Donne’s Holy Sonnets and Calvin

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Copyright: Chong, Kenneth Tze Aun
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Abstract
Criticism on Donne’s Holy Sonnets has traditionally been concerned with trying to find an explanation for the doubt, anxiety, and despair that is often expressed by the speaker of those poems. In recent decades, critics have increasingly made recourse to Calvinist theology in an effort to explain these melancholy states of mind. The accounts that such critics provide of “Calvinism,” however, have been varied and largely inadequate, mainly because they fail to engage with Calvin’s work at the level it requires. My thesis seeks to correct such deficiencies by providing a detailed reading of Calvin’s view on salvation and the way in which it is received. Calvin argues that we obtain salvation through a firm and certain faith, a faith that is nevertheless attacked by the unbelief that still resides in the believer. In other words, there is a division between the flesh and the spirit within the soul of the believer, which means that he or she is never free (until death) from the sinful temptations of this life. This division, which Calvin invokes to reconcile the uncertainties of the Christian life with the assurance of faith, is dramatised in the Holy Sonnets. In the five poems that I analyse, the speaker is torn between a desire for righteousness and an inclination toward evil, a division that is also represented in the structural qualities of the text. The various temptations which the speaker registers and confronts (and often falls to) are, I believe, a demonstration of Calvin’s view that the regenerate person is in continuous warfare against the remnants of the flesh.
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Chong, Kenneth Tze Aun
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2006
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Masters Thesis
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