John Donne and the ancient Catholic nobility

John Donne and the ancient Catholic nobility1995
About this book
Against the background of the earliest, puzzling portrait of John Donne, this book attempts to place Donne's early life in the context of his descent from Sir Thomas More and his family's generations-long association with the ancient Catholic nobility.
Beginning with Sir Thomas More, Flynn traces the active involvement of two generations of Donne's forebears in political opposition to Tudor religious reform. Flynn suggests an alliance in opposition to persecution between Donne's family and the houses of Percy and Stanley, especially through the missionary work of Donne's uncle Jasper Heywood and Donne's friendship with Henry Percy, ninth Earl of Northumberland.
Percy's continental travels in the 1580s may be related to the early travels of Donne and to the plans of Catholic exiles for an invasion of England six years before the defeat of the Armada.
Seen within a larger familial, social, and religious context in which exile and persecution for religious belief were the overriding experiences, the distinctive marks of Donne's personality emerge with new clarity. An important contribution to Donne studies, Flynn's book will have an impact on how Donne's poetry is read.
Details
- First published
- 1995
- OL Work ID
- OL3529393W
Subjects
Catholic ChurchCatholicsCatholics in literatureChristian poetry, EnglishChristianity and literatureChurch historyChurch of EnglandClergyEnglish Christian poetryEnglish PoetsFamilyFamily relationshipsHistoryHistory and criticismNobilityPoets, EnglishReligionDonne, john, 1572-1631