John Donne's A Valediction: Forbidding

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“Dull sublunary lovers' love —Whose soul is sense—cannot admit
Of absence, 'cause it doth remove
The thing which elemented it” (Donne). It is the very nature of the metaphysical conceit: to remove itself from the world of the tangible yet project an image far more moving than its literal counterpart. It is to go above and beyond the world of the immediate, to transcend the physical and stay bound to its origin, its comparison, while floating in the dreamy ether. The quote featured above serves as an accurate catch-all for what threads compose the complex weave of conceit: purely earthly knowledge, pure reason and sense, cannot understand what, its own, physical body is not present. Though weathering considerable assails for its use—mocked …show more content…

Of the many poems of John Donne, A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning affords a rich array of metaphysical conceit, attesting to the depth and beauty which immortalized Donne as a literary giant.
The poem, on the surface, is an incredible story of unconquerable love. This poem, as well, operates on two different levels: it establishes the circumstances, metaphorically speaking, which the love and his lover are in while rebelling against the absolute definitiveness of death. It would seem the two lovers depicted in this lament are forced apart. The speaker, however, obstinately asserts that though the two lovers are separate by physical distance “they are two so, as stiff twin compasses are two” (Donne). The two legs of the compass represent the two lovers. They are as one, conjoined by a central focus just as the two legs of a compass meet; that joint by which they are connected is the “gold to aery thinness beat”—it is a connection found in the ethereal beyond (Donne). Beyond …show more content…

Thus begins the metaphysical conceit for which Donne was famous for. The first three stanzas set a scene reminiscent of a funeral with the presence of clergy (“virtuous men”) and “laity” or laymen (Donne). Quiet apparently, they all are lamenting the loss of some beautiful creature—his love to him was real enough for a body of its own or its loss was tragic enough for a funeral to take place—which is taken in varying degrees of severity. The speaker feels great pain for the loss of his relationship considering the circumstances, but respects the “mild” nature of the clergy. As they pass, they do not go to hysterics as the lay men do, rather they “whisper to their souls to go” (Donne). This may seem callous to anyone lamenting a loss, but these holy men know that a better life awaits the one beyond the faulty, befouled human one—in Heaven. Moreover, the speaker wishes to lament its loss as they do: with “no noise, no tear floods, nor sigh-tempests move” as these expressions of grief were antithetical or “profanation of [their] joys” (Donne). So very fitting is a calm mourning, a mourning of body not there because the speaker treats the body—the love—as so “refined” that [they] know not what it is, inter-assurèd of the mind, care less, eyes, lips and hands to miss” (Donne). In regard to the line quoted above, the physical attraction may only appeal to the other bodily

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