Jump to content

Poems of John Donne/Volume 1

From Wikisource
Poems of John Donne (1896)
by John Donne, edited by E. K. Chambers
Volume I
John Donne35747Poems of John Donne — Volume I1896E. K. Chambers

POEMS


OF


JOHN DONNE.

The Muses’ Library


POEMS

OF

JOHN DONNE

EDITED BY

E. K. CHAMBERS


WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY

GEORGE SAINTSBURY


VOL. I.



LONDON:
GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS, LIMITED
NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO.

PREFACE.


John Donne’s Poems were originally undertaken for The Muses Library by Dr. Brinsley Nicholson. They were handed over to me shortly after his death in 1891. I have had the advantage of the material which Dr. Nicholson had brought together; but for the book as it stands, with the exception of the Introduction, which Mr. Saintsbury has kindly contributed, I am alone responsible.

The bulk of the text is based upon the principal seventeenth-century editions, those of 1633, 1635, 1650 and 1669. No one of these is of supreme authority, and therefore I have had no choice but to be eclectic. But at the same time I have endeavoured to give all variants, other than obvious misprints, in the footnotes. Here and there one or other of the innumerable MS. copies has been of service. I have modernized the spelling and corrected the exceptionally chaotic punctuation of the old editions. And so, though much remains obscure, I trust that I have provided a more intelligible version of the Poems than any that has yet appeared.

It should be understood that a reading attributed to any one of the printed editions in the footnotes is retained in the later editions, unless it is otherwise stated.

My thanks are due for various help to Dr. Grosart, to Mr. J. T. Brown of Edinburgh, and to Mr. A. H. Bullen. Dr. Nicholson’s notes contain abundant evidence of the similar debt which he owed to Mr. J. M. Thomson of Edinburgh.

CONTENTS OF VOL. I.


page
  Preface v
  Table of Contents vii
  Introduction xi
  Bibliographical Note xxxv
  The Printer to the Understanders xlv
  To the Right Honourable William Lord Craven xlix
  Hexastichon Bibliopolae li
  Hexastichon ad Bibliopolam li
  To John Donne lii
Songs and Sonnets —
  The Flea 1
  The Good-Morrow 3
  Song: Go and catch a falling star 4
  Woman’s Constancy 5
  The Undertaking 6
  The Sun Rising 7
  The Indifferent 9
  Love’s Usury 10
  The Canonization 12
  The Triple Fool 14
  Lovers’ Infiniteness 15
  Song: Sweetest love, I do not go 16
  The Legacy 18
  A Fever 20
  Air and Angels 21
  Break of Day 22
  [Another of the same] 23
  The Anniversary 24
  A Valediction of my Name, in the Window 25
  Twickenham Garden 29
  Valediction to his Book 30
  Community 33
  Love’s Growth 34
  Love’s Exchange 35
  Confined Love 37
  The Dream 38
  A Valediction of Weeping 39
  Love’s Alchemy 41
  The Curse 42
  The Message 43
  A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy’s Day, being the Shortest Day 45
  Witchcraft by a Picture 47
  The Bait 47
  The Apparition 49
  The Broken Heart 50
  A Valediction Forbidding Mourning 51
  The Ecstacy 53
  Love’s Deity 56
  Love’s Diet 57
  The Will 59
  The Funeral 61
  The Blossom 63
  The Primrose 64
  The Relic 66
  The Damp 67
  The Dissolution 69
  A Jet Ring Sent 70
  Negative Love 71
  The Prohibition 72
  The Expiration 73
  The Computation 74
  The Paradox 74
  Song: Soul’s joy, now I am gone 75
  Farewell to Love 76
  A Lecture upon the Shadow 78
  A Dialogue between Sir Henry Wotton and Mr. Donne 79
  The Token 80
  Self-love 81
Epithalamions, or Marriage Songs —
  On the Lady Elizabeth and Count Palatine 83
  Eclogue: at the Marriage of the Earl of Somerset 88
  Epithalamion Made at Lincoln’s Inn 99
Elegies —
  i : Jealousy 102
  ii : The Anagram 103
  iii : Change 106
  iv : The Perfume 107
  v : His Picture 110
  vi :   111
  vii :   113
  viii : The Comparison 114
  ix : The Autumnal 117
  x : The Dream 119
  xi : The Bracelet 120
  xii :   125
  xiii : His Parting from Her 128
  xiv : Julia 132
  xv : A Tale of a Citizen and his Wife 133
  xvi : The Expostulation 136
  xvii : Elegy on his Mistress 139
  xviii :   141
  xix :   144
  xx : To his Mistress Going to Bed 148
Divine Poems —
    To the E[arl] of D[oncaster], with Six Holy Sonnets 151
  1. La Corona 152
  2. Annunciation 152
  3. Nativity 153
  4. Temple 153
  5. Crucifying 154
  6. Resurrection 155
  7. Ascension 155
    To the Lady Magdalen Herbert 156
    Holy Sonnets: i.–xvi. 157
    The Cross 167
    Resurrection 169
    The Annunciation and Passion 170
    Good Friday, 1613, Riding Westward 172
    A Litany 174
    Upon the Translation of the Psalms by Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke 188
    Ode : Vengeance will Sit above our Faults 190
    To Mr. Tilman after he had Taken Orders 191
    A Hymn to Christ 193
    The Lamentations of Jeremy 194
    Hymn to God, my God, in my Sickness 211
    A Hymn to God the Father 213
    To George Herbert 214
    A Sheaf of Snakes Used heretofore to be my Seal 215
    Translated out of Gazaeus 216
Notes to Vol. I. 217