Friday, October 25, 2019
The Simularitesof Two Worlds :: essays research papers
 Stewart 1    The Similarities of Two Worlds    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Do we have such poetry in our age, as John Donne and the     Seventeenth-Century Metaphysical Poets? Yes, but we tend to limit     ourselves to the very best works of a very few figures. When poetry is    much more than what chosen artists portray. It is a challenge to look     squarely and see beyond the obvious features of things. Sometimes real     poetry is hidden beneath a rock, such as the work of Earl Simmons also     known as D.M.X. Earl Simmons has an emotional climax of a trip through    the subconscious of young people. By opening himself up in his works,     D.M.X. believes he can save the souls of those he cares about through God.    In an anglican manner, Earl Simmons and John Donne works are similar by     merit, love, and religion. Both artists have used poetry to explore their own     identities, expressing their feelings, and most of all, they have used it to deal    with the personal experiences occurring in their life. The world has changed     a lot since the seventeenth-century but many ideals have stayed the same as     we can see through Donne and Simmons.    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In efforts to save man, Donne tries to uncover the foes of man that     may lead to down fall. He explicitly states that the foe of man should fear is    the devil. The second foe that Donne refers to is the love of flesh or     Stewart 2    temporal pleasures. This can be recognized in a verse paragraph from     Satire III. Donne writes,     Know thy foes: the foul Devil, he, whom thou    Strivest to please, for, hate, not, love, would allow    Thee fain, his whole realm to be quit; and as    The worldââ¬â¢s all parts wither away and pass,    So the worldââ¬â¢s self, thy other loved foe, is    In her decrepit wane, and thou loving this,    Dost love a withered and worn strumpet; last,    Flesh (itselfââ¬â¢s death) and joys which flesh can taste,    Thou lovest; and thy fair goodly soul, which doth    Give this flesh power to taste joy, thou dost loathe.    Seek true religion.    From this section of Satire III we can see temporal and metaphysical foes are    Represented.    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  As Donne, Earl Simmonsââ¬â¢ work has quality and virtue. Simmons     attempts to warn people of the trickery of the devil in his work entitled     Damien. In Damien the devil uses the speakers love of the flesh and worldy     					    
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