Analysis Of Batter My Heart By John Donne

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Batter my heart (Holy Sonnet 14) As I read “Batter my heart” I felt I completely understood what John Donne was fiercely passionate about. I had an experience like this when I was 30 years old. The first two lines of the sonnet captured me with his word choice and tempo. He employed action words illustrating the progression of the new Believer: “knock”, God is a gentleman and will request entry into your life; “breathe”, breathe life into me; “shine”, His love, life, and light; “seek to mend”, mend my brokenness. I felt this was stated so profoundly yet simply. As the poem progressed, I felt Donne’s frustration when he realized he didn’t have a deep, meaningful relationship with the “three-person’d God”. Donne wanted what God had to offer, but he needed to His poetry is characterized by the themes of love, mortality, and spirituality. It is bathed in sophistication and complexity of thought. He used active verbs in a jarring manner to capture his conflicting thoughts and emotions. In his use of metaphysical conceit, Donne compared himself to a besieged town, captured by and engaged to Satan. He had attempted to admit God into the town but found he was too weak to do so, even though he loved God dearly. He pleaded with God to “Batter my heart” as though He would use a battering ram on the city walls and secure a divorce for him (Shmoop, 2008). He wanted to belong to God and only God, which he could not do unless God freed him to then imprison him. Donne’s poem is filled with the contradictions he became famous for. Illustrations of love and war, good and evil, captivity and freedom, and spiritual love and carnal love reveal the dual nature of the poem and the challenge in understanding, with certainty, what Donne was trying to convey with such sincerity (Donne, 2005). In last several lines, Donne reveals the ultimate disparity, saying he could never be chaste unless God ravishes him (Donne

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