THE ECSTASY – JOHN DONNE
1. The poem The Ecstasy is
one of John Donne's most popular poems, which expresses his unique and unconventional ideas about
love.
2. It expounds the theme that pure,
spiritual or real love can exist only in the bond of souls established
by the bodies.
3. For Donne, true love only exists when
both bodies and souls are inextricably united.
4. Donne criticizes the platonic lover who
excludes the body and emphasizes the soul.
5. The
fusion of body and soul strengthens spiritual love.
6. Donne compares bodies to planets and souls
to the angels that body and souls are inseparable but they are
independent.
7. According to the medieval mystical conception,
'ecstasy' means a trance-like state in which the soul leaves the body, comes
out, and holds communion with the Divine, the Supreme or the Over-soul of the
Universe.
8. In Christianity also, it denotes the
state of mystic/religious communion with God.
9. Donne uses the religious and
philosophical term with religious and philosophical connotations to build his
own theory of love.
10. The poem is an expression of Donne's
philosophy of love.
11. Donne agrees with Plato that
true love is spiritual. It is a union of the souls. But unlike Plato, Donne
doesn't ignore the claims of the body.
12. It is the body that brings the
lovers together. Love begins in sensuous apprehension, and spiritual
love follows the sensuous. So the claim of the body must not be ignored.
13. Union of bodies is essential to
make possible the union of souls.
14. The poet begins the narration of the
event with a typically passionate scene as the backdrop for the lovers to
embrace and experience the 'ecstasy'.
15. The setting is natural, very calm and
quiet.
16. The scenery is described in erotic
terms: the riverbank is "like a pillow on a bed"; it also is
"pregnant".
17. The reference to pillow, bed and
pregnancy suggest sexuality, though the poet says that their love
is 'asexual'.
18. Indeed, the image of asexual
reproduction of the violent plant is used to
compare the lovers' only 'propagation'. It is springtime, and
violets are in bloom.
19. To a Renaissance reader, the image of
violets symbolizes faithful love and truth.
20. It is pastoral settings were
lovers are sitting together, holding each other’s hand and looking intently
into each other's eyes. Their eyes meet and reflect the images of each other,
and their sights are woven together. They get a kind of sensation within their
hearts and blood, resulting in perspiration and blushing.
21. They become ecstatic because their
souls have escaped from their bodies to rise to a state of bliss. When love
joins two souls, they mingle with each other and give birth to a new and finer
soul, which removes the defects and supplies whatever is lacking in either
single soul.
22. The new re-animated soul made up of
their two separate souls gives them the ecstasy. But they cannot forget the
body, which is the vehicle, and container, cover and house of the soul.
23. The lovers' souls leave their bodies,
which become mere lifeless figures. Finally, they are united into a single
soul.
24. Donne tries to convey the readers
that the foundation of spiritual love is the physical attachment; the eyes
serve as a gateway to the soul.
25. Moreover, the physical union has
produced an even stronger spiritual bond that is far more powerful than each individual's
soul.
26. Donne refers the violet to tell us that
the fusion of the lover's soul produces a new "abler soul" like the
violet, which doubles its vigor when it is grafted together with another.
27. Then the lovers are now able to seek
the spiritual pleasure rather than purely physical pleasure. In this union the
two souls find strength like a violet when it is transplanted. As such, the
single united soul is able to grow with new energy.
28. The two lovers now understand that true
love is the result of their physical attachment provoking spiritual union.
Souls are spiritual beings. They move with the help of the bodies.
29. Body is the medium of contact of the
two souls. Therefore, the lovers turn to their bodies and try to understand the
mystery of love. Body is the medium to experience love.
30. So spirits must act through bodies. If
love is to be free, it requires physical as well as spiritual outlets.
31. The persona asks why our
religious institutions have imposed blind thoughts diving the body and soul.
32. The poem is also a criticism of the
conventional idea of love that supports the separation of the bodies, and hence
the souls.
33. He makes an appeal to his readers to
nourish their souls through their bodies and reach towards the point of extreme
joy, or 'ecstasy'.
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