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Summary John Donne Revision Guide

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This document contains in-depth analysis of key quotes, structure points, evocative imagery, features typical of Donne, context, sound devices, as well as summaries of each poem's content, aim and tone for all 40 poems that could come up in the John Donne question. Whilst I made this for Eduqas A Level, these notes would work for any exam board. At the end is also included 17 made-up questions which cover any potential themes and topics that might come up. All key quotes are colour-coded, the total word count is 23,074 and there are several useful critical quotes throughout.

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May 16, 2025
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The Good Morrow

Content:
Celebration of joyfully waking up with a lover – their souls have woken up together – explores
a new life together, one that is created by central, mutual spiritual love – aubade – love is a
spiritual bond
Aim:
Contemplates the special quality of their love, aiming to show the elevated experience of
being in love.
Tone:
Reflective, conversational, informal, disbelieving, bewondered

Striking moments of sound and rhythm:
- ‘Let’ – repetition of the passive imperative – dismissive of the world outside the
relationship/its irrelevance

Context:
a) ‘Seven sleepers’ den’ – Catholic legend – the lovers weren’t really awake/present in
life before they found each other – woken up to a new Christian experience – love
described with religiosity – spiritual divinity of the love
b) Final conceit – densely argued point that they will continue loving each other
eternally/their love will give them immortality – ‘What ever dies was not mixed
equally’ – idea of equal elements within us, playing on Aristotle’s idea of heavenly
bodies and sublunary bodies, which were not mixed equally so cannot achieve stability
– ‘none do slacken, none can die.’ – the lovers together become a perfect mix of
elements – they achieve perfect stability – love becomes immutable/love will give them
immortality

Evocative imagery:
- Love ‘makes one little room an everywhere.’ – their love contains everything in it;
a safe microcosm in the turbulent macrocosm of the outside world – sense of control in
their love, which is not constricting, but defining – end stop gives sense of finality –
assured conclusion of the strength of their love
- ‘My face in thine eye, mine appears’ – staring into each other’s eyes – parallel
phrasing – mirror quality of their perfect reflection – joy they relish in the shared,
mutual experience of love

Structure: what is interesting?
- ‘Thou and I/ Love so alike’ – enjambment links the unity of the lovers with the
perfection of their love, leaving no space between the lovers and their love – love forms
a perfect whole, they are a perfect mix
- Final rhyming couplet ‘I’ ‘die’ – definitive conclusion of the strength of their
love/perfect spiritual unity/ mutual fulfilment
- Aubade – celebrating joyfully waking up with a lover – reflects on the awakening of their
souls in mutual spiritual love

That’s so John Donne…
Final conceit – logic that is typical of Donne – sets out his argument that things that perish are
not mixed equally, but that the lovers, in their divine, superior quality, are

Themes:
Love

,Song (‘Go and catch a falling star’)

Content:
First explores a series of impossible tasks to expose the futility of the quest of searching for a
beautiful faithful woman.
Aim:
Aims to present women as doomed due to their inherent infidelity – general criticism of
human fallibility
Tone:
Assertive, serious, mocking, hopeful, cynical, impatient

Striking moments of sound and rhythm:
- ‘Go and catch a falling star’ – sets out impossible tasks as he begins the argument
of the impossibility of finding a beautiful woman who is faithful – emphasis to the
imperatives (‘go’ ‘get’) – stressed syllables – magical feel to the opening line
heightens sense of impossibility
- ‘Singing’, ‘stinging’ – complete foot and feminine rhyme – lingering feel/longing –
wants to find a faithful woman
Context:
a) ‘Get with child a mandrake root’ – get a mandrake pregnant – screaming plant –
associated with witchcraft, madness – absurdity/exaggerated quality – speaker directly
addressing the addressee – humorously challenging the reader to perform impossible
tasks in order to assert the view that beautiful women are never faithful
b) ‘Teach me to hear mermaids singing,/ Or to keep off envy’s stinging’ –
mermaids – mythological half-fish, half-women who lured men to their deaths with their
singing – falsehood of women – ‘envy’ is real however – cannot be prevented – wry
comment that it is equally impossible to overcome jealousy as it is to hear mermaids
singing
Evocative imagery:
- ‘Ride ten thousand days and nights’ – immense journey – hyperbole with a
mythical/fairytale quality – stressed foot ‘nights’ – draws out time, emphasising the
extra distance and time one could go to no avail – ‘Till age snow white hairs on
thee’ – so much time passing that you will have age, yet despite ‘All strange
wonders that befell thee’, the addressee will not find a faithful woman – abundance
of experience throughout the journey
- ‘And swear,/’ – forceful verb of truthfulness – cynical, ironic categoric truth that there
are no honest women – ‘Nowhere/’ – significance of the absence – cynical – isolated on
its own even further by the enjambment – speaker cannot find anyone, and there are
no honest women anywhere – ‘Lives a woman true and fair’ – qualifying comment
(‘and fair’) – beautiful women are full of deceit
- ‘Yet she/ Will be/ False, ere I come, to two, or three.’ – stressed foot (‘false’)
emphasises the meaning of the word, she would’ve slept with someone else before he
even made it next door – caesural pause at the end of the line is witty, an afterthought
– dramatic bitter certainty that she will have slept with multiple men (some see this as
misogynistic) – ‘two, or three’ – once she’s slept with one man it no longer matters –
she is simply dishonest

Structure: what is interesting?
- Song – ironic – implies conventional ideas of love – lyrical, sweet, romantic, beautiful –
however, it is infused with bitterness – lyrical quality of the varying line lengths gives
an ironic tone
- Final rhyming triplet of each stanza – logic of the exaggerated, dramatic argument –
lack of dispute – resolution in the speaker’s voice despite the irony/wit
That’s so John Donne…
Doesn’t not feature the characteristic metaphysical conceit so much, but does play on the
exaggerated use of comparison to present the falseness of women – beautiful women
Themes:
Women, love, cynicism, contempt

,
, The Sun Rising

Content:
Addresses the sun, castigating its interruption of the perfection of him and his love in bed
together – a lament at daybreak for the interruption of lovers in their world of private bliss –
aubade – central image of love as the centre of the world – love’s ability to transcend time
Aim:
To amuse and yet convey the value of her company/ the beauty of the privacy of their love/
love’s perfection.
Tone:
Frustrated, praising and comical, amusingly impudent, accusatory (to the sun) to present his
frustration at having to part with her

Striking moments of sound and rhythm:
- ‘Busy old fool’ – castigates the sun for disturbing the lovers – trochaic inversion –
harsh, plosive insult – direct address to the sun, dramatic opening –
conversational/speaking tone – personifies the sun as a meddling old man
Context:
a) Reverses the tradition of Elizabethan love poems which commend the sun, comparing it
to a woman’s beauty
b) ‘Indias of spice and mine/… lie here with me’ – East and West Indies – love has
transformed the world so that its riches are condensed in their love – mistress
embodying the riches of the world – bedroom/love is a magical microcosm of the exotic
riches of the world
c) ‘This bed thy centre is, these walls, thy sphere.’ – he defeats the sun by saying
their bedroom is the centre – plays on Ptolemy’s/Copernicus’ view of the world – poem
settles into calm intimate space – centre of the bed is warmest

Evocative imagery:
- ‘School-boys and sour prentices’ ‘go tell court-huntsmen’ ‘call country ants’ –
mocking of those bound by time – working obligations to be up early – the lovers are
above this, so shouldn’t have to be unwillingly risen – satirical and mocking of the
public world – private life is superior – forceful imperatives and alliterative consonant
sounds – exuberant speaker
- ‘Why should’st thou think?/ I could eclipse and cloud them with a wink’ –
speaker can close his eyes to block out the sun’s light – diminishes/dismisses the sun’s
strength (‘thy beams, so reverend and strong’) – mocking of the sun’s arrogance
through direct address – poetic inversion, scornful, sarcastic tone, heightened by
rhyming couplet – second line diminishes sun’s stature even further – swagger in the
tone, ‘cl’ alliterative sound

Structure: what is interesting?
- ABBA CDCD EE – starts each section talking about the mundane rising of the sun, then
elevates it to grand themes/speculations on love
- ‘She’s all states, and all princes I’ – places enormous importance on her – she is
everyone and everywhere – balanced, mirrored sentence – pronouns enclose the
sentence, emphasising the meaninglessness of everything outside the relationship –
repetition (‘all’) in the hyperbolic statement – heightens their elevated status
- ‘Why should’st thou think?’ – poetic inversion, scornful, sarcastic tone – moments of
questioning the sun’s supposed power stand out

That’s so John Donne…
Uses his logic and wit to present the power of love by subverting domestic/mundane ideas
into grand ideas about love

Themes:
Love, praise, frustration, poignancy of love (power, ability to transcend time)
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