankind
these.' 1
We
whose Egypt
'God hath made nothing which needs him not, or which would
not instantly return again to nothing without his special conservation
Angels and our Souls are not delivered from this dependancy upon
him. And therefore Conservation is as great a work of Power as
:
Creation.' 3
liberal theologians.
in a limited sense,
'Of all the wayes in which God hath expressed himselfe towards us,
we have made no word which doth lesse signifie what we mean, then
Power for Power, which is but an ability to do, ever relates to some
future thing: and God is ever a present, simple, and pure Act. But
we think we have done much, and gone far, when we have made up
the word Omnipotence, which is both wayes improper; for it is much
too short, because Omnipotence supposes and confesses a matter and
God was the same, when there was
subject to work upon, and yet
And then it over-reaches, and goes down-wards beyond God
\
nothing.
1
Ibid., p. 164.
e.g.
3
i.
197 (note,
ii.
160).
DONNE'S PROSE
234
as can do all
things
it more
men
think
and
tenderer
though squeamish
mannerly to
this things yet it is
say. This thing cannot be done, then, God cannot do
is limited with the
which
all one: And if that be an
Omnipotence,
nature of the worker, or with the congruity of the subject, other
things may incroach upon the word Omnipotent) that is, they can do
all things which are not against their nature, or the nature of the
matter upon which they work. Beza therefore might well enough say,
for
or
is
for
That God could not make a body without place; And Prateolus might
enough infer upon that, that the Bezanites (as he calls them)
deny omnipotence in God; for both are true. And therefore I doubt
not, but it hath some mysterie, that the word Omnipotence is not
found in all the Bible; nor Omnipotent in the New Testament. 1 And
where it is in the Old, it would rather be interpreted All-sufficient^
then Almighty, between which there is much difference. ... So that,
as yet our understanding hath found no word, which is well
pro
2
portioned to that which we mean by power of God.'
truly
is
the
his Prerogative.
Nature.
And
Miracle
is
not
like
so
many
us,
and Miracle
Non-obstantes
is
upon
more then
in this, that no body can tell what it is. For first, Creation and
that, are not Miracles, because they are not (to speak in that
such
as
language)
Nata fieri per alium modum* And so, only that is Miracle, which
might be done naturally, and is not so done. And then, lest we allow
the Divell a power to do Miracles, we must
say, that Miracle is contra
totam Naturam, against the whole order and
disposition of Nature.
... I can change some naturall things (as I can make a stone
fly
up
ward) a Physician more, and the Djvell more then he; but only God
can change all. And after that is out of
necessity established,* that
1
Donne had
word
in Rev. xix. 6.
This and the following sentences are taken from St.. Thomas
Aquinas,
^heol^ i, qu. cv. 7-8 (Jessopp).
4 Dr.
Jessopp compares Hooker's treatment of this subject in the Laws of
Summa
iii.
5.
'ESSAYS
-IN
DIVINITY'
235
Miracle
is
Donne
for faith.
Land
faith.' 2
Medici, pt.
pp. 184-6.
i,
sections ix
Sir
DONNE'S PROSE
236
deceits and holy lyes, as they are often called amongst themselves. The
Power of God, which we cannot name, needs not our help. And this
Donne
again he
'Even at
first
execute
And
upon transgressors
then,
tributive;
for
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
And
237
of that, all
of Mercy. So that the Vulture, by which some of the Ancients figured
a
Justice, was just symbole of this Justice; for as that bird prayes onely
and upon nothing which lives; so this Justice appre
Carcasses,
upon
hends none but such as are dead and putrified in sin and impenitence.' 1
God,
justification
We
tions
justice
was
bitternesse in them.' 4
Donne
We
5
and grown thing from an unperfect and growing.'
The whole book concludes with four very beautiful
sum up Donne's meditations. The first of
prayers, which
of Exodus
these is' intensely personal, and applies the lessons
to his
own
case:
3
*
P 195Ibid., p. 206.
Ibid.,
2
Ibid., p. 193.
4 Ibid
J
'> P-
DONNE'S PROSE
238
another, and gavest
him
leave to gather
fifty
to ten;
grace, I
by thy
and spoken of thee, I may now
enlightned and enlarged me to contemplate thy greatness, so, O God,
descend thou and stoop down to see my infirmities and the Egypt in
which I live; and (If thy good pleasure be such) hasten mine Exodus
and deliverance, for I desire to be disolved, and be with thee. O Lord,
I most humbly acknowledg and confess thine infinite Mercy, that
when thou hadst almost broke the staff of bread, and called a famine
of thy word almost upon all the world, then thou broughtest me into
this Egypt, where thou hadst appointed thy stewards to husband thy
blessings, and to feed thy flock. Here also, O God, thou hast multiplied
thy children in me, by begetting and cherishing in me reverent
devotions, and pious affections towards thee, but that mine own
corruption, mine own Pharaoh hath ever smothered and strangled
them. And thou hast put me in my way towards thy land of promise,
thy Heavenly Canaan, by removing me from the Egypt of frequented
and populous, glorious places, to a more solitary and desart retiredness,
where I may more safely feed upon both thy Mannaes, thy self in thy
Sacrament, and that other, which is true Angells food, contemplation
of thee. O Lord, I most humbly acknowledg and confess, that I feel
upon
in
thee,
of thy Power,
as
and frequency
fiest
my
thereof, they are not Miracles. For hourly thou rectilameness, hourly thou restorest
sight, and hourly not only
my
me from
My
thy Passion; yea, after thy glorification: for hourly thou in thy
heart, to overthrow there Legions of spirits
Spirit descendest into
of Disobedience, and Incredulity, and Murmuring.
Lord, I most
after
my
up
many
candlesticks,
'ESSAYS IN DIVINITY'
239
have mercy upon me. Let not sin and me be able to exceed thee, nor
to defraud th.ee, nor to frustrate thy purposes But let me, in despite
of Me, be of so much use to thy glory, that by thy mercy to my sin,
other sinners may see how much sin thou canst pardon. Thus show
mercy to many in one And shew thy power and al-mightinesse upon
thy self, by casting manacles upon thine own hands, and calling back
those Thunder-bolts which thou hadst thrown against me. Show thy
Justice upon the common Seducer and Devourer of us all: and show
to us so much of thy Judgments, as may instruct, not condemn us.
Hear us, O God, hear us, for this contrition which thou hast put into
us, who come to thee with that watch-word, by which thy Son hath
assured us of access. Our Father which art in Heaven, etc? 1
:
The remaining
first
person
'Behold
us,
The
most glorious and most gracious God, into whose presence our
make us afraid to come, and from whose presence we
consciences
own
cannot hide our selves, hide us in the wounds of thy Son, our Saviour
Christ Jesus; And though our sins be as red as scarlet, give them there
renounce,
another redness, which may be acceptable in thy sight.
Lord, all our confidence in this world; for this world passeth away,
and the lusts thereof: Wee renounce all our confidence in our own
C
We
DONNE'S PROSE
240
we renounce
all
confidence even
our poor endeavours, for thy glorious Sons sake, who gives ^them their
of sanctification, for thy
root, and so they are his; our poor beginnings
their
them
growth, and so they are his:
blessed Spirits sake, who gives
our
whom
in
and for thy Sons sake,
prayers are acceptable to
only
thee: and for thy Spirits sake which is now in us, and must be so when
?I
soever we do pray acceptably to Thee ; accept our humble prayers
The
of
sin,
life
thy glory.
so
till
our
own
1
as
the
X
DEVOTIONS UPON EMERGENT OCCASIONS
was during Donne's dangerous
illness in
the winter of
Occasions,
composition
ffir vmn mid*
:
fmin-Ti
y^sr
T>m
natrons
A
th fiftieth year of his age: and in his fifty
sickness spiVert Mm., wMrfr inclined him to_a
1
Consumption. But God, as Job thankfully acknowledged, preserved,
bis spirit, and kept his intellectuals as clear and perfect, as when that
sickness first seized his body: but it continued long and threatned him
Within a few days' [after a
with death; which he dreaded not.
visit from Henry King, described at length, by Walton] 'his distempers
abated; and as his strength increased, so did his thankfulness to Al
mighty God, testified in his most excellent Book of Devotions, which
he published at his Recovery. In which the Reader may see, the most
secret thoughts that then possest his Soul, Paraphrased and made
not unfitly be called a Sacred picture of
publick: a book that may
and applyable to the emergencies of that
occasioned
Extasies,
Spiritual
a
book
which
being composition of. Meditations, Disquisitions
sickness;
and Prayers, he writ on his sick-bed; herein imitating the Holy
that place, where
Patriarchs, who were wont to build their Altars in
2
their
received
had
blessings.'
they
.
as
Consump
tion'
is
1640
to a spotted Feaver, and ended in a Cough,
dangerous sicknesse, which turned
in Section 13
that inclined him to a Consumption'. The spots are mentioned
of the Devotions.
illness Donne
composed
Walton, Life (1670), pp. 49-52. During this
I
the Hymn to God the Father, Wilt thou forgive that sinne where begunne',
that
which Walton describes as a 'heavenly Hymne, expressing the great joy
him'. After his
then possest his soul in the Assurance of Gods favour to
the poem to be set 'to a most grave and solemn Tune,
recovery Donne caused
in
and to be often sung to the Organ by the Choristers of St. Pauls Church,
Service'.
the
at
Evening
his own hearing, especially
also
DONNE'S PROSE
242
it
We
We
suppose
tempted
what we now call typhoid fever in
his youth,
name we
Donne
call it by, it
alone
left
5).
(Meditation
1
Gosse,
8),
ii.
by
When
They
374-5.
prescribe physic,
Ibid., p. 181.
'DEVOTIONS'
243
gladly (Meditation
Donne cannot
him
live
Paul's
this
was
Pepys in his Diary for 19 Oct. 1663 records that 'the Queene
as to be shaved, and pidgeons put to her feet, and to have the extreme
unction given her by the priests'.
1
so
ill
DONNE'S PROSE
244
Prince of Wales.
'Sir,
there
Though
still,
and
have
as a
my
of both,
Jesus
Donne.' 2
It
Thomas Jones.
Letters (1651),
pp. 249-50.
publisher
2
'DEVOTIONS'
245
Majestic.
that sound of boldnesse too) I surprise your Majestic, I take you at
an advantage, I lay an obligation upon you, because that which your
Brother's Highnesse hath received, your Majestic cannot refuse. By
by
suffer,
his
To
also reprinted in
6
Good Doctor.
None
had
and
I trust
his assistance, to
whom
not without
The first
collation
by
in
12 Eel The
B-Z, Aa-Dd
A8
is
1.
2.
3.
my
Digested into
Meditations vpon our
Humane
Condition.
of
London, Printed by A. M.
S. Pauls,
for
London.
Thomas
lones.
\6^\?*
There
Letters,
DONNE'S PROSE
246
5
sequentes. This
text begins on B
is
I,
thus:
'London Printed
for
Other
lones,
1624.'
these the
effigy of
Thomas
two
last
and I638. 1 Of
Donne wrapped
series.
*Keynes (op.
cit.,
two separate
issues
of the
18 'Scripsit et Meditationes
Polyhistor, lib. vi, cap. iv,
super morbo suo
quae in Linguam Belgicam conversae et Amstelddami 1655 * n I2
editae sunt.'
:
sacras,
3
poems
'DEVOTIONS'
247
self-analytical
every symptom of his bodily
and
spiritual condition.
The
rich, sustained
The
Donne
In section
is
sent for.
by spots'.
haue fallen vpon the criticall dayes' is the heading of section
nor night' of section 15. Sections 16
14, and 'I sleepe not day
on death occasioned by
meditations
Donne's
to 1 8 contain
the tolling of the bells of an adjoining church.
In section 19 the patient begins to recover. 'At last, the
and stormie voyage, see land; They
Physitians, after a long
concoction of the disease, as that
the
haue so good signes of
1
Devotions (1624,
first edition),
pp. 25-6.
DONNE'S PROSE
248
may
safely
proceed to purge.
section 20,
relapsing'.
may
How
'DEVOTIONS'
longe period; and Eternity had bin the same,
neuer beene.' 1
Again, in section
10,
when the
on
249
as it
is,
to steale
LXXX
attacked.
*If there
sicknes,
wee
see,
all sicknesses;
them which
on
11.
ii.
letter to
160-2).
4
DONNE'S PROSE
250
'And
as
to that
though in eminent Place, and Office, must contribute
therefore doth the Phisician intermit the present care of Braine, or
.
There
number of references
are a
Of
of the time.
the Head,
Spirante Columba
ad ima vapores.'
Supposita pedibus, Reuocantur
Donne
meditates on his
these vapours
'What haue
me it
own
my Melancholy,
my selfe? It is my thoughtfulnesse; was I
It is my study; doth not my Calling call for that
tell
is
into
wilfully, peruersly
toward
it,
it,
die
a metaphorical consideration
of evils in
'these vapours in vs, which wee consider here pestilent, and infectious
fumes, are in a State infectious rumors, detracting and dishonourable
Calumnies, Libels. The Heart in that body is the King; and the Braine,
Sinewes,
body
1
suffers.'^
comma between
3
'DEVOTIONS'
251
'these libellous and licentious Testers, vtter the venim they haue,
though sometimes vertue, and alwaies power, be a good Pigeon to draw
1
this vapor from the Head, and from doing any deadly harme there.'
In
our
own
wils,
our
own
thy
Sacraments, and the obedience of thy word, and these Doues, thus
applied, shall
make
vs Hue.' 2
Ibid., p. 297.
252
DONNE'S PROSE
to^the
over again Donne pours forth
hip repentance for the sins of
his youth and his hatred of the sinful
impulses which still
torment him at times. He writhes under a sense of God's
infinite purity and stern
justice, and then again he takes
as
he
remembers
the
death of Christ, and entreats
courage
the mercy of God through His Son.
<I
soule to
thee,
my God, in an humble confession,
[open]^my
is no veine in
mee, that is not full of the bloud of thy Son,
whom I haue crucified, and Crucified againe,
by multiplying many,'
and often repeating the same sinnes: that there is no
Artery in me'
that hath not the
spirit of error, the spirit of lust, the spirit of giddiness
in it; no hone in me that is not hardned with the
custome of sin, and
nourished, and soupled with the marrow of sinn; no
sinews, no liga
1
ments, that do not tie, and chain sin and sin
That there
'Looke therefore
upon me,
Lord, in
recall mee from the borders of this
together.'
bodily death;
Redemption, yet,
to
them
'DEVOTIONS'
253
thou
displeasure.'
Donne implores
prove
may hope
fatal,
'And therefore
how
little
soeuer I bee, as
God
calls things
that
Noahs time, 120 yeres; thou staidst for a rebellious generation in the
wildernesse 40 yeares, wilt thou stay no minute for me ? ...
God,
My
God, thou wast not wont to come in whirlwinds, but in soft and
gentle ayre. Thy first breath breathed a Soule into mee, and shall thy
breath blow it out ? Thy breath in the Congregation,
Word in the
my
thy
The deuouring
hand.
mee
is
Thou my
God,
who hast
led
be
all
one; and
here.'*
He
on the compassion
of Christ:
God, and
'My
1
my
lesus,
my
Lord, and
my
Christ,
2
my
Strength,
and
DONNE'S PROSE
254
my
LXXX Sermons,
nos.
40 and 41.
XI
THE SERMONS
is
drew men
Letters,
ii.
318.
DONNE'S PROSE
256
style.
in holy raptures,
He
is
alwaies
Autumne,
... He
brought light out of darknesse, not out of a lesser light; he can bring
thy Summer out of Winter, though thou have no Spring; though in
the wayes of fortune, or understanding, or conscience, thou have been
benighted till now, wintred and frozen, clouded and eclypsed, damped
and benummed, smothered and stupified till now, now God comes to
th.ee, not as in the dawning of the day, not as in the bud of the spring,
but as the Sun at noon to illustrate all shadowes, as the sheaves in
harvest, to fill all penuries, all occasions invite his mercies,
times are his seasons.' 1
and
all
is not his
only instrument. Scattered
the
Sermons
are
felicitous
short phrases which
throughout
in
the
he
that loves not the
linger
memory. 'Certainly
Militant Church, hath but a faint faith in his interest in the
Triumphant. He that cares not though the materiall Church
fall, I am afraid is falling from the spiritually
'Nothing
hinders our own salvation more, then to deny salvation, to afl
but our selves.' 3 'Even humility it self is a pride, if we think
it to be our own.' 4 'God makes sometimes a
plaine and simple
mans good life, as powerfull, as the eloquentest Sermon.' 5
Sometimes Donne uses the homeliest phrases and imagery
to drive home his meaning.
1
Sermons, 2. 13.
*
XXVI Sermons,
12. 172.
LXXX
'SERMONS'
257
'We have sold our selves for nothing; and however the ordinary
murmuring may be true, in other things, that all things are grown
dearer, our souls are still cheap enough, which at first were all sold
in gross, for (perchance) an
Apple, and are now retailed every day for
1
'God
doth
but
call
nothing.'
us, he does not constrain us, He does
not drive us into a pound; He cals us as Birds do their young, and he
would gather us
as a
Hen doth
her Chickins.' 2
'It is
many
of Donne's
'From that inglorious drop of raine, that falls into the dust, and
no more, to those glorious Saints who shall rise from the dust,
and fall no more, but, as they arise at once to the fulnesse ofEssentiall
joy, so arise daily in accidentiall joyes, all are the children of God, and
all alike of kin to us.'* 'The whole life of Christ was a continuall
Passion; others die Martyrs, but Christ was born a Martyr. He found
a Golgatka, (where he was crucified) even in Bethlem, where he was
born; For, to his tendernesse then, the strawes were almost as sharp
as the thornes after; and the Manger as uneasie at first, as his Crosse
rises
at last.'s
'is
There
and a
style of the Scriptures is a diligent, and an artificial style;
great part thereof in a musical, in a metrical, in a measured composi
tion, in verse. ... So the Holy Ghost hath spoken in those Instru
The
ments,
whom
would
in those
5102
XXVI Sermons,
n.
2 Ibid.
14. 199.
161.
DONNE'S PROS^E
258
to a shrewd danger
his Oration, till
letters
of Credit
it
and
surprisall, that
the Prince, to
And
it is
upon
whom
a late
is
singing. Loquere
XXVI Sermons,
had
4
before,
Ibid., p. 305.
'SERMONS'
Haghe Decemb.
in
my
19. 1619. I
259
Preached upon
this
Text. Since
my
Germany
LXXX
p. 61.
DONNE'S PROSE
260
a looke,
such gravitie
Pietie;
And
Of time, O
With markes
The
speaker
is
a zealous
dunce, or
so.
CalTd him
a strong lin'd
man,
Macaroon,
desire,
Thus
Griexson,
i.
381, 382.
i.e.
Richard Busby.
Griers^n,
i.
386, 387.
'SERMONS'
is
261
by Jasper Mayne
Yet have
And
More Sermon,
An
Not
bee. 1
his con
one of his
',
to you, and yet I consider by the way, in the same instant, what it is
you will say to one another, when I have done. You are not all
here neither; you are here now, hearing me, and yet you are thinking
likely
that you have heard a better Sermon somewhere else, of this text
before; you are here, and yet you think you could have heard some
other doctrine of down -right Predestination, and Reprobation roundly
delivered somewhere else with more edification to you.' 2
As
Ibid., p. 384.
his zeal
DONNE'S PROSE
262
compares
and continues
:
'And
if
they deride
us, for
Few
human weakness, and no hypocrite, claiming a saintliness which he did not possess; but a man of like passions with
his hearers, a man whose history they all knew, whose peni
feel for
is
this
Two months before his death he wrote to George Gerrard, *I have been
always more sorry, when I could not preach, then any could be, that they
could not hear me. It hath been my desire (and God may be pleased to grant
it me), that I
might die in the Pulpit ; if not that, yet that I might take my
death in the Pulpit, that is, die the sooner by occasion of my former labours'
1
(Letters, pp. 242-3). This was in answer to a rumour that his illness was
exaggerated in order that he might be free from preaching, and the truth
of his assertion was proved by his last sermon, which was preached before the
LXXX Sermons,
33. 325.
'SERMONS'
263
agonizing with his hearers to rescue them from temptationsof which he knows the awful power, but inspired also by
a great
hope and a great devotion. The sermons of Andrewes
or Laud or Barrow or South seem cold beside this ardour of
penitence, this glowing love to the person of Christ, this
yearning desire for the souls of men. Donne never glosses
over the sinfulness of his past life, but in the fact that God
has had mercy on his own soul, he sees encouragement and
hope for the most despairing of his hearers.
Thus, speaking in joyful expectation of the resurrection of
the dead, he rests all his confidence on Christ's merits.
me, in ascribing his righteousnesse unto
me
his Fathers hands, with the same
in
into
and
me,
delivering
his
he
delivered
owne soule, and in making me,
as
tendernesse,
up
who am a greater sinner, then they who crucified him on earth for
me, as innocent, and as righteous as his glorious selfe, in the Kingdome
'Christ shall bear witnesse for
of heaven.' 1
which
compare any beauty in this world, to that face,
in this
to
nearenesse
great
persons
any
Lambe wheresoever he goes; any riches
of this world, to that riches wherewith the poverty of Christ Jesus
hath made us rich; any length of life in this world, to that union which
disdaine to
DONNE'S PROSE
264
we
shall have, to
men, and to
a desire to
welcome other
Wine of
sinners, that
blood to drink ? Or
if
own
flesh to eat,
we do wonder
let us
not
and
his
own
nothing
is
mis-interpret
any way, that he shall be pleased to take, to derive his mercy to any
man but, (to use Clement of Alexandria? $ comparison) as we tread
upon many herbs negligently in the field, but when we see them in an
there is some vertue in
Apothecaries shop, we begin to think that
a
we
have
so
howsoever
them;
perfect hatred, and a religious despite
as
a
a
sinner; yet if Christ Jesus shall have been pleased
against sinner,
:
to have come to his door, and to have stood, and knock'd, and enter'd,
and sup'd, and brought his dish, and made himself that dish, and
to that
the
Name of Publican,
to
all,
to
repentance?*
XXFI Sermons, S,
Sermons,
8.
65-6.
in.
The
'SERMONS'
265
'Almost every man hath his fpetite, and his tost disposed to some
kind of meates rather then others; He knows what dish he would
choose, for his first, and for his second course. We have often the
same disposition in our spirituall Diet', a man may have a particular
love towards such or such a book of Scripture, and in such an affection,
I acknowledge, that my spirituall
appetite carries me still, upon the
Psalms of David, for a first course, for the Scriptures of the Old
Testament and upon the Epistles of Saint Paul, for a second course,
for the New, and my meditations even for these publike exercises to
Gods Church, returne oftnest to these two. For, as a hearty enter
tainer offers to others, the meat which he loves best himself, so doe
I oftnest present to Gods people, in these Congregations, the medita
:
tions
which
be asked
feed
upon
a reason
Elsewhere
the
sidering Ezekiel the greatest of
1
major prophets.
numbered
DONNE'S PROSE
266
'Amongst the four great ones, our Prophet Ezekiel is the greatest.
compare not their extraction and race; for, though Ezekiel were
de genere sacerdotali, of the Leviticall and Priestly race.
Esay was
of a higher, for he was of the extraction of their Kings, of the bloud
is in his extra
royall. But the extraordinary greatnesse of Ezekiel,
.'*
ordinary depth, and mysteriousnesse.
I
Donne
refers
and
for,
for the
though
they were all Anabaptists, yet for some collaterall differences, they
detested one another, and, though many of them, were near in bloud
and alliance to one another, yet the son would excommunicate the
father, in the room above him, and the Nephew the Uncle. As 5. John
is said to have
quitted that Bath, into which Cerinthus the Heretique
came, so did I this house; I remembred that Hezekiah in his sicknesse,
turn'd himself in his bed, to pray towards that wall, that look'd to
Jerusalem; And that Daniel in Babylon, when he pray'd in his
chamber, opened those windows that look'd towards Jerusalem ; for, in
the first dedication of the Temple, at Jerusalem, there is a promise
annext to the prayers made towards the Temple: And I began to
think, how many roofs, how many floores of separation, were made
between
in that house.' 2
to obtain a
'SERMONS'
267
of his life, and the cares and emotions which possessed him.
After the great sorrow of his wife's death, his sermon on the
text 'I am the man, that hath seen affliction, by the rod of
3
Walton to have so worked upon the
his wrath is said
by
Heathen that
said, If
of this world;
Quire.'
When Donne
LXXX
p. 220.
Treadled
at S. Pauls,
upon Easter-da 7
1627'
DONNE'S PROSE
268
And so as
hear with both at once, and he hears in both at once;
for
far
all that
be
must
that
mine
and
of,
your eyes that stay here,
.
distance shall meet every morning, in looking upon that same Sun,
and meet every night, in looking upon the same Moon; so our hearts
sees and hears
may meet morning and evening in that God, which
1
every where.'
The
rioting
his
friendship
indulged, and so met their death. And again
for Lady Danvers, the mother of George Herbert, finds
at Chelsea, where she was
expression in the sermon 'preached
a
which
sermon
I
gives so fresh and
buried,
July 1627'
beautiful a description of the home life of the Herberts that
it is worthy to rank with Walton's picture in the Lives.
Donne's interest in the history of his times is also reflected
in his sermons. There are few references to the internal
far as these had reference to
politics of the day, except in so
a lively interest in the
shows
Donne
but
religious matters,
events which led up to the Thirty Years War. This was
natural, since he had known the luckless Queen of Bohemia,
first as Princess Elizabeth and then as Electress Palatine, and
had written an Epithalamium for her marriage and had
preached before her at Heidelberg. An undated sermon
preached at St. Paul's exhorts to sympathy and help for all in
distress, 'whether Princes be dispossest of their naturall
patrimony, and inheritance, or private persons afflicted with
sicknesse, or penury, or banishment, let us goe Gods way, all
the way.
Let us, us, with all the power we have, remove
or slacken those calamities that lie upon them.' 2 The same
.
XXVI Sermons,
19. 280.
808,
'SERMONS'
269
God
778, 779.
XXVI Sermons,
DONNE'S PROSE
270
James.
held himself close to the text, without flattering the time too much.' 2
In
Sermons
Donne
made
of
Mr.
2
Sermons, 33. 303. Both this and the preceding passage are
Pearsall Smith, op. cit, pp. 47, 57.
/,
ii.
4.
quoted by
'SERMONS'
271
DONNE'S PROSE
272
discovered
How
is
then
farre
wretched and
sinfull
is
that
man, from
How
far
is
that never so
he from doing
much
as
so,
considers
who
is
so farre
as though that
God, who when man was sowr'd
in the loins of
Adam, would
by
temporary
life,
delighted
men,
as
though that
God who
1627',
him
on Midsommer day.
1622.'
i.e.
1627/8.
February 20.
*
'SERMONS'
and to be no man, by a violent
and a shamefull death, as though
that God, who when he was
pleased to
come
to a creation,
privations,
thee
humane
soule,
or,
Religion,
a Jew, or
that
all this
for nothing,
thorough
flash,
like
this
thou passest
world,
lightning,
like
whose
or
end nobody
beginning
knowes, like an Ignis fatuus in
the aire, which does not onely
not give light for any use, but
not so much as portend or signi-
When God
placed
Adam
5102
273
former better
own
estate,
engage his
life,
cular
He
thee
He
a Papist, as
so
much more
by breeding thee
Church, had done all
thee,
nothing;
for
in a true
this
for
thou
passest through
as a flash, as a lightning
world
of which no man knows the be
ginning or the ending, as an ignis
fatuus in the air, which does not
only not give light for any use, but
does not so much as portend or
signifie anything; and thou passest
this
DONNE'S PROSE
274
the
flowing
Land
them
of promise, he bad
and
fight,
destroy
Idolaters; to every body some
task, some errand for his glory;
And
men
When God
world, God
Adam
enjoyned
to
fill
do.
his children in
lifetime.
his
his
by
'SERMONS'
275
Preach' d to the
death, the most interesting are the Sermon
Honourable Company of the Virginian Plantation and the
Sermon of Commemoration of the Lady Danuers^ i.e. Magdalen
Herbert. Soon after his death his last sermon was printed as
Deaths Duett (1632), which ran into a second edition the next
year. In 1634 the University of Cambridge published six
more of Donne's sermons, and these were afterwards included
in the Fifty Sermons of 1649. The chief collections of Donne's
sermons, however, are those which his son prepared for the
.
expounded
such Authors,
were prefaced by
a dedicatory epistle
.
Printed for Thomas lones
1626; (6)
.
Whitehall, 24 Febr. 1625.
Printed
. I.
sermon of commemoration of the Lady Danuers
July 1627
The
and Christopher Meredith
1627.
Philemon
H.
for
I.
Stephens,
by
Sermons
Three
as
volumes
in
successive
collected
were
(1623),
earlier of these
.
DONNE'S PROSE
276
as 158,
29,
35)
Cam
in 1634 by t ^le
University of
collation of the two editions does not reveal
bridge.
any
considerable differences. There are certain obvious errors
in the Six Sermons which have been corrected in the
Fifty
Sermons, for example, the latter reads 'I leave' (page 20, line
25) for the earlier
'I
there are some passages in which the text of the Six Sermons
is to be
preferred.
The
Register
make
this clear:
3 Jan.
1639/40
Master fflesher
and
Master Marriott
^
'SERMONS'
the reverend John
Pauls
Donne Doctor in
277
divinity late
Deane of Saint
vjd
19 Feb. 1639/40
Richard Roiston. Assigned ouer vnto him
by vertue of a note vnder
the hands and scales of Master fflesher and Master Marriott and
yjd
eodem
die
Master fflesher
Master Marriott
and
Richard: Roiston.
the reverend John
Dunne
of Saint Pauls
with his picture and the tables and
d
vj
all
sermons.
The
XXVI
much
less
carefully
-Mm
2
4
B 4 , B 4-Q4, S 4
Nn 6-Oo6, Pp 4-CccV
formula,
,
,
6
4
Ddd , Fff ^--Ggg It will be noticed that the absence of R4
corresponds with the omission of 121-8 in the pagination.
Since Sermon 8 ends on page 120, and the sermon which
follows it immediately on the page numbered as 129 is called
Sermon 10 both in the title and in the margin, it may be
surmised that another sermon numbered as 9 should have
.
There
as
appear
as Sss
and
Sss 2,
and Tt
2 as
Ttt
2.
DONNE'S PROSE
278
4
occupied pages 121-8 (R ), but that while the volume was
passing through the press, it was for some reason omitted.
The requisite number of sermons is made up by dividing
Sermon 10 into two, with separate headings, though both
parts are
numbered
as 10.
1
The most interesting
Misprints are fairly numerous.
sermons from a textual point of view are numbers 3 (or 17),
(large-paper)
copies mentioned.
copy
many
'SERMONS'
279
did purposely select these from amongst all the rest, for,
being to finish this Monument, which I was to erect to his
Memory, I ought to reserve those materials that were set
forth with the best Polish.' One glance at the headings will
show that among the dated sermons three belong to the last
three years of Donne's life, and one of the undated ones
and
(Deaths Duett)
is
his
very
last.
No. 26
reveals very
XXVI
Ser
ber of errors in Deaths Duett are corrected in the
*ad
salutes'
reads
latter
8
1.
the
on
for
mons.,
page 397,
example,
c
for and salutes'. But it adds a few fresh printer's errors, for
same
line,
1.
'it is
An interesting problem is
raised
XX7I
lished,
Op.
cit.,
pp. 35-6-
1638.'
B
in The
R. C. Bald has drawn attention to a letter from Milbourne
vol. 52, pp. 221-2) in which
Cosin
(Surtees Society,
at
name on the
title-page.
DONNE'S PROSE
280
2
every sentence. The two versions were printed in 1932 in
Donne'
'j Sermon
of Valediction^ by the Nonesuch
my edition,
and
XXVI
Sermons
comparison shows that in the
amount of compression, and here and there
whole sentences have been omitted. The phrasing is less
Press,
there
is
a certain
XXV
There
Emmanuel
is
copy of
this issue in
summer of
'SERMONS'
281
to
damne
us
God
forbid:).'
XXVI)
19. 272,
we
read, 'every
man hath
folio.
Thus
in
a pocket picture
Creator, and
Remember thy
Creator.'
XXVI,
19.
is
then
reads: 'This
is
reading
The
folio text,
DONNE'S PROSE
282
w
by
the
between
haue passed between y* nesses
lesuits & y6 Dominicans Jesuites and the Domiin y e Roman Church, nicans in the Romane
even to y6 imputacons of Church, even to the
(amongst
things
belonging
the crime of heresievpon imputation of the crime to the will) whether the
one annother in questions of heresie upon one same proportion of grace,
concerning y* will of another, in questions offered to men alike disMann, and how y 1 con- concerning the Will of posed, must necessarily
th
alike upon both
cernes
y^ grace of man, and how that con- work
God pticularly whether curres with the Grace their wills ? And amongst
particularly, persons neerer to us,
y same pporcon of grace of God-,
being offered by God to Whether the same pro- whether that proportion
two men equallie dis- portion of Grace being of grace, which doth
fc
irresistable or no,
theis
By
all
culties
wee
vntractable
may
see
were
irresistible
all
these
and
or
no ?
infinite
Mann
&
vnderstanding
5
y*
e will
memory,
man, might
how
untractable,
untameable
man
wil of
a faculty the
is.
But come
God make
works
to
brance
his wonderful
be had in remem-
the
present
& vntamable By
and come to
convert
untameable a facultie
the will of man is. But
infinite
dangers
.'
'SERMONS
MS. A)
p. 3 contd.
contd.
wilderness in
y Cap-
to
he had in remembrance
tivitie
daingers
dangers
MS. A,
Present
.'
XXVI.
Sap. Clam.
p. 3.
of
Omitted
19. 271.
Concerninge Antichrist,
and a Papist vnder-
and a Papist
many
altogether.
concerning
under
of a single, and
momentane, and tran
sitory man, that must
stand
that
Antichrist,
will
it
vnderstandinge
of a succession
succession of
it
&
continuance of men.
y* haue lasted a 1000
have
men, that
lasted
1000.
so
yeers already.
MS. A,
XXVI.
p. 4.
And
so in deliveringe y6
Ghospell in one principall
And
so in delivering
Gospell}
one
the
principall
19. 271.
And
so in delivering the
Gospel in one principal
thereof the ptici- Stale thereof, the parti seal thereof, the sacra
piation of his body and cipation of his Bodie and ment of his body, he
scale
He
what
in
Churches
vnderstanding
(as
is
ferences in
as
all
Churches,
what understanding
is
own Church, go
own memory
.
to thine
.
DONNE'S PROSE
284
MS. A)
p.
contd.
pulous
selfe,
Yet haue
MS. A,
vs this
the
indigested,
may worke
have
Ghospell
to try,
recourse
to
owne memorie.
pp. 9, 10.
e
a Zeale,
perverse, yet
thine
day y
Church,
though not
sine
vses
owne
thine
which sometimes
a reconverse to yet
thy memorie.
and
since
God
hath
or
owne
these uses,
275.
hath
given us this day, the
brightness of his Gospel,
this
light
is
first
u
s
r
p pos by, in o selues. & owne purposes by, in our presented, that is, all
to shew & lustifie o r selves, and to shew and great actions begun with
6
y world
since
wee see
justifie
this religion
but he y is able to abide fessed advisedly, and not relation to the continue
any triall that y aduer- implicitly; but so that it ance of the Gospel, since
sarie will put vs to of is able to abide
any triall God hath given us such
fc
Antiquitie
Councells, Since it
is
so
from darkness,
no corrupt ptes ar
th
it, and so
mingled w
severed as y i there be
sufficient lawes & meanes
put us
severed
Fathers
as y*
since
to, of antiquities,
and
Counsels;
several
as
is
sharpseeing the
lights, wise in
head,
sighted
in
it is
speaks
liavit
tion,
he
fc
day,
great
his,
humble
that humble thanks that wee
by whom this day spring
^thankes.
wee haue it in humble have it, and in humble from an
[sic] high hath
prayers, that we may prayer that wee may visited us.
in
He
still
haue
not
remember God
it;
doth
in
'SERMONS'
Sap. Clam. 283, 284
MS. A,
pp.
Consider
10 contd.
9,
contd.
sider
e
Ghospell the
pfession of y
light,
the profession
of the Gospell
is.
MS. A,
is.
XXVI.
p. 16.
That
19. 279.
neither height
nor depth, nor any other
that
so
neither
height,
nor depth, nor any other
so
y
y
sea.
Wee
see
men
the Sea.
Wee
see
men
wth
therfore saies the Apostle. And therefore saies the Let them that suffer, com
let
them that suffer Apostle, Let them that mit their souls to God, as
Comitt their soules to suffer commit their soules to afaithful Creator; that
He made them, and
God, as to a faithfull to God as to a faithfull is,
therefore will have care
Creator, He had gra- Creator. Hee had gra
s
u
vs cious
tious
upon us of them.
vppon
and if he
p pos
purposes
in or Creation,
good
in or Creation,
very redemption
too.
in our Creation,
wee
MS. A,
p. 18.
XXVI.
Jesus re
Christ lesus reme-' And Christ Jesus
us all in his
ber vs all in his king- member us all in his member
which Kingdome, to which,
to
dome, to w ch thoe wee kingdome,
we must sail
saile though
must
wee
sea
a
saile
must
though
through
it is the
sea of his through a sea, yet it is through a sea,
it is a
yet
ch soule never the sea of his bloud, sea of his blood, where
in
blood
&
re
and
Christ
DONNE'S PROSE
286
MS.
XXVL
p. 18 contd.
suffered
19. 280,
contd.
contd.
shipwracke in
which
never
soule
281
though we must be
blowne w th strong winds. Though we must bee blown
with
strange
wth vehement sighs & blowne with strong winds, with sighs and
r
groanes for o sines, yet windes, with vehement groans for our sins, yet
is
the spirritt of God. sighes and groans for our it is the
Spirit of God
that
blowes
all
suffered
shipwrack.
it is
all this
wind,
winde in vs, and shall of God that blowes all and shall blow
away all
blow away all Contrarie that winde in us, and contrary winds of dimwindes of difference in shall blow away all con- dence or distrust in Gods
his
mercy.
MS. A,
where wee
XXVI.
p. 19.
haue
more strength & no
enemies, wee shall Hue
& never dye, where wee
shall meete & never
pte,
but here wee must.
shall
where wee
have
19. 281.
words of sermon):
more strength, and no where we
shall
be
enemie; where wee shall stronger to resist, and
and never die; yet have no
live,
enemy;
where we shall meet, where we shall live and
and never part; but never die, where we
here we must.
shall meet and never
shall-
(last
part.
The sermons
the
as a
than
all this,
Alford was so
little
acquainted with
much
waste paper.'
'SERMONS'
287
LXXX
LXXX
LXXX
Chimney,
i.
85.
DONNE'S PROSE
288
On
.'
all
their knowledge,
consummate
all
in
in Donne
pure gold. Without being aware of this passage
the same
declared
rather
or
same
the
I expressed
conviction,
Manual.'*
Statesman's
the
to
in
the
Appendix
experience,
When Donne declares that nothing is essentially good but
God, and that there is nothing in the world which does not in
is
finds
him
divines
On
ment
4
6
com
is
LXXX.
15. 148.
Notes,
i.
105.
Notes,
i.
107-8.
2
5
Notes,
i.
97.
LXXX.
7 ib id
^
17. 167,
p 89 on
.
not of notions
LXXX.
17. 165.
paragraphs B, C, D.
LXXX.
7. 71.
'SERMONS'
289
and conceptions, the manufacture of the understanding, is therefore
simplex et nuda, that is, immediate; like the clear blue heaven of Italy,
deep and transparent, an ocean unfathomable in its depth, and yet
ground all the way. Still as meditation soars upwards, it meets the
arched firmament with all its suspended
lamps of light. O, let not the
simplex et nuda of Gregory be perverted to the Socinian "plain and
easy for the meanest understandings !" The truth in Christ, like the
peace of Christ, passeth
all
understanding.'
There
Why ? Because Donne confounds the act of faith with the assent
of the fancy and understanding to certain words and conceptions.
Indeed, with all my reverence for Dr. Donne, I must warn against the
contents of this page, as scarcely tenable in logic, unsound in meta
physics, and unsafe, slippery divinity; and principally in that he
confounds faith essentially an act, the fundamental work of the
with belief, which is then only good when it is the effect and
Spirit
3
accompaniment of faith.'
He
'O would that Donne, or rather that Luther before him, had carried
out this just conception to its legitimate consequences; that as the
sacrament of the Eucharist is the epiphany for as many as receive it in
of Christ himself
faith, so the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension
in the flesh, were the epiphanies, the sacramental acts and phaenomena
of the Deus fatiens, the visible words of the invisible Word that was
in the beginning, symbols in time and historic fact of the redemptive
!
Ibid.
Ibid., p. 71,
on
LXXX. I.
LXXX.
9,
paragraph C.
this page,
5102
from
to E.
.'
The
is
reference
is
to
LXXX.
another
3. 25.
DONNE'S PROSE
290
On
Donne's statement.
Lamb
from the
crucified
We
most
He treads waters,
On
a passage in
LXXX
'Donne was
writer to another.
1
LXXX. 4. 30,
LXXX. 18. 179.
no, on LXXX. 17. 171.
i.
79, 80, on
Ibid., p. 113, OIL
Notes,
2
paragraph B.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., pp. 101-2.
s
6
Ibidtj p> 2?2>
Ibid-> p> 297<
Ibid., p. 103. The sentence is from
17. 161, That world, which
finds itself truly in an autumn in
itself, finds itself in a spring in our imagina
tions.'
LXXX.
XII
THE LETTERS
throw a flood of light on the character
They show him as he appeared to his
intimate friends, with whom he had no need to be on his
guard, and there are passages which give an explanation
of apparent inconsistencies which might puzzle us in his life
and work. We see in them that mingling of magnificence
and meanness which was characteristic of the Elizabethan
letters
of the man.
DONNE'S
age.
With
all his
moments
We
DONNE'S PROSE
292
Smith and
Burley
MS.
Sir
a series of letters
'Madam,
Those
he doth
them
and
single persons,
is
to
make
cast into
a mould, and in an instant, made fit for his use; For Heaven is not a
place of proficiencie, but of present perfection; That peece, which
he
fitter
and
intire
conformity to
To
fitter for
?I
Your man
Tobie Mathew
addressed was
Lady
Kingsmell.
The lady
'LETTERS'
I
almost to
my
293
my
last
and as a man
I had taken in breath, but not articulated it, nor,
perchance, said
enough, to let you know, that I shall lose the honour of waiting upon
you at your time: which I feel the more, because I desired much to
?I
have been in my Lord Chancellor's sight.
.
some
style,
is
as
may have
',
lished
>3
We
his
2 i.e.
letter,
the date of
wHch
was
campaign
3
DONNE'S PROSE
294
hand
pungent enough.
'In the mean time,
This
is
Donne
Donne
Ibid., p. 128.
'LETTERS'
ladies to
verses.
295
whom
The
excessive,
296
DONNE'S PROSE
of .30. z
After his wife's death in 1617, his daughters begin to oc
he busies himself
cupy a larger share of his thoughts, and
to provide suitable husbands for them. His first matrimonial
scheme for Constance, the eldest girl, goes awry, as he explains
at length. 2 A little later he marries her to Edward Alleyn,
the old actor who became the founder of Dulwich College,
gift
Letters (1651), pp. 218-19: Tor her other way of expressing her favour
to me, I must say, it is not with that cheerfulnesse, as heretofore she hath
delivered her self towards me. I am almost sorry, that an Elegy should have
been able to move her to so much compassion heretofore, as to offer to pay
1
my debts;
2
Ibid., pp. 185-6: 'Tell both your daughters a peece of a storie of my
Con. which may accustome them to endure disappointments in this world:
had provided him already 30O a year, of his own gift in Church livings, and
hath estated 30O 1 more of inheritance for their children: and now the youth,
(who yet knows nothing of his fathers intention nor mine) flies from his
resolutions for that Calling, and importunes his Father to let him travell.
The girle knows not her losse, for I never told her of it: but truly, it is a great
disappointment to me. More than these, Sir, we must all suffer, in our way
to heaven, where, I hope you and all yours shall meet
Tour poor friend, and affectionate servant
1
J.
3
Donne.'
my
'LETTERS'
297
volume
entitled Cabala.
Mysteries of
State.,
in
Sir
4
ii,
is
in Latin.
Poems (1635), p. 283 ('to the La. G. ), pp. 285-8 (to George Gerrard).
These were all reprinted in the Letters of 1651, and later by Gosse.
6
Both of these were addressed to Buckingham. The second was reprinted
in the Tobie Mathew Collection, and both were reprinted bv Gosse.
s
DONNE'S PROSE
298
Letters.
The
Lady
ris
.
Bridget Dunch.
The
letters
themselves occupy
318 pages.
and
Popeshead-
Alley.
Sir
1654.'
letters written
by Donne
letters,
containing 38
The
or to him,
title
of the
first
Philological Quarterly, xvi. 30-4. Walton did not intend to deceive his
readers, for he introduced it as an extract 'collected out of some few of his
[Donne's]
many
letters'.
'LETTERS'
299
Contemporary with him. London^ Printed for Henry Herringman, and are to he sold at his Shop, at the sign of the Anchor
in the Lower walk in the New Exchange. 1660.
There is a frontispiece, facing the title-page, with an
engraving by James Gammon of a portrait of Sir Tobie,
r
bearing the words, 'The lively Portraicture of S Tobias
Mathewes KnV The book opens with an epistle dedicatory
from the younger Donne to Lucy, Countess of Carlisle,
followed by 'The Character of the Most excellent Lady,
Lucy Countess of Carleile'. The collection of letters is
a large one, and most of the Donne correspondence is to
be found at the end of the book (pages 296-356), though
there are a few letters from Donne among the earlier
1
pages.
The
in 1692
sheets
which made up
with
new title-page
The new
64, 68)
sixth,
ii.
47).
reprinted by Gosse (i. 104-14;
second
3 The first of these is to Sir Dudley Carleton (Gosse, u. 143), the
to
Buckingham
(ibid., p. 140).
DONNE'S PROSE
300
j^-5 o? n
i
first
time.
was preparing his Life and Letters of Sir Henry Wotton (1907).
The manuscript was subsequently destroyed by fire, but it
had been examined by Sir Herbert Grierson, who described
manuscript of great importance for the editor 'of
letters'. 'Amid its varied contents are some letters,
unsigned but indubitably by Donne; ten of his Paradoxes
with a covering letter; and a few poems of Donne's with
other poems.' 1
This collection has a particular interest, for it covers an
earlier period of Donne's life than that represented in the
Letters of 1651. Walton had described the lifelong friendship which existed between Wotton and Donne, but the
letters which the two were known to have exchanged were so
few that Gosse doubted the accuracy of Walton's statement. 2
Now, however, we possess a number of letters which testify
as 'a
it
Donne's
Grierson,
volume, pp.
2
Gosse,
i.
ii,
pp. ex,
cxi.
2, 133.
18-19; "
3 I 4~ I S
'LETTERS'
301
fresh light
life
marriage in 1601.
documents relating to
interests during his first
from the
Spain.
letters,
1
It should
(Life of Donne,
1670, p. 9; Life of Wotton, 1670, p. 19) was supported by Henry King, Bishop
of Chichester, in a letter addressed by him to Walton on 17 Nov. 1664,
and prefixed to the 1670 edition of the Life of Donne: *I shall begin with my
I am glad that the general
most dear and incomparable Friend Dr. Donne
Demonstration of his Worth was so fairly preserved, and represented to the
Pen in the History of his Life. . . . After the performance of
World
by your
Dr. Donne, you undertook the like office for our Friend Sir Henry
which two there was a Friendship begun in Oxford, con.tinued in their various Travels, and more confirmed in the religious Friend
ship of Age.
this task for
Wotton'. betwixt
DONNE'S PROSE
302
Smith
at first
437-43)-
(i-
The
the prose
Sir
H. W.
folio 308,
folio 295,
The
letters in Parkhurst's
diffi
prove
not to be Donne's. It was
evidently addressed to Wotton at
Venice by an unknown Englishman who needed
help. Some
of the letters which follow are not at all in Donne's
manner,
e.g. the letter on folio 302, beginning 'Mille volte
ringratio
1
i. 188.
See also the notes on this
poem (ii. 152).
fact that the letters are
unsigned presents no difficulty. All the
letters in the Tobie Mathew Collection lack
Sir Tobie
signatures,
Grierson,
The
name of the
though
writer in a heading.
'LETTERS'
303
V. E. delP
group
distinct
from the
i letters.
it
placing
but
it
The
tractions
original,
'
hand
V
*94
Writen
(f-
\l\
L J
The
done
first
act of y play
fc
*1
sayd
see
is fro
risero. 1
it is true
y Jonas was in a whales belly three dayes but hee
came not voluntary as I did nor was troubled w111 y e stinke of 150 land
soldiers as wee & I was there 20 dayes of so very very bad wether y*
even some of y e marriners haue beene drawen to thinke it were not
fc
em
one of y
say god help vs.
for all our paynes wee haue seene y e land of promise spaine whether
wee shall enter or no I guess not I think there is a blott in there tables
altogether amisse to pray
but pchaunce
tis
fleet for
Ply-
& yet y e people hisse. how it will end I know not ast ego vicissim mouth
The
all
to
me
that the
scribe apparently
phrase is a quotation from Horace, Efode xv. 24. The original
c
for c', and when this initial blunder had
mistook the short Elizabethan
to
been made, the change from 'c' to *C' and from
See my note in Review of English Studies, xx. 224-5.
'c'
followed naturally.
DONNE'S PROSE
304
extreame beggery
mumers had
distill
& but for y much gay cloathes (w yet are much melted)
should thinke wee were in vtopia all are so vtterly coyneles. in one
bad bare word y e want is so generall that y e lo: generall wants & till
this day wee wanted y e lo: generall: y will pdone me if I write nothing
ernest. Salute all whome thou louest in my name & loue me as I would
pawnes
ch
deserue.
77
Kelleys,
charlatan,
who was
Philosophers' Stone. He worked his way into the favour of the Emperor
Rudolph II by boasting that he possessed the Stone. Rudolph twice imprisoned
him in order to force him to produce some definite proof of his power; on
the second occasion Kelley was killed in an attempt to escape. There are
numerous references to Kelley in the literature of the time, e.g. Dekker,
GulPs Hornbook (1609), Proem: 'rich Midasse, that had more skill in
alchimy
then Kelly with the Philosophers stone'. Cf. Gabriel Harvey, Pierces Superero
gation (1593), p. 28; Ben Jonson, Alchemist, Act iv, sc. 1, 1. 90.
2
Pawne here means something deposited as security for a debt, a pledge
2
Grierson,
i.
175-80.
'LETTERS'
the
9th.
fleet
305
days of
Tor during the space of an whole moneth together (after wee were
againe readie) the weather stood flat opposite to our course, insomuch
that wee were not able to worke our selves out of the Harbour. And
in this consumption of Time we lost the best season of the yeere
for our purpose, and also greatly decayed our victualls and provi
Mariners that daily
sions; besides the number of our Souldiers and
diminished.' 1
Gorges
who had
young
gallants
'But yet this violent and dangerous tempest had so cooled and
battered the courages of a great many of our young Gentlemen (who
and mercilesse Seas, had neither
seeing that the boysterous winds
Court
nor
London
afSnitie with
bravery) as that discharging
delicacie,
He
gives a
all this
5102
Gorges,
A larger Relation
of the said
Hand
Voyage.
DONNE'S PROSE
306
W
Sr
*1
in fashion there
y should to
much
fc
through
faine
fc
strenght
.
full
of
fc
hope
it shall
a thankfull desire to
become acquainted.
'LETTERS'
307
[31
S r but )rt
.
frends in
of mine
for
e losse
of
many
deere
Ir: I
w <*
t
nothing to bee cdmended but y it was well suted for the place &
barbarous enough to go thither: yet it should haue brought y* thanks
& betroathed to y the loue & services of one who had rather bee honest
then fortunate:
this letter
hath
a greater
burthen
&
charge; for
it
caries
y poore
firend
&
lover,
Went you
what
much
lost
Yourself, that
in
Transcript
'safty*.
DONNE'S PROSE
308
W
(f.
295
.)
They
shake 1
wthout
flattery
w^out
suspitio
of flattery
I
cannot
repeate.
1
r
ingenio p ditu.3 So much of y matter.
t
this
of
receaved
was
but
morning so y
yo
so) y 25
Ja:
e
it lost
y grace in a kind of affectation of gravity. I had rather y would
senc[ y T letters in y e french then in y e Spanish pace4 to me. I am now
^ree
were
last (if it
an
ue
though
am
afrayd y
state bee
e
certaynly the court hath in it much vnnaturall heate & y courts &
e
ch
seats of
taking forme from theyre
princes are y harts of all realms w
humors
Qwne
more
are
w^s: wh en
meaning
w^ them
is
well
as
o r selus least
is
fc
y they may
must wish y
be contagious
neighbours) infected
th
in a while there be no historic so
states (or
was of
call it a
&
&
brag
all
&
all
variable.
& so
Shake
The transcript states that this marginal note was in another hand from that
is
of the letter
3
itself (D
It looks as if the
i).
beginning of the letter had been lost.
Adapted from Terence, Andria, 11. 96-8. Donne substitutes 'amicum'
for 'gnatum'.
4 rather
in y french then in e
.
y Spanish pace, that is, too fast rather than
too slowly.
5
Cf. Letters (1651), p. 203
'your company, that place, and my promise are
strong inducements, but an Ague flouts them all, of which I have had two
.
I provide against it
by a little Physick.'
Livy's Preface, 4, nulla unquam respublica . . bonis exemplis ditior fuit'.
7 Cf.
Donne's verse letter
S r Henry Wotton' (Grierson, i. 180-2),
which denounces the evils found at court.
There, however, the condemnation
6
To
is a
general one, forming part of Donne's contribution to a poetical dispute
on the comparative evils of court,
city, and country, in which Bacon, Wotton,
and Thomas Bastard took
part. Here Donne's dissatisfaction with the court
is
much more
acute, probably
'LETTERS'
309
my
him cu
supp
him where we
Wee
shall
meet
at
e
amongst y rest y shall giue me leaue to make this vse of it. y* wee
may sometymes togeather privately speake of y e course of these
wor[l]dly things
t
conclude y virtus
w^
is 3
are
12
governed w**
much
instability.
I will
The two
Donne
299
Sir Maurice Berkeley was knighted at Cadiz in 1596. Donne and Wotton
For his relations with
probably made his acquaintance on that expedition.
Wotton, see Pearsall Smith, i. 22 n.
3
2
th
th
Presumably Donne wrote 'est'.
Transcript *w w '.
4 Douce made a note in the Bodleian
copy of the first edition of the
1
In caelo
civis.
Bono
Henricus
hospiti haec scripsi
Wottonus, Anglo-
of virtue, which
though not the nature, yet the fortune
in terris, in caelo civis' (Pearsall Smith,
i.
290).
certainly
is
peregrina
(f.
296.)
DONNE'S PROSE
3io
[6]
(f.
296^)
That loue
w ch
went
meetes you.
words seald vp in letters be like words spoken in those frosty places
where they are not heard till y e next thaw 1 they haue yet this advan
tage y* where they are heard they are herd only by one or such as in
Sr
if
his
fitt for.
am no
Courtier for
w th out
having
liued there desirously I cannot haue sin'd enough to haue deserv'd that
reprobate name: I may sometymes come thither & bee no courtier as
men
they
are vnpracticed. only y e women are free from this charg for
they are
sure they cannot bee worse nor more throwne downe then
haue
they
they haue pchance heard that god will hasten his iudgment for
2
righteous sake. & they affect not that hast & therfore seeke to
beene
e
lengthen out y world by their wickednes. The Court is not great but
of iollyty & revells & playes and as merry as if it were not sick,
full
her
ioy
tie
is well
disposd & very gratious in publique to my Lo: Mountmy lo: of Essex & his trayne are no more mist here then the Aungells
he withers
still
fc
anything
headed
verso
c. 55.
There
is
'Incipit loannes
(11.
to
w*
averted 3 of yr lo:
a naturall weaknes of inno-
I feare
it is
may be
for themselues
Bk. IV,
I see)
likelyer
&
(for
in his sicknes
as
&
the reference to
De
sig.
f5
11-13):
It 's not that French which made his
Gyant see
Those vncouth. Hands where wordes frozen bee,
Till by the thaw next
yeare they'r voic't againe.
Transcript 'rigtheous'.
Perhaps a confusion with adverted, but the context implies
3 averted.
'reversed'.
'LETTERS'
311
(f.
if
wee
err reasonably
my
my
ma
*1
euery
man
is
w th these tymes w
well suite
dares accuse
t
to y
rather
accesse.
Wee
ch
not exceeding the limits of emulacion & desire to
envy (w
men pchaunce is no fault) is now growne a pfect vice,
equall worthy
for heretofore it was but oposed to good fortune & so men might be
a man may be to good: If
thought to rich now it is oposd to vertue &
vices bee extremities I wonder how every day such growth & addition :
but if wee complayne no otherwise then former ages, that is, if
because wee see & feele o r owne tymes pfectlyest, wee accuse most &
r
1
that y e prophesy of Horace Etas parentu prior etc belong also to o
are
serve vs for some comfort (though a hard shift) y*
it
&
may
tymes,
w^
e
the english
travayle to y pole call
already borne, and if as those
r
wicked
so
a
to
last
shall
y* o age
tyme
sothernly people so the world
it is not
shalbe thought good in respect of that as we do of former ages
r
ch
will bring the world to his piod* o wickednes
600 yeres nor 6000
then should wee
is to strong & stobborne to be so soone weakened why
& feare more:
ill
much
see
we
since
much desire lyfe or her delights
& to be in
&
barbarous
rude
bee
to
is
fashion
of
since to bee out
fashion
is
since vertue
is
as a
1
Prior is clearly an error for
tulit
Odes, in. vi: 'aetas parentum, peior auis,
progeniem
2
vitiosiorem.'
Transcript 'pvod
nos nequiores,
mox daturos
297.)
DONNE'S PROSE
3 i2
(f.
297
V
.)
or a
skarfe:
fc
to quench
all
hope of revenging,
so
am
I in this
warfare enforced to
my
fitted it I should
w ch I
would be loath
to do.
Donne
Wotton.
[8]
f.
298.)
ch
S r I promised a iorney like godfathers
promise & vow three
children
know
before they
whether it bee in the childrens
things for
destiny to bee able to keepe there vowes or no. for I am since over
.
taken,
&
mett
& inwrapd
in busineses
*1
avoyd: nothing else could haue made me comitt this omission, for
wch yet I will not aske pardon bycause y cannot giue it & my verie
offence of not coming is my punishment I meane the want of that
r
good company y haue & are. S I would some great princes or men
were dead so I might chuse them or some states or Countryes overthrowne so I were not in them y i I might haue some newes to ease this
.
itch of writing
Court 2
Caesar,
2
De
This seems to be
i,
c. v.
a reference to the
d? Amour
i.
169, and'
r
.
'LETTERS'
w ch least I heape
313
vp many
.
here
alwayes
This letter
sins I will
&
all
wayes
jr
[9]
great voyager in other mens works: no swallower nor (f 2 9 8v -)
devowrer of volumes nor pursuant of authors, pchaunce it is because
am no
Sr I
.
borne in
r
th
knowledg or ap hension enough for (w out
of
I
I
think
am
bond
to
impeachment
modesty)
god
thankfully to acknowledg it) to consyder him & my self: as when I
haue at home a convenient garden I covet not to walk in others broad
I find
my
self
forfeiture or
medows
woods
or
w ch my
gett
players
&
stomach
booke is
delighted
voluntary
&
3
banding brikwald into the hazard ) in
his impriso[n]-
ment vsed more then much reading, & to him y* asked him why he did
so he answerd he read so much lest he should remember something.
I
am
but
as far
from following
I find it
leaves I
1
his counsel! as
haue read.
y how many
& keep awake y*
tell
Cf. Pearsall
them
Tobie Mathew
Collection, p. 65.
fetruccios.
of letters
man
DONNE'S PROSE
314
1
god hath pleased to kindle in mee then farr
ch consume w th out flame or
w
sticks
of
greene
faggott
smale coole
(f.
ch
off to
heat
gather a
in a black smoother: yet I read something, but indeed not so much to
to write these I flung
I
avoyd as to enioy idlenes. Even when begun
to bee beloved & to much
a
man
Italian
Dant
the
enough
pert
away
2
to bee beeleeued: it angred me that Celestine a pope far* fro the
299.)
e
manners of other popes y t he left even there seat should by y court
of Dants witt bee attached & by him throwne into his purgatory. &
t
e
it angred me as much, y in y life of a pope he should spy no greater
e
t
e affectation of a
cowardly securyty he slipt fro y
fault, then y in y
haue
would
Dant
him
do
?
what
alas?
him.
-burthen layd vpon
great
thus wee find the story related: he that thought himself next in
succession by a trunke thorough a wall whispered in Celestines eare
counsell to
thinke that Celestine tooke this for as imediate a salutacio & discourse
of y e holy ghost as Abrahim did the comandment of killing his sonn?
if he will needs punish retyrednes thus what hell can his witt devise
for ambitio ? & if white integryty merit this what shall Male or Malu
*
w ch
made y i
but
his
as
chancell: Hatton*
p decessors
was of another
haue enough.
I have studied philosophy therefore marvayle not
9 6
r
accompt of arguments que trahunt ab effectib
if I
make such
land.)
1
Cf. Fifty- Sermons, 36. 326: 'If them canst in those embers, those cold
ashes, finde out one small coale, and wilt take the paines to kneell downe,
his
Pope
Celestine
office,
Gaetano being elected to succeed him as Boniface VIII. Dante does not
mention Celestine by name, but according to the early commentators, parti
cularly Boccaccio, he referred to Celestine in Canto iii. 59-60 of the Inferno:
'Vidi e conobbi
Pombra
Che
di colui
|
far, read
Male
[so] far.
or
is
'LETTERS
315
if I
had remembred y
fc
am bound by making
myself loose,
teach that saints see all mens
w ch
1
action in god as in a mirror. for I
am
sure y
fc
if I
were but
glorified
(as
e
wherein fortunes tumblers are exercised at & from y
y* fryer sayes)
what,
more
doth
&
when
&
why
Court, for I hunger to know who
then any thing else. S r I long to see y when I haue drunk one potion
more tq my health & weakned my self I shalbee strong enough to find
not at all at Court where you shall find me
y att Essex or rather then
(a
Lord Harrington',
11.
31-4 (Grierson,
i.
'
272):
as
seest all
concerning thee,
comprehend
So, yet unglorified,
of thy wayes, and end.
All, in these mirrors
2
Transcript
'altibaros'.
Altibaxos
is
form of
altibajos, plural
of alt&ajo,
(f.
294^.)
DONNE'S PROSE
i6
is
[n]
(f.
3o8v.)
reasons against
but swaggerers
them,
pchaunce they be pretyly guilt, 7*
quiet enough if y resist
hatcht:
are
not
best
for
is there
they are rather alarus to truth
they
to arme her then enemies & they haue only this advantadg to scape
fro being caled ill things y* they are nothings therfore take heed of
make another, yet S r though I know
allowing any of them least y
r
r
I
receue
there low price except
by y next lett an assurance vpo the
r
for any respect of
shalbee
taken
no
of
coppy
y frendship y
religion
if
fc
against both
011
affections although I
haue
there maker,
prayse.
I made
beleeue
I will
no answere but
it
when it
y
had need excuse
speakes of y
r self
much words
last lett
& when
it.
of
to
in theyre dis-
I embrace &
me too if ye good words
all
lett
w ch vo
S
peake of me bee ment of my intentions to goodnes for else alas
no man is more beggerly in actuall vertue then I. I am sory y should
i
2
th
(w any great ernestnes) desyre any thing of P Aretius not y he
th
could infect; but y it seemes y are alredy infected w the comon
opinion of him beleeue me he is much lesse then his fame & was to
well payd by y e Roma church in y t coyne w ch he coveted most where
:
fc
his
w ch
if
they had
Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae, lib. xii, c. xi: Alius quidam veterum
poet arum, cuius nomen mihi nunc memoriae non est, veritatem temforis
filiam esse dixit.
2
P. Aretius, i.e. Pietro Aretino. Probably the scribe has omitted a con
traction mark over Aretius.
'LETTERS'
317
December
Sr
In
1601.
[12]
e
dotage of y world where vertue languisheth in a
must be glad shee hath found so holesome a dwelling in
this sickly
banishment
r
r
y mind y* dares not only harbor her, but avouch it by y words &
deeds, for it is as dangerous to haue vertue in this world as it wilbe to
haue wanted it in the next & I am sure to find more sinners in heaven
then honest me vpon y e earth, yet S r y e greatest harme y 1 honesty
doth y is y* it arests my iudgment & suffers it not to go forward to
'sirrope'.
(f.
298.)
DONNE'S PROSE
ji8
so
& by
it I
letter or
(f.
298^.5
see I should
when y
me worthy
& when
letters pisheth
wth out
answere
&
thanks
lett
me
forfeit
think
my
one of yr
you. I had
me
of sending let
me
here
kisse
r
y hand
& vow
to
u
y the observaunces
r
y servant
&
of
lover.
This
letter
Donne
[13]
(f.
299*.}
of
send to y
me
all I
now y
depend
fc
for
though
I do bycause
vppon y opinion
be troubled w th the extremyty of
so
were lessoned:
desperat mind is
the cittizens are stobborne: but by
y are
liue
&
(for
my
y
1
So in
transcript.
servant,
'LETTERS'
1
319
his marriage.
The
Manu
the
the
which
attacked
of
sickness
strain, complaining
Donne after his disgrace, and which was probably due to the
anxiety and nervous strain which he underwent. Thus on
12 February he wrote from the Fleet Prison to Sir Thomas
Egerton, the Lord Keeper:
scripts
by Kempe,
same
'To excuse
for
it,
my
offence, or so
much
as to
were to
with you in punishing thereof with increasing my sickness, and that he
gives me now audience by prayer, it emboldeneth me also to address
my humble request to your Lordship, that you would admit into your
favourable consideration how far my intentions were from doing
dishonour to your Lordship's house, and how unable I am to escape
utter and present destruction, if your Lordship judge only the effect
and deed. My services never had so much worth in them as to deserve
the favours wherewith they were paid, but they had always so much
.*
(Gosse, i. 105.)
honesty as that only this hath stained them.
.
land of tapistry.
The
Dr. C. T. Onions points out that it is a reference to Rabelais, Bk. V, ch. rsix,
'Comment nous visitasmes le pays de Satin .
duquel les arbres et herbes
ne perdoient fieur ne feuilles, et estoient de damas, et velours figure": Les
bestes et oiseaux estoient de tapisserie.' It is described also as k pays de
.
fi
DONNE'S PROSE
320
e
then y giant so
y then y if y
fc
London, such
one
as I
kisse
may yett
stay there or at
y hand.
1604, since
it
inquires
[15]
(f.
Madam.
296.)
am intangled in
double
affliction
ch
it is
a forfeyture of
this,
my
fc
it
accompanying vertue) is foule spoken; & therfore naturally slaunderous. but I must wonder w^ griefe y i my lo: Latfn) 1 whose discretion
load
Davies
then
davis
w th
I
&
y op
ssion of
is
it
for
deriue
fuell
it
of anger
good
do easylyer forgiue his anger
pitty he should haue beene any instrument
pallace as y are and so furnishing it as his
pchaunce
&
having dishonored y
me
to.
y building of so fayre a
th
care hath done if hee would not be
angry w any defect, but (mech
it
cannot
become
I
discretio
w
think
thinks)
y
y inherit from him
in
fc
&
of superrogatio, yet
I durst
vpon
my
conscience acquit
him of
ever
Latin), i.e. Larimer. The title of Baron Latimer was assumed wrongfully
by Richard Neville of Penwyn, cousin of John Neville, fourth Baron Latimer,
who died in 1577, leaving four daughters. Richard Neville died in
1590, and
his son Edmund then assumed the title and held it
during the rest of Donne's
lifetime.
'LETTERS'
conceaving vnworthyly of you.
1
alwayes loued you comands
me
321
but y e reverence
to employ
all
r
myself in y good thoughts & to leaue y well assured not y I ever
ch
t
but
y I never heard ill word from any man w might be wrested
spake
ch
here I sweare to y by my loue
to y e impeachment of y r honor w
by
7* fayre learned
hand
The Mr.
latter
[16]
Madam.
I will
*1
bold to
letter
kiss
my retourne
is
do
easyly
that hee
w ch
much more
is
5102
*1
(w
vertuous hand
yt fayre
& may
best honor
at
Query, 'owed'.
295.)
DONNE'S PROSE
J22
fair
grants.'
It is strange, however, that this letter should
rest
of the
be marked
Donne
Goodyer.
we
(f.
Sr
2Q7 V .)
as
well in
me
let
indeed.
me
rs
what
it
intreat
worthy
&
it is
my
happy
am
r
y honest
frend.
[18]
(f.
300.)
M.C.
To
is
if,
is
no
trespas,
a
we do need
is
to speake
braunce,
w ch
advauncem*:
learning for
tould
met w^ yr remem-
me
my
for
it self
where ere
1
I find it.
so
much more
a learned wise-
'LETTERS'
dome purchased by
me w th
error:
To
323
a travellers
expience I
r
a touch of envy, the latt r
giues me certayne knowledg of y
but for t ? is error amoris I will excuse it & wish it were not so.
giue you cousell in these affayres were to offer much more then I
much I dare say in generall: that the course if
go on good grounds,
r
may be y
sound, for
I wish
fayrest
myself such oportunyty.
a
diet
spare
good excersise
know it w th
y mind take but such
if I
y body
&
&
p paratiue
as
may
keep
r
1
y Cosin Nay: out
of his expiance can p r scribe y, & I doubt not y shall go well instructed
for y e best of knowledg. What y know
already I can tell y, that
abroad tis best being trusty to y r self, & keep all secrets at home lockt
w^
Comon
vp
religion
much more comon there the honesty p rserve y e one, the other y may
th
r
th
r
requite w out much cost, for y private w S H. W. I can say no
r
for
I
not
know
nor
course
what
y employment
thing
y meane to hold
In these kind of courses or the like we see so many hopes so
w** him
.
many
in
discontentments
my
all,
2
fata quietas ostendunt.
"
the messeng
Loue me
f.
1
.
S.
This letter must have been written after ]uly 1604, when
Wotton was knighted, since the writer refers to him as 'Sir
H. W.' The gentleman addressed evidently wished to travel
A corrector of the transcript has queried 'May:'. The name which might
have given a clue to the recipient of the letter is abbreviated.
c
2
for tendimus'.
Virgil, Aen. i. 204-6. Transcript 'tendring'
1
39V
-)
DONNE'S PROSE
324
but S r
itt
may be warranted
wth
I assure
worth y i makes
me
strewed that
good
kindnes, y *, and
r
overboldnes, y burthen must be borne by o deare and worthy frend
r H.
W. whose credit I haue in pawne y t y shall accept these lines
fc
I offer them) kindly and lovingly. They haue nothing in charg but
(as
to tell y y 1 the effect of y r vertue and worth besydes y e autority of
o r forenamed frends reports haue made you already knowne vnto me,
but yt knowledg is as a tast ch doth rather stir vpp appetite the
itt
and j t therefore
ance
do
satisfy
infinitly
by o acquaint
ch
meeting) I do this according to the fashion of a soldier (w
th
this health
do
for a while I professe) charg y
me
y y
occupation
as
fc
reason
itt
302
cont.)
That
his
blood
&
the vessels of
2
his
it were
enough to warme
him yet certayne hath neither in
nor minde made any new impressions w I do
little
att,
spirits
in
*1
bycause methought
raysed in myne
theire masters fortunes.
owne conceipt:
as servants
This short
writer or date.
1
Here there
been made
ai'
a blank in the
transcript. In the margin a pencil query has
owne behaviour'.
is
'LETTERS'
325
[21]
Sr
am come
tropicke
*1
but a
litle
nerer to y
and
made
am
already att
a promise to
my
(f.
303.)
(f.
303^)
(f.
300^.)
y of sending
my
*1
i
by the goodnes of my loue am worthy y y desire itt too.
r
r
house to whome w^
S. & me all prayse &
Fro D. parke
sire
much
M m
&
loue
remembrance of y be now
&
for ever
[22]
fc
is
w&
by this
while be satisfied
demand itt on
fro a
ma
(though
it
make daynty
paines.
r
r
of my lett r
you shall find my loue w^in my lett & y Lp on the backe
This short
letter gives
authorship.
Sr
more
haue receaued
hereafter
when
this
is
w^
promiseth
I shall demerit.
many
Howbeit
(f-
DONNE'S PROSE
326
am very content of them, as some men that loue to borrow money yet
know not how to repay. Wherefore I would haue y first acquainted
I
w th my
when you
estate lest
do giue:
in effect
new
to a
Perhaps from Donne
friend.
There
is
no
clear
indication of date.
Ad
(.302.)
singularis defectus.4
no discontinuing
malum
ad
sufficit
To 5 make my letters
the best of ill
least, as
sinn of ours
men) thinke that vppon every
God
so
discourse, nor
is truth
learn knowledge enough out of yours to me. I learn that there
'
firmnesse and an earnestnesse of doing good alive in the world ----
Sir, I
and
2
Transcript 'requiritum'.
For the sentiment expressed here, compare Letters (1651), p. 97: Tor
no where,
vertue is even, and continuall, and the same, and can therefore break
4
nor admit ends, nor beginnings: it is not only not broken, but not tyed
not vertuous, out of whose actions you can pick an excellent
together. He is
be seen, because they are thick bodies, but not
fruits
her
and
Vice
one.
may
vertue,
which
is all
light ____
'
St.
Thomas Aquinas,
:
Summa Tbtologica, i-2 ae , qu. 19, art. I, ad l
'Ergo dicendum quod, sicut
dicit in 4 cap. de Div. Norn., bonum causatur ex integra causa,
Dionysius
malum autem ex singularibus defectibus.' Ibid., qu. 20, art. 2: Est autem
considerandum quod, sicut supra dictum est, ad hoc quod aliquid sit malum,
non
sufficit singularis defectus; ad hoc autem quod est simpliciter bonum,
The
cularibus defectibus.'
alrias' TO 8e
Norn.,
iv,
K&KOV
The Greek
e/c
is
TroAAcav /cat
debted to Professor C. C.
J.
iii,
TO ayadov
col. 729).
Webb.
e/c
pt-pwr&v eAAci^eW
(Dionysius,
For the above references I
5
Transcript
oXys
de Div.
am
in
'So'.
'LETTERS'
for all the old store, you should
vppon
old I write therefore now, rather
327
my
Ma ties
e>.
Ne
of
now, and myself am not worthy of a line, not in myne owne letters,
my best honor is that I have a roome in yr frendship, and my best
merit that I giue y one in my
prayers.
My
Loue maks me
enough
make
it
it
therefore
1
bycause he loues you. yet least I say nothing lett my tell you S r that
the sleeping preacher2 is sent for againe to the king for
to
.
y* contrary
day, and Preached in the night in his bed. His Practice came by his Profession,
and his Preaching (as he pretended) by Revelation: For he would take a Text
in his sleep, and deliver a good Sermon upon it, and though, his
Auditory were
willing to silence him, by pulling, haling, and pinching, yet would he perti
naciously persist to the end, and sleep still. Thtfame of this sleeping Preacher
abroad with a light Wing, which coming to the Kings knowledg, he com
manded him to the Court, where he sate up one night to hear him: And
when the time came that the Preacher thought it was fit for him to be asleep,
flies
and the
last
but sent for him the next morning, and in private handled him
cunning Chirurgion, that he found out the sore; making him confess
not only his sin and error in the act, but the cause that urged him to it, which
was, That he apprehended himself as a buried man in the University, being
of a low condition, and if something eminent and remarkable did not spring
his labours,
so like a
which,
accounts in
James
I,
i.
Anthony
509, in
his Reputation,
this
Wood,
Annales,
which further
ii.
particulars
(f
3 oo
.)
DONNE'S PROSE
328
ch
maks some report that his former
lie
practises againe w
i
and
and
was
vntrue
extorted
confessio
y it was in him an act either
his
promise
natural or diuine:
for
m7
am
self I
The particularities y
self 7*
shall
y comands
shall
This letter must belong to 1605, which was the year of the
at court.
'sleeping preacher's' appearance
(f.
302.)
r
th all
If you please to write I will
gladnes answere y letters : yf
ch
r affection
need not be
I
answere
y
you please to be sylent yet will
testified vnto me by letters; whereof myne owne sure knowledg and
the cleernesse of
my
soule vnto
you
least
doubt.
all
me
to haue the
Only
There is no clear
haue
whereby
enioyed you at
such distants' might refer to the correspondence between
Donne and Wotton when the latter was in Ireland, or to
Wotton's letters during his first embassy in Venice.
indication of date.
(f* 3
IV
letters
[28]
S r yr letter of y e 26 of Ma: came vnto my hands th in the space of
20 dayes as if y r goodnesse were not contented w th y e bare extending it
self vnto y r poore dependents, but w th y e rare
company of expedition
what comfort bysyds the honor it was vnto me I best know y t haue
felt y e effects, neither can it bee vnknowne to r self from whence the
y
course hath so literally flowne, though what the advantage will bee
I must refer to future event w
1
hope shortly will fall out if it fall
not in the meane tyme into the ordinarie Court apoplexie of forgetfullnes. I would
gladly passe fro hence to the performance of some
service of relatio, if either my desyre or meanes of
knowing the tymes
*1
'LETTERS
329
Cf.
zeale,
Query, 'answerers'.
5
c.
That
is,
'To
let
settle
down
quietly.
i,
DONNE'S PROSE
330
tedious.
The
1
rather y
w^out
now a
B p of Glocester
.
as
fc
y may
see the
partialitie those
is
remoued
instrumental
to
as
vocal fittnesse
whome
they find
fitt I
is
(f.
302,)
evills
ma
in
policy the one in Judgment the other
it is
tyme
waighty
to take vp
affayrs.
my
so I rest.
(f.
Sr
301.)
worme
bottome
There
when you
is
you
shall find
so often
as
'LETTERS'
in
331
my
though perhaps my thred of performance
be very small. If therefore in the accompts you cast of r frends
y
you
do not sum me vpp amongst the rest it will very much greiue and
length enough
desires
increase the
admitts no cypher.
frends y
fc
w ch
And
know
th
bycause I cannot but communicate w my
t
you y it did much reioyce my hart
I will tell
whe
the
I heard my IA E by his
L d Amb r of Venice as to
this
dispositions
and
I desire to
than 1616.
The Tyrrany
1
'fiends'.
2
3
in the margin.
They should be
inserted after
,
(Sir
(*
330
DONNE'S PROSE
332
found either vertue or stubbernes inough in me to disdaine all bitternes y t itt can make against my body, now assayles my mind & shews
me y (by imprisoning me in my chamber itt is able to depriue me of
clr
r
by y grace was allowed me whe y gaue me the
yt happines w
that this is my sicknes
priueledg of having leaue to visit y. I confesse
last
Tamerlins
as
&
as
worst fitt
dayes black ensignes
fearefully ominous
whose threatnings none scaped. 1 Let not yr charity therefore desdayne
to coyne w *1 me, in an honest deceit, to breake this tempest of my
sicknes, and since this letter hath my name, and hand, and words,
fc
and thoughts bee content to thinke itt me, & to give itt leaue thus to
to itt againe. It shall
speake to y, though y vouchsafe not to speake
th
what
tell you truly (for from me itt sucked no levin of flattery) w
who
I reverence you
besides
the
of
devotion
lownes
or
rather
height
comandm* of a noble birth, and y r perswasiue eloquence of beauty,
haue the advantage of the furniture of arts and languages, 2 and such
other vertues as might serve to iustify a reprobate fortune and y e
soe that if these things whereby some few other
lowest condition
are named are mades worthy, are to you but ornaments such might
be left w th out leaving you vnperfect. To y t treasure of y r vertues
whereof y r fayre eyes curtesy is not the lest iewell I present this paper:
and if itt be not to much boldnes in itt my excuse of not visiting y.
And so kindly kissing y r fayre hand y vouchsafes the receipt of these
:
fc
lines I take
leaue. 4
Letters (1651), pp. 34, 37: 'I have often seen such beg-gers
indisposition is, end themselves soon, and the patient as soon. . . .
I have mending or dying on my side, which is two to one.'
Henry Goodyer),
as
my
Cf. Marlowe, Tamburlaine the Great, pt. i, Act iv, sc. i, and Act v, sc. i.
first day Tamburlaine's colours were white to signify mildness, on
On
the
the second day red, but on the third and succeeding days his ensigns were
black to signify that no quarter would be given.
2
For this emphasis on the union of beauty, noble birth, and learning in
the lady whom Donne addresses!, compare his verse letter To the Countesse
of Bedford (Grierson, i. 190), 11. 24-7:
Your birth and beauty are this
And
and
again,
11.
To
in you.
A methridate
200),
Balme
religion,
made
On
i.
36-7:
Hee [i.e. God] will best teach you, how you should lay out
His stock of beauty, learning, favour, blood.
c
Query, and are made'.
4 Cf. Letters
(1651), p. 68 (in a letter addressed To the Countess of Bedford}:
'Here therefore I humbly kisse your Ladiships fair learned hands.'
'LETTERS'
333
The
llm
.
should
r
relaco of occurrences heere I leaue to this gentlema
r
1
is
desirous y Lp:
allwayes my good frend (who
3 OI
Strachey
know
so
G: 2
r
secretary to S T.
.
dare
but
know yr Lp.
ga
true and
painted
know: and so of his vertues. only this I shall intreat that bysyde
merit he may for my sake find himself welcome.
his
r
haue the honor of a letter from y Lp: and a testimony that
know my infirmity yet you are not
though better then any other you
r
other
scandalized with
chang of habitt. I haue S besydes many
Sr
my
internal advantages
this also
by
itt,
With
Sir
Thomas
May 1609.
William Strachey
Bermudas during the
Gates and Sir George Somers he was wrecked on the
letter
of
the
an
account
wrote
He
shipwreck in a
of
July 1609.
great storm
iv. 1734. In 1610
which was published later in Purcbas his Pilgrimes (1625),
and recorder of the
he reached Virginia, where he was appointed secretary
to England in 1611 (D.N.B.).
returned
He
colony.
was knighted in 1596 on the
2
Sr T. G. Probably Sir Thomas Gates, who
of Virginia, and
Cadiz expedition. In 1609 he was made lieutenant-general
to Virginia in 1610
with
went
He
Strachey
sailed on the Bermudas voyage.
of the colony, a post which
and after a visit to England returned as governor
to Gates in his letters,
twice
or
once
refers
Wotton
he held from 1611 to 1614.
i6o 4 he says, 'I commend unto
for example, when writing to Ralph Winwoodin
whom I entreat you to love and to
you the bearer hereof, Sir Thomas Gates,
S termen(Pearsan
1
loveme,andtoassureyourselfthatyoucannotlovetwohone
bearer is
In 1614 Wotton wrote to Winwood, The
Smith, Wotton, i. 320).
from
I hope hath learned some diligence
and
Thomas
Sir
Gates,
to
a servant
his master' (ibid.,
3
draw
|
gather
ii.
These
50).
in the transcript.
a iternativ e readings appear thus
(f.
255.)
DONNE'S PROSE
334
ch
as yet I
same
In the Burley MS. the letter was separated from the other
Donne letters by a considerable interval, as it was transcribed
on folio 255, and the Donne poems began on folio 279, and
the letters (except for the postscript on folio 286) on folio
294. It will be noticed that all the other letters seem to have
Appendix
Letters in the Burley
(f.
302.)
to
MS.
Chapter
XII
certainly not
by Donne.
sue virte.
(?)
for
r
worthy of y acceptance
This
I rest.
letter, certainly
as is shown by
Wotton,
'Vostra Eccellenza'.
(f.
259.)
must wonder
y* since
whome
1
I haue not
many tymes
expected a truer representation of those
my coming to Lon:
I
Transcript 'inverto'.
'LETTERS'
335
where yo Hue then fro any other vessell of lesse receipt, and
r
r
indeed besyds y r loue y should yeeld somwhat in this to o p sent
humors w if they haue not matter of truth to worke vppon are likely
parts
*1
farwell sodenly,
way
againe.
To
is
'S
Wotton's
letters
by Mr.
Pearsall
Smith (L
306),
who
adds:
Right. Ho: L:
comendatio
importune y
in satisfying
&
r
It
may seeme
all
excusable demands
strang to
y that vpon
so short a
should so sodenly
abylyty of desert in me I
Honors favo r but emboldned by the relatio of the world
lesse
my
& prsuming in y
necessary respect
r
May it please y Ho:
& so to Venice in a smale barke & potentos2 from both places: yet I
r
feare purgatory & therefore so farr as w^ modesty I may I craue y
further
in
be
tedious
&
to
absolution:
Ho: favor in procuring
fearing
relatio
Query, 'hebdomade',
So in the transcript. Dr. C. T. Onions suggests that the sense may be
to free the writer from quarantine up to that point
'permits* or 'passports',
of the journey. Totent' in the sense of a military warrant or oider occurs
2
in F.
0J).
(f.
300*.)
DONNE'S PROSE
336
am
e
in a banke right over
1
th whose
against the house of y Sanito'
th lesse
offence of circumstaunce recomend this
help I may
suite
& service to y r Ho: Thus least I should fold vp many errors in one
I humbly take
leaue
vow the observaunces of him who is
my
my
&
yr
This letter
addressed to
is
rs
.
It
most obliged.
seems to be
his
APPENDIX A
LIST OF MANUSCRIPTS OF DONNE'S PROSE
WORKS
MS.
25707, British
Museum.
Ash. 826. Ashmole
MS.
now
J.
Dobell, and
late
Rev,
Phillipps
S*
fCC. MS, R.
<TCD. MS. G.
3. 12,
W.
Edmund Gosse, now in the New York Public Library.
Wy. Wyburd MS., formerly in the possession of
Wyburd, from whom it passed to Mr. P, J* Dobell.
2.
the late
W.
MS.
3*
Siath&natos
MS.
4.
Musaeo
Sermons
Dowden MS,,
late J.
Payne
DONNE'S PROSE
338
Do. Dobell
MS. Harvard
above
College Library (Nor. 4506). See
under Juvenilia.
L. Lothian MS., formerly in the possession of the
Jessopp, now in that of the Marquess of Lothian.
PC. MS. St. Paul's Cathedral Library, London.
5.
late
Rev. A. H.
Letters
British
British
Bath MSS.
Fortescue
ii.
59 (Hist.
MSS.
iv,
P- 383)-
Loseley MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm. Rep. VII, App., pp. 659, 670-1).
Portland MSS. Ill (Hist. MSS. Comm. Rep. XIV, App. ii, p. 6).
Powis MSS.,
Series II.
(Transcript
only)
Clarendon
Note
sends
to
word
Burley-on-the-Hill
MS.
Delegates
of the
Press.
Section J.
that the
As
this
volume goes to
press, Professor
R. C. Bald
APPENDIX
ITsermons
who
life
by reference to
his
LXXX
In the
undated sermon.
sermons
us,
may sometimes be
series described as
on what Walton
calls
found
as
the fourth
XXVI
The L
as
'Sermons preached at
'at
LXXX
in Lent.
1
Sermon
35,
which
is
Donne
DONNE'S PROSE
34o
On
if
in
LXXX
my
of that Sermon,
It
XXVI
is
detailed.
Out of the hundred and fifty- four sermons contained in the three
volumes, less than thirty offer us no clue as to their date. The headings
of eighty-three contain either actual dates, or a clear reference to
current events by which the sermon can be dated. By far the larger
number of these belong to the later period of Donne's life, whilst
he was Dean of St. Paul's. Only three sermons are dated as belonging
to the two and a half years between his ordination and his wife's
death, and two of these are dull and lifeless. Probably Donne felt in
later years that his early sermons were unworthy of his subsequent
reputation, and therefore he did not trouble to revise and preserve
them.
Each of the years 1618, 1619, and 1620 has four sermons ascribed
to it. Those preached in 1619 are of especial interest owing to the
circumstances under which they were delivered. One was 'preached
to the Lords, upon Easter Day, at the Communion. The King being
then dangerously sick at Newmarket.' The second was the 'Sermon
of Valediction', preached just before Donne's departure on the
Bohemian Embassy with Lord Doncaster, and closely connected in
thought and expression with the 'Hymn to Christ, at the Author's
Last Going into Germany'. The third was preached in Heidelberg
before the Princess Palatine, that unfortunate
lady Elizabeth,
daughter of James the First, who recalled in later years the 'delight'
1
of accepting
ii,
comment on
bility
APPENDIX
341
and 'edification' with which she had listened to Donne; and the fourth
was delivered at the Hague, where the States General
presented Donne
with a gold medal representing the Synod of Dort.
Donne was appointed Dean of St. PauFs in November 1621, and
after this the number of sermons which have been
preserved increases
rapidly. Ten are dated as belonging to 1622, and two of these were
considered sufficiently important to be
published at once. One was
delivered at St. Paul's Cross to
explain 'some reasons, which His
Sacred Majesty had been pleased to give, of those Directions for
Preachers, which he had formerly sent forth'. James was delighted
with this sermon, and desired to see it in print, saying 'that it was a
piece of such perfection as could admit neither addition nor diminu
tion'. 1 The other was
preached to the Virginia Company, and is
described by Dr. Jessopp as the first missionary sermon in the
English
language.
Collection.
Mathew
DONNE'S PROSE
342
in
Lady
July
of the home-life of the Herbert family.
picture
his illness at
During
some of
Abury Hatch
in the
autumn of 1630 he
revised
no. 71 in the
his sermons, as we learn from the heading to
Sermons. He came to London again early in 1630/1 to preach
L
before the King on the first Friday in Lent, when he delivered his last
which was published in 1632.
sermon, the famous 'Death's Duel',
back
his
to
went
After the sermon he
house, 'out of which*, as Walton
XXX
carried by devout
Stephen, "he was
March
on
1631.
men to his grave"/ His death took place
31
The following list includes only those sermons of which the date is
the heading. The dates in italics have been supplied
clearly given in
says,
'he never
moved,
till,
like St.
from
e.g.
When
civil
State, to a
new Court,
Emperour
affected to Christ,
Is
there not
And what
all
and
bee,
at that
other)
so
may
all
so neare
L, 27, p. 231.
APPENDIX
Vot. AND No.
xxvi,
'
DATE
6
24
343
PLACE AND OCCASION
At Greenwich*
At Whitehall
*A Sermon Preached at
Pauls Cross to the Lords
of the Council, and other
Honorable Persons.
. .
.
It being the
Anniversary
of the Kings coming to the
Crown, and
then
being
his
Majesty
gone into
Scotland.'
1617 Nov. 2
(20jfA
Dec, 14 (yd
18
12
13
2
J6i8/x<) Feb.
27^
At Whitehall
At Denmark House
Queen Anne.
At Whitehall
Communion,
The King
being
dangerously sick at
Market,'
,
19
Apr.
to
(yd
At
then
New-
mon
of Valediction at
*Two
n June 16
Sermons,
to
the
to
Sermon
Germany,
we went
as
out,**
is
This
headed
till
is
Jan, 1614/15,
If L,
iii. I
mentioned by Walton
as
Donne's
first
after his wife's death, it must belong to Aug. 1617 and should be inserted here*
3 The
heading of this sermon does not give the year, but the mention of
been
lost.
DONNE'S PROSE
344
DATE
At
the Hague.
'Since in
my
sicknesse at
Abrey-hatche in Essex,
1630, revising my short
notes of that Sermon, I
digested them into these
two.*
14
1
xxvi,
9
LXXX, 74
42
L, 30
June
II (Trinity
1620/1 Jan. 7
(u
Sun. after
Epi
At
Lincoln's Inn.
'To
Countesse of
then at Har
the
Bedford,
rington house.'
Before the King at White
Feb. 16
Whitehall.
after Easter)
Sunday)
phany)
xxvi,
At
hall.
Apr. 8
yi
At St. Paul's.
At Whitehall.
At the Spital.
At Lincoln's Inn.
At St. Paul's.
'At
,,23
L,
At Whitehall.
I4
LXXX, 70
L, 36
LXXX, 15
xxvi, 25
37
,,31
Hanworth, to my
Lord of Carlile, and his
company,
Earles of
land,
being
the
Northumber
and Buckingham,
etc.'
Published
Sept. 15
The
Cross
(i.e.
St. Paul's
Wherein occa
Cross).
sion was justly taken for
separately
in 1622
and
Numbered
this
numbered
as
clearly
is
It
is
Donne
before.
APPENDIX
345
DATE
AND No.
38
43
At
St. Paul's.
Nov. 13
Published
separately
1622
in
Virginian Plantation^
16
rB
At St. Paul's.
At Whitehall
At St. Paul's,
txxx,
In
the
Evening*.
M&y
Published
22 (Aacension Day)
separately
in
t,
*
At Lincolnes Inne.
At the Dedication of a
new Chappell there.'
in the
At St. Paul's *.
*
1623
txxx, 19
45
Apr*
1 1
n 46
A/tfj 23 (Trinity
43
June
32
13
(yd
Sermon
company,
Chappell
LJ
/>/**.
i^4/S
49
,
]*"*
30 (4^
phany)
5*
4/krr
St.
Paul's,
17
(ist
FrL
in L#nt)
*in
the
Evening**
St. Dunstan's,
Epi
Mar, 4
in his
at Saint Johns.'
At
(Circumcision)
7^-
46
At
25 (Christmas Day)
that
St. Dunstan's,
To
and
txxx, 2
*The
in
At
Sunday)
Evening**
At St. Dunstan's.
first
At Whitehall
DONNE'S PROSE
34 6
DATE
The
LXXX, 20
to
preached
separately
in 1625
Sermon
First
King
At
St.
the
'in
Paul's,
Evening'.
At Denmark
Apr. 26
house, some
moved from
thence, to
hisburiall,Apr.26, 1625.'
LXXX, 65
May
(yd
At
The
St. Paul's.
first
At
At
St. Paul's.
St. Dunstan's.
The
Sermon
Our
First
fhany)
after
LXXX, 66
Jan.
At
St.
Prebend
my
Sermons upon
Published
Feb. 24
(ist Fri. in
Lent)
separately
in 1626
LXXX, 21
The
Paul's.
second of
my
five
Psalmes/
*A Sermon Preached to
tie at
the Kings
White
hall.'
The
first
Sermon upon
this
73
XXVI.
Apr.
18
Text, preached at
S. Pauls, in the Evening.'
'Preached to the King in
my Ordinary wayting at
White-ban.'
To the Household at
Whitehall.
LXXX, 77
May
At
St. Paul's.
Day)
78
67
ne21
J?
Nov.
St.
Paul's
The
third of
Ptsperis
my
Pre
my
five Psalmes.'
80
Dec. 12
Treached
at the funerals
of Sir William
Cokayne,
Knight, Alderman
London.'
Dec. 25 (Christmas Day)
At
St. Paul's.
of
APPENDIX
i,xxx>
68
347
DATE
At St, Paul's.
of
22
L,
1627
27
A/f/r.
25 (Easter Day)
Apr. I (ist Sun, after Easter}
my
The fourth
Prebend Sermons
upon my five
At St. Paul's.
To
Psalmes.*
hall.
May
I.XXX,
.
2H
May
44
Published
July
13 (Whitsunday)
20 (Trinity Sunday)
I
(6/A
&*,
tf/ter
trinity)
At
At
St. Paul's.
St.
Dunstan's.
Sermon of
*A
Comme
separately
In
At
1627
lately buried.'
Nov. 19
manage of his
the
Lady
daughter,
the
at
At
St. Paul's.
1627/8 Jan, 27
47
fhttny)
S. Paul'
Feb. 29 (n/
xxvt, is
At Whitehall.
To the King at White
hall, upon the occasion
1628 Apr. 5
LXXX, 54
of the Fast/
Apt. 13 (Kaster Day)
Apr. 15 (Easter Tuesday)
75
At
St. Paul's,
To
hall/
,t
June
(Whitsunday)
after Trinity)
At
St. Paul's.
Even
ing'.
LXXX, 6
f)et,
25 (Christmas Day)
of St.
1628/9 Jan. 25 (Conversion
Paul)
At
St. Paul's.
This
Pauls
is
the heading of the sermon, though the pages are headed *At Saint
The printer has carried on the headline of the previous
Croue\
sermon*
DONNE'S PROSE
348
1
DATE
LXXX, 24
At Whitehall.
Probably
at
St.
Paul's
28 2
Apr.
1629.'
At St. Paul's.
24 (Whitsunday)
Nov. 22 (2$tb Sun. after Trinity) At St. Paul's Cross.
3
At St. Paul's.
1629/30 Jan. 25 (Conv. of St. Paul)
Feb. 12 (ist FrL in Lent)
To the King at White
May
LXXX, 31
L,
44
LXXX, 49
xxvi, 5
hall.
LXXX, 25
,,13
At
St. Paul's.
s 'Preached
in
Lent, to the
King.'
6
1630/1 Feb. 25 (ist Fri. in Lent)
xxvi, 26
(published
separately in 1632
as 'Death's Duel')
1
This sermon
Before
is
repeated as xxvi, 17, where no date is given.
appearance in the L Sermons, this was published in 1634 ky the
University of Cambridge as one of Six Sermons upon Severall Occasions
its
preached by Donne.
3 Should this sermon be dated
24 Jan. or 31 (the Sundays preceding and
following the Feast of St. Paul's Conv.) rather than 25 Jan., the actual date of
the Feast ? See Donne's remarks on his habit of celebrating festivals on the
the
first
fell
on
as xxvi, 1 6,
Monday,
it is
as
day'.
5 There is an
error in this title, for in 1630 Easter fell on 28 Mar., so that
20 Apr. could not possibly have been in Lent. Gosse dates the sermon
23 Apr.
and adds a footnote 'Misprinted "April 20" in the 1640 edition
(p. 127).
Dr. Jessopp points out that the third Sunday after Easter fell on the
23rd'
(Life and Letters of John Donne , vol. ii, p. 263). This emendation only increases
the confusion, for as a matter of fact, 23
Apr. was a Friday, and moreover
was not in Lent.
XXVI Sermons give no date for this sermon, but Walton tells us
was preached on the ist Friday in Lent. The
separate edition (1632)
says that it was delivered 'in the beginning of Lent 1630' [i.e. 1630/1]6
that
The
it
APPENDIX
349
then
probable, as men's minds were
of the Protestants in Germany.
much
runs
LXXX, II. Treached upon Candlemas day.' The last sentence
'And therefore since all the world shakes in a palsie of wars, and
since we are sure that Christs Vicar in this case will
and Indulgences,
Dimittuntur
his
to
come
feccata, to send his Buls,
and Crociatars for the maintenance of his part, in that cause, let us
who are to do the duties of private men, to obey and not to
rumors of wars,
also,
direct,
to Christ Jesus,
in
England
DONNE'S PROSE
350
Roman
of
Catholicism.
2 February 1620/1 seems a probable date for this sermon.
If LXXX, 10 is correctly dated as belonging to 2 February 1621/2,
and LXXX, 9 as 2 February 1622/3, these years are excluded. 2 Febru
Thus
ary 1623/4
is
excluded by Donne's
illness at that
time.
February
preached at St. Paul's for 1623 and all the succeeding years of his
This sermon probably belongs therefore to Easter 1622.
life.
LXXX, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37. Treached upon Whitsunday.*
As Dean, Donne was required to preach at St. Paul's on Whit
sunday. We have sermons for 1627, 1628, and 1629 (LXXX, 28, 29, 31),
Six of these sermons may therefore be assigned to the Whitsundays
of 1622, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, 1630. There would then remain one
sermon not accounted for. This might be LXXX, 30, which is inserted
between the Whitsunday sermons of 1628 and 1629. We cannot,
however, assume that sermons 32-7 are placed in the order in which
they were preached, for the whole series of ten sermons begins with
those for 1627 and 1628, after which there is an undated sermon
followed by that for 1629. The date of any of the undated sermons can
be settled by internal evidence only. With some hesitation I assign
no. 32 to 1623, for it contains less anti-Roman matter than
any of the
others. During the negotiations in 1623 for the
Spanish match, the
King ordered preachers to refrain from violently controversial sermons,
LXXX, 38, 39, 40, 41. Treached upon Trinity Sunday/ A careful
examination of these sermons shows that they form a course, an
nounced by Donne in no. 38, as intended to deal, not in a controversial
spirit but in one of devotion and edification, with the Three Persons of
the Trinity and with sins directed against each Person. No.
38 takes as
its
no.
subject
afford,
have bent
my
upon
which
that,
APPENDIX
351
LXXX, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55. Treached upon the Penitentiall Psalmes.'
These are arranged with LXXX, 54 to form a series on Psalm vi.
LXXX,
54, which is headed Treached to the King at White-hall, upon the
occasion of the Fast, April 5, 1628', is on verses 6 and
7. It is unlikely
that Donne, preaching before the King on the occasion of a
special
Fast, would merely continue a series of sermons which he had been
preaching for some time, and therefore we need not suppose that
the undated sermons necessarily belong to 1628. Internal evidence
suggests that nos. 50-3 were preached much earlier, for nos. 50 and 52
are closely linked with the Essays in
Divinity (seepp. 2 13-1 4. supra), and
the last sentence of no. 52 shows that no. 53 was to follow
quickly: 'And
so we have done with our first Part, which was the
Prayer it selfe;
and the second, which is the Reasons of the Prayer, we must reserve for
a second exercise,' On the other hand, no. 55
(on verses 8, 9, 10 of
Psalm vi) shows no such lints with the Essays. I suggest that nos.
50-3 should be assigned to the period between 1615 and Donne's
departure for
Germany in 1619.
LXXX, 69. 'The fifth of my Prebend Sermons
upon
my five Psalmes:
Preached at S. Pauls.'
This must be later than 28 January 1626/7, when the fourth of
Donne's prebend sermons was preached (LXXX, 68). The prebend
sermons followed one another at intervals of a few months, so this
sermon may be safely assigned to 1627.
LXXX, 76. Treached to the Earle of Carlile, and his Company, at
Sion.*
so the
seem to date
it
as belonging to
1620-2.
the Trinity, the three Persons in one God.' LXXX, 38, p. 376. Had the sermon
been preached anywhere but at Lincoln's Inn, Donne would hardly have
DONNE'S PROSE
352
E.g.
'I
may
have
a full
measure in
my
selfe,
finde
no want of
temporall conveniencies, or spirituall consolation even in inconveniencies, and so hold up a holy alacrity and cheerefulnesse for all
concerning
desert
all
us that professe
thee aright.' 1
'But he may derive help upon us, by meanes that are not his, not
avowed by him, He may quicken our Counsels by bringing in an
Achitofbell, he may strengthen our Armies by calling in the Turke,
he may establish our peace and friendships, by remitting or departing
with some parts of our Religion; at such a deare price we may be
2
helped, but these are not his helps.'
'God does all that he can for us; And therefore
when we
see others
'Our Ancestors who indured many yeares Civill and forraine wars,
were more affected with their first peace, then we are with our
continuall enjoying thereof, And our Fathers more thankfull, for the
beginning of Reformation of Religion, then we for so long enjoying
anger by a rumour that Frederick had invited the Turks into Hungary
him in his Bohemian campaign.* Feeling in England ran high
in favour of Frederick, and
great impatience was manifested at the
reluctance of James to assist his son-in-law.
L, 3. 'Preached at a Marriage/ This was also published in 1634 in
the Six Sermons, and it is found in the
manuscript in St. Paul's
Cathedral Library, where it has the heading 'Preached at St. Clements
to help
at
Lady
3
5
by
Ibid., p. 806.
4
Ibid., p. 808.
Ibid., p. 81 1.
Tillteres's dispatch,
April 6/16, Raumer, Briefe aus Paris, ii. 299, as
S. R. Gardiner,
History of England, 1603-42, vol. iii, p. 344.
quoted
APPENDIX
icast er
353
Carlisle in
Treached at a Churching.'
Treached at the Churching of the Countesse of Bridgewater.'
hese two sermons have the same text, and the second is
evidently
ntinuation of the first, if indeed the two do not form one sermon,
ded by Donne when he revised his notes, as we know to have been
case with LXXX, 71 and 72. x
he Earl and Countess of Bridgewater had a numerous family,
listing of four sons and eleven daughters, of whom two sons and
:e
daughters died in infancy. The occasion of L, 10 must have
i afforded
by the birth of one of the younger members of the
2
ily, perhaps that of John
(born 1622), the eldest surviving son,
succeeded to the title in 1649. The sermon cannot be later than
5, when the youngest child of the Earl and Countess was born.
II. Treached at Lincolns Inne, preparing them to build their
,
9.
D.
l
ppell.'
his sermon
The
conjecture that the two sermons are really one is supported by the
any reference in L, 9 to the occasion on which it was preached.
John, Viscount Brackley, played the part of the Elder Brother in the
>rmance of Milton's Comus at Ludlow Castle in 1634.
See G. R. Potter,
Sermon Preached at Lincoln's Inn by John Donne^
\-j. He shows that Gosse was wrong in stating that *In 1617 he [Donne]
the first stone of their new chapel'.
ice of
DONNE'S PROSE
354
Nos. 17 and 18 both take as their text St. Matt, xviii. 7 and no. 18
evidently a continuation of no. 17. It is probable that they belong
to the winter of 1620-1, for there are passages in no. 1 8 which seem to
point to the dismay in England at the news of the Elector Palatine's
is
war on
his behalf. 1
Nos. 19-23 form a series preached on Ps. xxxviii, and of these nos.
21-3 take ver. 4 as their text.
L, 26. 'Preached to the King, at White-Hall, the first Sunday in
Lent.'
1626/7 seems a probable date for this sermon, as that is the only
year from 1617/18 till Donne's death for which we possess no sermon
preached at Whitehall on the first Friday in Lent, (There is no
sermon
illness.)
It
is
for 1623/4,
of controversie between them and us, and restoring those places to their true
sense (which course I held constantly for one whole year) so I think it a usefull
and acceptable labour, now to employ for a time those Evening exercises to
reconcile some such places of Scripture, as may at first sight seem to differ
from one another; In the morning we saw how Christ judged all [no. 12 has
as its text "The Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment to
the Son"]; now we are to see how he judges none: I judge no man! L, 13,
p. 101.
1
Speaking of the
men
man who
is
easily scandalized,
Donne
says,
to give
their
nothing but Paper, when they are onely Paper- Armies, ^n^. Pamphlet-victories,
and no such in truth) Illico scandalizatur, yet with these forged rumours,
presently hee is scandalized.'
Prof. S. R. Gardiner says
London on November 24
L, 18, p. 147.
The
first
The
[1620].
Many
APPENDIX
Donne
the
to preach before
him on the
ist
Sunday
355
in
Lent
as well as
on
ist Friday.
on the same
Parish'.
No. 48 has as its text Lam. iii. i. *I am the man that hath seen
by the rod of his wrath.' This is the text on which, according
to Walton, Donne preached his first sermon after his wife's death.
On this evidence Gosse 2 has identified this sermon with the one
described by Walton, though the latter expressly states that the one to
which he refers was preached 'where his [Donne's] beloved wife lay
buried in St. Clement's Church, near Temple Bar, London', whereas
L, 48 is headed Treached at St. Dunstans', and is included among a
affliction
that Gosse
numerous
is
2
3
si***
Aa2
DONNE'S PROSE
356
We
This
xxvi, 10.
which
is
dated
as
is
a continuation
This sermon
belonging to 1620.
there remain only the few following sermons to which as yet
no date can be assigned. Further investigation will probably lessen
Thus
their
number
LXXX,
8.
12.
30.
45.
56-64.
still
further.
on
z
L, 2, 3
4-7.
24, 25.
34.
39, 40.
xxvi, 22.
truly such a
Ps. xxxii).
'Preached at a Manage.'
'Preached at a Christning.'
'Preached at White-Hall/
man
['as
had seen
affliction ];
companionable sadness,*
'We reade in the Naturall Story, of some floating Islands, that swim, and
move from place to place; and in them a Man may sowe in one place, and
reape in another This case is so farre ours, as that in another place we have
sowed in tears, and by his promise, in whose tears we sowed them, when we
:
APPENDIX C
PROSE WORKS ATTRIBUTED TO DONNE
two
THERE
Septuaginty which have
on alchemy, preserved
fol.
By
of Walton is not his ; it was by one John Domy a poor and fiimsy writer,
the author of two or three other trifles.'
This translation has none of the marks of Donne's style. It is plain
DONNE'S PROSE
358
that if the original publisher could have claimed the book as Donne's,
he would have done so in 1633 the year of the publication of the
Poems and Juvenilia. John Donne the younger made no mention of
it or of Polydoron in the
petition which he sent to Laud asking for an
those
against
injunction
publishers who had issued works ascribed to his
father without his permission, nor did he reissue either book among
the
with
his writings.
notes;
my
I tried
my
impression is
employed by the booksellers.'
Dunn notes
but
we
there
carelessly,
misprints;
are shrewd things said and there is evidence of
fairly wide reading. Accord
ing to my theory the younger Donne had his father's
early notes to draw
upon, but was too indolent and unscholarly to make any better use of
them.'
APPENDIX
3S9
women
&c.
6,^10, x6, 18, 19, 21, 23, 26, 49, 51, 77,
C3ivc a drunkard that hath learned to reele of the
tapspinning Mearmaidc, and a divell bomxn-e Ruffian (wV), the wall, in any case;
for the one nccdcs it, the other in right should have wall on all sides of him,
*
Polygon, pp.
Ibid,, p* 72:
viz.
3
5
Ibid,, p. 40.
Note
*
^
laughmg is Truth discerning the Alchymist mistake; for the like is betwixt
Mercury and Saturn** P. 83; *Alchymie is the knowledge of things hidden in
nature, the revelation thereof the gift of God? In view of such passages it
seems clear that the sentences which Professor Dunn quotes express the dislike
of the learned occultist for the vulgar practitioner: eg p. %: *A met tallmonging Alchimist ti but a horakeeper to a coyner, however he curries his
tromperie*
360
DONNE'S PROSE
?
.
INDEX
Abbot, George, Archbishop of Can
terbury, 110,204,205, 330
,
Baddily,
Richard,
*/>
Morton,
o/"
24-6.
ri
330.
.,
Aelian, 54.
Alcaxar, Luis, In
Don Cameron,
171
255
n,
249
.,
6i, 69,
of,
*74-
30, 92,
104,
113, 251,
107,
363,
34,
I),
34J-
n6,,
uj,
114,
176,
204, 213,
117,
wo,
171,
172,
223, 334
,,
if.
56,
54,
115
.J
),
176,
n$,
120, 171,
R.
E.,
12,
146-7, 148
137,
13571*,
.,
291, 298,
227.
Bern,
167, 234,
Boccaccio, 314 .
Bodleian Library,
.,
145,
Oxford,
161-3,
168
45
.,
#*,
280,
338.
Bodleian Library Rffcord, 47 w,
and
51, 146,
.,
Atosia, 136 H,
Au!u Oelliua,
143
Artemidorus, 54.
a.,
Bennett,
48
116,119,
.,
173
333t 344-
Andrewa,
326
294
Ambrose,
3x6
#.
177.
,
Juan (Azorius),
Mwalts, 50,
Inttitotiimts
Bridgewater, Earl
of,
see
Egerton,
John,
Brooke, Rupert,
3,
INDEX
3 6z
297
.,
(George
299 n. 9 344.
9, 10.
.;
Poems of Donne,
King, 48,
132,
244-5.
Cabbala (Kabbalah),
also Cabbalists,
De Bello
Clement of Alexandria,
Gallico, 312/1.
Cajetan, 113.
Calendar of Domestic State Papers,
Calpurnius, Eclogues, 54.
Calvin, John, 102, io6n., 113.
Calvinistic doctrine, 68, 87, 99.
Cambridge, University
n.,
of,
337.
15, 275,
n.
287-90.
Colet, John,
193
Camerarius, 24 n.
5>
13672.,
St.,
264, 270.
New
132, 133.
348
151, 312
Caesar, Julius,
1 50?*.,
150?!., 151.
n^
Chambers,
Dean of St.
Paul's, 270,
271.
Campion, Thomas,
30.
Columbia University
Carew
Salisbury, 17.
195.
youn
.,
359
n. 9
n.
152.
n.,
156, 201
n.,
270.
INDEX
set
Danvers, Lady,
Herbert,
Magda
len.
Danvcw,
DC Quineey, Thomas,
Dekker,
Thomas, 304
Denbigh,
37
.,
Karl
164
.,
of,
Fcilding,
275.
15,
99;
Roman
285
6,
ff.;
secretary to Sir
20, 309;
for Brack;
his arrest,
165.
means of support,
27; his sacred poems, 27; journey
to the Continent, 28; attempt to
obtain a diplomatic post, 29;
literature as a
(the
w,
pucudo-DiottyMus), 113, 326
Dohtll, P. J-* 337Doneasucr, James Hay, Viscount,
afterwards Earl of Carlisle, 37, 38,
267, 340, 341 ., 344, 351, 352, 353Doncasicr, Viscountess (Lucy, Coun
ter of Carlisle), 199, 351*
mem
7, 71, 72,
20, 2f
22, 34
,,
267, 317,
wife,
visit
36;
to
Germany and
social
circle,
39, 69-72;
Donne, Bridget, 37 n
Donne, Constance, 37 #,, 296*
Donne, Sir Daniel (or Dunne),
death, 42-3*
Ititfrtiry
29,
38;
ter),
towards
attitude
205
Roman Church,
dons the
later
ft.
Basil
Cambridge,
vice,
19.
36
363
n.
Donne, George, 37
Donne, Henry, 14.
Donne, John (father of the poet),
Donne, John, individuality of,
eusenmt unity of his work, 5;
and character rellected in
.
13.
Characteristics.
Ex
poetry,
audacity
re
imagery, 57-60, 256-7; images
his
311
authors in Latin translations, 54-6;
knowledge of the Fathers, 15, 35,
know
1*3-15, 255, 266, 270, 290;
of
the
li$Schoolmen,
15,
ledge
i;
life
Han
17, 255,
INDEX
364
Donne, John
(contd.)
(contd?)
Letters, 292-3.
WORKS.
Poems
115, 126,295.
Storm, The, 16.
Verse
Woman's
Prose:
153, 203,
2,
67, 28,
n6n.,
56, 977*.,
294-5.
Calme, The,
16, 304.
Biathanatos,
I,
152,
148,
210
i78-9> 209,
i59-77>
n.,
njn.,
Henry, 59.
Elegies, 5, 18, 26 n., 28, 54, 91, 92,
Essays in Divinity,
2, 9, 31-3, 46,
So, 5 2 > 53> 54> 6 4> 73, 82-3, 88,
101,
100,
II77Z.,
II57J.,
122,
167
316-17.
Good-friday, 77 n.
Good-morrow, The, 18.
Holy
constancy, 7*
n.,
351.
Ignatius
his
Conclave
(Conclaue
La
to
the
Lord Harrington,
113,3157*.
Primrose, The, 128-9.
Progress of the Soul (Metempsycho
sis),
19, 70, 75 n.
Juvenilia
lems),
and Prob
(Paradoxes
i, 5,
53, 59> 7i *
7, 17,
75
37
n.,
*2,
45, 46,
*3 2 ~4 8 >
33,
358.
Severall Persons ofHonour,
12 n., i6n., 22, 23,29,30, 34 n. 9
Letters
to
74, 93,
INDEX
WORKS
Donne, John:
206 #,, 255, 258
Edmondes,
(contd.)
262
.,
291,
,,
292,
293,
298,
300,
308
329
330
.*
Letters (in
'Tab if
Afatbew),
245, 291,
,,
297
296,
292, 293,
.,
29, 33
.,
298-9,
,,
PseuJa-Martyr,
2, 5, 13, 27,
J-
54, 55,
221
286, 294,
.,
6Vf(Mw,
i, 2, 5>
36
9 *Q 33
w., 38
35
.,
43
49, So, 5*
$ 6 > 57> S 8
SSi
62
71
n.,
34
>
52
53
S9> 6o <> r
68 n,,
63, 64, 65 n^ 67
72 H2, 83 it,, 84-90, 91 .,
-
166-7,
207, 208,
148^
144,
i8o., 203
iSS"^ 3H
177
*>
247,
3*9
elder
m),37.,t3*-5t3M37*MM4
149, 150, 161, 162, 195, 203, 215,
275, 276, 278-9, 291, 298-9, 358-60,
Dowdcn,
W, H.
Thomas, 190-1.
Fkmta
Fou
337.
(Master of the
Temple), 246*
Drayton, Michael, 321.
of HawWilliam,
thornden, ty n.
Drury, Elizabeth, 7, z8 ? 122, 153,
Drummond,
29S>
Espanola, 49 n.
Professor E.
Draper, Rev,
Lady, 20.
>
2ii.,
.,
ligerton,
54
353,
Sir
ion.,
Thomas, 301.
.,
355.
Collection of Letters
.*/
made by
326
322,
.,
332
.,
365
Sir
32L
ft Sage, 47.
46-7.
354 n.
Gardiner, Thomas, of Barstowe, 37
Gardner, Helen L., 32 n., 92 n.
n,
INDEX
366
in,
14
n.,
Spirit in
107
Conflict,
.,
Harvey,
Harvey,
Harvey,
Hatton,
.,
Gabriel, 304 n.
Samuel, 37 n.
William, 127.
Sir Christopher, 314.
M.
Gosse, Sir
Edmund,
Havilland,
327
n.,
de, 300.
328.
195, 300.
Donne's
Hebrew,
32
*.,
93
n.,
127-8, 255 n.
Hele, Sir John, Serjeant-at-law, 157.
Henri IV, king of France, 17, 192.
Henrietta Maria, Queen, 342.
34
.,
101
37
.,
n., 40,
48, 66, 67
no-ii,
.,
izofl.,
Greek
literature studied
by Donne
in
I),
Donne,
134
n.,
n. 6.
128, 160-2.
in,
213, 217-
18.
151;
Guicciardini, Piu Consigli ed Avvertimenti, 46; Propositioni di stato,
46
I, 3, 17 n., 28,
300; Poems of Donne (two-
volume
of,
knowledge
1:57.
Hippocrates, 125.
n.
INDEX
Horace (Quintus Horatius
Flaccus),
47 5* -3J drs Poetic a, 52; Efodes,
52, 303
.;
$2*
Horwood, Alfred
J.,
300.
fas/phina, 49.
of, 16,
Jackson,
Donne's knowledge
borough, 279.
James the first, King, 26, 119, 144,
146, 151, 152, 153 n>, 180-3, *86,
201, 205 n n 247, 258 ,, 269, 270,
297, 327-8, 334, 340, 341, 343-6,
3$*
#.;
341,
Jvhn D&nne>
.,
353;
I34.
Qu*rits, 357-8-
Silent
Woman, 304
Kempe, Alfred
n.
299, 319.
J.,
Kepler, Johann,
119-21, 124,
125, 147, 159, 173 Ht> 1^2, 196,209.
117,
2 43> 334-
.,
Kinpmdl, Lady
Koran
(Bridget White),
Laetantius, 51.
Lindsay, Jack, 51
Linthicum,
Drama
319^
M.
of Shakespeare^ 146.
Thomas,
n.
292
3$**
98, 117
304
Josephus, 171.
Juvenal, 51-3; Satires, 53, 208 n.
Italian literature,
367
Lombardelli, 315,
244??.,
Jones,
Jonion, Ben,
publisher,
*,,
278.
INDEX
368
Middle Temple, 312
n.\ St.
Dun-
stan's in the
St. Paul's
103
7i.,
278
n.,
298
St.
344-51;
133;
132,
Paul's
St.
n,,
276,
338-41,
(Deanery),
Churchyard,
Paul's
61,
Cross,
hall, 35,
354> 356.
Lothian, Marquess
doctrine
De Rerum
Nafara,
n.,
151,
329
Montaigne, Michel, 46, 47, 1177*.,
,
A full enquiry
1 66.
de,
48, 49.
(pub
lisher), 194.
19,
Vere), 355.
S^.
Macrocosm,
of,
128.
143,21771.
of, 338.
Moore
147.
De Rege
et Regis
n.,
Smith,
Professor
G.
C.,
42 n.
More, Ann, see Donne, Ann.
More, Sir George, 20, 21, 25, 27.
More, Sir Thomas, 13, 171, 219.
Morhof, Daniel Georg, Polyhistor,
246.
J 33-
Mary Magdalene
Mathew,
Letters,
133,
29
n.,
27,
69,
148,
179-80,
Munday, Anthony,
n.,
26,
185.
(1567), 141.
Collection of
Sir Tobie,
ion., 12
22-5,
33
n.,
143.
341 n.
Mathews, E. G., 49 n.
Matthias, Emperor, 37, 38.
313
n.,
Mayne
(Maine), Jasper,
133,
261.
Baron Lati-
mer), 320 n.
n.
134,
Nonesuch
INDEX
Northumberland, Henry Percy, Earl
of, 21, 344, 352.
Norton, Charles
369
Plato, 54-6,
223;
114,
Laws,
54;
Republic,
55;
Timaeus, 54-5.
128-
of,
30-
Plautus, 51.
Pliny, the elder, 5
1, 54.
Pliny, the younger, 51, 54.
.,
114, 115
.,
21971.
Optatianus,
Porfyrius,
Panegyricus,
54*
144.
Ovid, 51.
Oxford, University of, 15, 181, 301
306, 327 n.
n,,
Paris,
n.
n,
270.
Pearsall
Logan
Smith, Logan,
sfe
Smith,
Pearsall.
Pdicanicidium^ 165.
Pembroke, Mary, Countess
203
of,
321.
set?
n,,
223
n.
n,
Northumberland,
Ravis,
329-30.
204, 217,
Petromus, 51 n.
Petruccb, FUbaldmior FLudovico,
3*3*
Phelips, Sir
Philips,
Edward,
Thomas
30*
(or Phelips),
155,
157.
,129,130,155,204,219.
Plat, Sir
Hugh,
48, 157.
9 8.
Rudolph
Rudyard,
II,
Sir
Emperor, 30471.
Benjamin, 135.
INDEX
37
Earl
Salisbury,
see
of,
Cecil,
Sir
125.
Synod of Dort,
Robert.
Henry
Sayle,
*3 2 -3> i35-"
Tacitus, 51.
Taine, 113
(Scale),
38, 341.
n.
163-471., 165 n.
Scotti, Giulio Clementi, alias Lucius
Tertullian, 113.
314
Down,
Theodoret, 95 n.
Theophrastus, 144.
Thomason, George, 133
215
Tillieres, Comte de, 352 n.
163,
TJ.,
n.
Serranus,
J.,
54.
Underhill, Evelyn, 94 n.
301.
.,
159
Register,
163, 179
.,
.,
119-20,
244
,,
133,
276-7,
MnM,
52;
51,
Virgil,
52,
32371.;
333 *
274
.,
275,
34*> 345-
Vitellio, 124,
Walton, Izaak,4,
20.,
37
23,
30,
38, 39>
31
4>
.,
33,
34,
4 1 * 4 2 > 43>
.,
&
36,
n*>
360.
26,
139-40.
Sutcliffe,
Garland
Spencer, Theodore, 300;
for John Donne, 16 n., 53 n.
Stationers'
Sir
Vane,
51, 171 n.
Maximus,
Valerius,
152.
300, 301
rz,,
.,
348
.,
355, 3S6.
Webb, C. C.
J., 142
Wilde, Oscar, 66.
Wilson, Arthur, 327.
,,
319
.,
326
n.
INDEX
Wilson, F. P., 12, 46 n.
Winwood, Sir Ralph, 333/1.
Wither, George, 321.
Wood, Anthony a, 37 n., 321, 327
358
S34-6
.,
r y 128.
n,
Woolky,
Wotton,
125,
126,
135,
146,
149
.,
292,
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