Holy Sonnets: Batter my Heart, three-person'd God
John Donne
Poem:
Batter my Heart, three-person'd
God, for you
As yet but knock, breathe, shine,
and seek to mend;
That I may rise and stand,
o'erthrow me, and bend
Your force to break, blow, burn,
and make me new.
I, like an usurp'd town to
another due,
Labor to admit you, but oh, to no
end;
Reason, your viceroy in me, me
should defend,
But is captiv'd, and proves weak
or untrue.
Yet dearly I love you, and would
be lov'd fain,
But am betroth'd unto your enemy;
Divorce me, untie or break that
knot again,
Take me to you, imprison me, for
I,
Except you enthrall me, never
shall be free,
Nor ever chaste, except you
ravish me.
INTRODUCTION
™ Batter my Heart is one of the 19 sonnets Donne wrote
after taking orders in the Anglican church, it is also known as Divine
Meditations
™ It was published in the first edition of Songs and
Sonnets (1633)
™ Religious poem
™ Petrarchan verse
™ Rhyme scheme :ABBAABBA (octave), CDCCDC (sestet)
™ Meter: Iambic Pentameter
ANALYSIS
q The poet pictures an afflicted lover of God who is
hurt because he has deviated from the holy path to the sinful path
q He urges God to ravish his body and make him chaste
q The poet prays to God in his threefold capacity as the
father, the son and the holy spirit, to batter his Heart and reshape it
q God has knocked at him, blown his breath through his
bellows and lighted the fire of his love and mercy to purify and reshape him
q But all these methods have ended without attaining the
end. Therefore God should overthrow the poet and bend his force to bend, break,
blow, and make him new and free from sin.
q The poem is a plea for God to enter and take over the poet's
life
THREE IMAGES
™ The poem develops through three images
· A potter or craftsman repairing a damaged vessel
· Military terms: he is like a town captured and being
ruled by God's enemy. The poet now a usurped town that owes its allegiance or
due to someone else. He is frustrated that his reason, God's governor in the
town of his soul is captive to other forces and is failing to persuade him to
leave his sins behind
· The third image is sexual, and the poet compares
himself to a woman who is compelled to marry against her will . The tone moves
from political to personal. He loves God but "is bethroth'd unto enemy".
He seeks God's help to achieve the divorce from his sinful marriage and break
free
Donne
says he cannot be wooed into salvation but must be taken by force
Donne has put the World and the passionate
life entirely behind him and was probing with anxiety for the right
relationship with eternal.
The later sonnets display Donne's
continuing love of wit and paradoxes but also is deepening concern about his
relationship to God
He tempered the cynical
indifference of some of his earlier poetry with the submissiveness of faith
His vigorous intellect, willy
imagery, and love of paradox characterize his poetry.
THEMES
™ Religion
™ Love: the poet's wish for salvation is the fact that
he loves God more than the usual spiritual level. He is interested in two-sided
love, where he loves and is loved back
™ Sex is a metaphor; the speaker uses for how God might
demonstrate a passion for the speaker
™ His relationship like working is through the encounter
of a sexual nature
™ Violence: the poet wishes God to punish him (ravish
his body) to mend his sinful soul
™ Warfare: He calls upon God to storm the walls and
retake the invaded fortress. God should not deter from causing damage to the
speaker, to bring him to the path of salvation
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