Divine Deviants: The Dialectics of Devotion in the Poetry of Donne and RūmīDivine Deviants is a comparative study of the Persian Sufi poet, Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī (1212-1273), and the English Metaphysical poet, John Donne (1572-1631). By focusing on the two schools of thought to which these poets belong as well as their individual poetic worldviews and styles, this book elucidates the different dimensions of the shared philosophy governing their poetry. Bridging linguistic, cultural, religious, and philosophical barriers, Divine Deviants carefully illustrates that in the works of both Rūmī and Donne love symbolizes Beatific Vision and Truth. More generally, this book highlights the bonds between religion, mysticism, and literature and thus examines not only the interdependent issues in these disciplines, but also the invisible and yet profound closeness that exists in the representative works of the two literary and religious traditions. |
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Page 16
... According to Bald , there is no doubt now that “ Donne's tutor was a good Catholic , perhaps even a seminary priest ... " ( 39 ) . Based on historical evidence , however , Bald dismisses the idea that his education had either been ...
... According to Bald , there is no doubt now that “ Donne's tutor was a good Catholic , perhaps even a seminary priest ... " ( 39 ) . Based on historical evidence , however , Bald dismisses the idea that his education had either been ...
Page 19
... According to Hughes , Donne's " finest sermons were delivered first to King James and then , from 1625 , to King Charles I " ( 226 ) . Although Donne is universally acknowledged as the greatest preacher of the seventeenth century , his ...
... According to Hughes , Donne's " finest sermons were delivered first to King James and then , from 1625 , to King Charles I " ( 226 ) . Although Donne is universally acknowledged as the greatest preacher of the seventeenth century , his ...
Page 77
... according to these lines , the speaker of the poem does acknowledge the transient nature of life and its meaninglessness compared to true life . According to Dashtī , Rūmī considers death merely as a change in the surface of things ; to ...
... according to these lines , the speaker of the poem does acknowledge the transient nature of life and its meaninglessness compared to true life . According to Dashtī , Rūmī considers death merely as a change in the surface of things ; to ...
Contents
The Context | 15 |
The Philosophical Fundamentals of Belief | 27 |
Religious Obligation and Mystical Transcendence | 47 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
According allegorical Altizer Anniversary beauty becomes believed Beloved body Catholic chapter Chittick Christ Christian mysticism Church concept conviction death devotional poetry discussion Dīvān-i Divine Poems Donne's mystical dost doth earthly love ecstasy erotic eroticism faith figurative devices flesh following lines Gardner Ghazal God's grace hath highlighted highly Holy Sonnet homoeroticism human Husain Iblīs imagery images intellectual Islamic mysticism Jalāl Jalāl al-Dīn Jesuit John Donne language lover Masnavī Mathnawi meditation Metaphysical Metaphysical Poets mind Moreover Muhammad mystical poetry Nasrin Rahimieh Neoplatonic Nicholson Nimatullahi Nurbakhsh passionate Path of Love Persian mystical perspective philosophical Poet and Mystic poet's poetic poetry of Rūmī Press Prophet Qūnīyah reflect regard relationship religion reveals Rūmī and Donne Rūmi's Rūmī's poetry Satire III Schimmel seen sense Shams Shams's significant similar soul speaker spiritual stanza Step by Step Sufi Path Sufism T.S. Eliot Tehran thee thou tone tradition Triumphal Sun true Truth union University writes Zarrīn/Kūb