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The erotology of Donne's "Extasie" and the secret history of voluptuous rationalism.

Publication: Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900

Publication Date: 01-JAN-04

Author: Martin, Catherine Gimelli
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COPYRIGHT 2004 Rice University

Those heavenly Poets which did see



Thy will, and it expresse In rythmique feet, in common pray for mee, That I by them excuse not my excesse In seeking secrets, or Poetiquenesse. --John Donne, "The Litanie" (1)

A secret history is by definition a coterie history, just as Donne is by definition a coterie poet who writes for a select circle of initiates. (2) Yet because such circles are never hermetically sealed--because their work circulates in manuscripts that can be copied, miscopied, or otherwise circulated among the uninitiated--poetry of this kind often bears an inner seal that blocks or conceals its hidden sense from outside readers. As Sears Jayne points out in his introduction to Marsilio Ficino's Commentary on Plato's Symposium, esoteric writing of this kind especially flourishes during periods when old hierarchies of birth begin to be replaced by new hierarchies of merit, and when old orthodoxies begin to give way to new and potentially heretical doctrines. In the most extreme cases, esoteric ideas (particularly those bordering upon, if not actually crossing, the frontier of heresy) will appear to the exoteric reader as versified ravings or nonsense rhymes rather than as riddles to be unraveled by discovering the hidden key to their inner sense. (3) In less extreme cases, the presence of a meaningful paradox or riddle will be obvious, but the quest for a solution will appear either impossible or unsuitable; the former when the poem must be taken seriously but its key is irretrievably lost, and the latter when it can simply be passed off as a jest. Donne's erotology typically combines the former with the latter kinds of obscurity, which, as this essay will argue, helps to explain the long controversy not only over major love lyrics such as "The Extasie," but also over what would later be known as the metaphysical style.

From this perspective, Samuel Johnson's insight that metaphysical poetry violently "yoked together" disparate ideas or images is at once nearly right and entirely wrong. Even the most disharmonious imagery (like for instance that found in such poems as Shakespeare's "The Phoenix and the Turtle") may lack true metaphysical violence if its paradoxes are not "contaminated" with a riddling logic that produces metaphysical doubt. (4) So long as their allegorical mystery remains safely insoluble or transcendental, such poems produce complacent wonder instead of violent controversies over their missing or nonexistent keys. In contrast, Donne's Songs and Sonets provoke such controversies by playing with glaring inconsistencies--verbal, musical, or intellectual--that challenge both the speaking voice and his readers to critique or explain his practice. These resulting tensions have long prevented the libertine "Jack Donne" from being fully separated from the devoutly or despairingly questioning "Dr. Donne" who first emerges in the early Satyres and never completely disappears in either the Holy Sonnets or the sermons. For all these works "contaminate" spiritual and rational arguments with sensual analogies that continue to perplex, astonish, or even outrage their readers. (5) Yet Donne himself is openly unapologetic about the metaphysical obscurity into which this technique so often plunges his meaning and intentions. As in the prefatory epistle to Metempsycosis, which demands "no such Readers as I can teach," he consistently appeals to an audience as excessive in seeking out secrets as he is. (6) He has not always found that audience; recent readers have been as ready as Johnson was to dismiss his metaphysics (particularly in "seduction" poems such as "The Extasie") as violently elitist, egoistic, insincere, neurotic, or all of the above. (7) At least in part, this dismissal seems linked to his obvious learning, for while no one denies his intimate acquaintance with the new philosophy that called all in doubt, few seem to recall the perplexities involved in trying to synthesize it with the semiheretical "pagan mysteries" of his beloved "old philosophy." (8)

While as in Metempsycosis Donne sometimes sports with these mysteries, he just as often plays with obscure doctrines in which he almost certainly believed. Yet however serious the doctrine, most modern critics seem to agree that such "play" is not free, that his Neo-Platonic erotology is typically or even universally put to cynically seductive purposes. But this consensus is both newer and more tenuous than it seems; only a generation ago, literary critics regularly followed Herbert J. C. Grierson and Helen Gardner in regarding the major love lyrics as sincere if also riddling defenses of incarnational Neo-Platonism. This view first faded under the influence of Pierre Legouis, whose rereading of "The Extasie" as a seduction poem proved broadly influential among second-generation New Critics, for whom the ironic mode was fast becoming the insincere mode later canonized in Stephen Greenblatt's Renaissance Self-Fashioning. (9) Yet one of the standard objections to this new orthodoxy--that it turns all forms of inwardness, including religious meditation, into mere social constructions--is especially applicable to Donne's erotic meditations. More than any other poet of the period, Donne represents his inner search for religious and erotic authenticity in such essentially continuous terms that even New Historicists find themselves forced to admit that the "sexual adverturism of [his] cynical young manhood" and "his adult religiosity" represent cognate "forms of passion radiat[ing] from Donne's frantic quest for personal immortality." (10) Quoting Kathryn R. Kremen, Robert N. Watson argues that the failure of this quest for transcendence leads not just to the misogynistic scapegoating or seduction of the women in the libertine lyrics, but also to the devout love lyrics' fantasy of making the "'sexual union of man and woman on earth ... the temporal and secular image which prefigures ... the hypostatical union in body and soul of man and the Godhead in heaven.'" (11)

Although Watson treats this fantasy with considerable skepticism (he is, after all, mainly concerned with psychoanalyzing the poet's wish fulfillments), such skepticism must be lessened in relation to the "devoutly" sexual dimension of the religious lyrics. Donne most notoriously exploits this dimension in Holy Sonnet 14, "Batter My Heart," where he fervently hopes to gain the beatific "rapture" of salvation by inviting the violent "ravishment" of divine rape. Although, like Watson, most critics associate this violence with an unconsciously despairing attitude toward divine grace, a fuller awareness of the secret history behind Donne's sacred and profane erotology would indicate precisely the reverse. (12) By adopting Ficino's strategy of self-consciously merging the "antithetical meaning of primal words" (as Sigmund Freud would call it), "Batter My Heart" punningly points to the underlying continuity between the superficially opposed senses of raptus--in its Latin root, both rapture and rape. (13) Ficino's similarly suspicious but also serious reunion of two antithetical primal words, voluntas (will or restraint) and voluptas (pleasure or release), uses the same technique to establish the anti-Stoic position that the will is properly fulfilled in, not prohibited from, pleasurable release. (14) By expanding upon this theme, Donne's erotic lyrics delve ever deeper into both the active and passive aspects of desire that subterraneanly link the sacred and profane "dying" into love, or what both Ficino and Freud would refer to as eros and thanatos. Thus psychoanalytic critics such as Watson are ironically right to insist that the unconscious desires analyzed by Freud were first explored by the poets, even though these same critics too often wrongly indulge in a post-Platonic amnesis or "forgetting" of the fact that long before Freud, the poets and Platonists consciously unmasked the hidden links between the higher and the lower Venuses. (15) While critics such as Watson often generate stunning psychological insights, they thus fall short of fulfilling their goal of historicizing the philosophical content of Donne's sexual poetics.

Peter De Sa Wiggins takes an important step toward historicizing the secret history of this content by resolving a notorious crux in "Aire and Angels." For as he shows, the crux disappears once the reader drops the "guilty," misogynistic assumption that the speaker must be insincere to claim that "just as the Incarnation spiritualized and revalued matter," so "perfect human love obliterates sharp distinctions between the purity of lovers." (16) Once that assumption is dropped, a new answer can emerge to the old question of whose love, man's or woman's, is said to be the most pure; that is, whose love is likened to the angel's enveloping "sphere" in the poem, and whose to its pure inner essence? Unlike the "male coterie" answer to this question, De Sa Wiggins's solution assumes that the speaker's effectiveness in arguing that his love should be given physical expression demands that his initial description of the lady as his angel remain consistent. Less sympathetic critics who accuse the speaker of changing his argument midstream are thus themselves inconsistent in failing to see how his complimentary purposes require the referent of the word "love" in line 11 (25 in most texts) to be transferred from his passion to hers, its only proper object. Here Donne argues that just as an invisible angel--first equated with the woman and then with the love she inspires--can only appear to humans by taking a body of less perfectly pure "aire," "so thy love may be my loves spheare" (lines 23-5). But rather than reading "thy love" as you who must become my outer sphere, a "plain paraphrase of the lines should read, 'So I may [then] be your [airy] sphere,'" the "translated" body of your angelic essence. This solution not only seems true to Donne's witty incarnational logic and his frank exploitation of the "grosser" aspects of male desire, but also to his "excessive" attraction to "rythmique" riddles and reversals of all kinds. It also fulfills both of these agendas by implying that in the familiar schema of five elements (earth, air, water, fire, and a fifth angelic "quintessence"), woman now belongs not below but above man, who had traditionally been associated with the "higher" elements of air and fire. No longer linked to the "lower" elements of earth and water but to the mysterious chora or "womb" of elements sublimed in angelic quintessence, she will now "redemptively guide him in her embrace as an angel guides the sphere of its domination." Of course, De Sa Wiggins does not deny the "glint in the eye of this lover," but adds that any suggestion of cynical self-interestedness would undermine both his high-minded compliment and the courtship it serves. (17)

Although this reading implies a radical reversal not just...

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