Summary
The speaker asks his addressee to be quiet, and let
him love. If the addressee cannot hold his tongue, the speaker tells him to
criticize him for other shortcomings (other than his tendency to love): his
palsy, his gout, his "five grey hairs," or his ruined "fortune.
He admonishes the addressee to look to his own mind and his own wealth and to
think of his position and copy the other nobles ("Observe his Honour, or
his Grace, "Or the King's real, or his stamped face"
Contemplate.") The speaker; does not care what the addressee says or does,
as long as he lets him love.
The speaker asks rhetorically, "Who's injured by
my love?" He says that his sighs have not drowned? ships, his tears have
not flooded land, his colds have not chilled spring, and the heat of his veins
has not| added to the list of those killed by the plague. Soldiers still find
wars and lawyers still find litigious men, regardless of the emotions of the
speaker and his loyer.
The speaker tells his addressee to
"Call us what you will," for it is love that makes them so. He? Says
that the addressee can "Call her one, me another fly," and that they
are also like candles ("tapers"), which burn by feeding upon their
own selves ("and at our own cost die"). In each other, the lovers
find the eagle and the dove, and together ("we two being one") they
illuminate the riddle of the phoenix, for they "die and raise the
same," just as the phoenix does-though unlike the phoenix, it is love that
slays and resurrects them. •_.¦'"
He says that they can die by love if they
are not able to live by it, and if their legend is not fit "for tombs and
hearse," it ‘will be fit for poetry and "We'll build in sonnets
pretty rooms." A well-wrought urn does as much justice to a dead man's
ashes as does a gigantic tomb; and by the same token, the poems about the
speaker and his lover will cause them to be "canonized," admitted to
the sainthood of love. All those who hear their story will invoke the lovers,
saying that countries, towns, and courts "beg from above / A pattern of
your love!"
Commentary
This complicated poem, spoken ostensibly
to someone who disapproves of the speaker's love' affair, is written in the
voice of a world-wise, sardonic courtier who is nevertheless utterly caught up
in his love. The poem simultaneously parodies old notions of love and coins
elaborate new ones, eventually concluding that even if the love affair is
impossible in the real world, it can become legendary through poetry, and the
speaker and his lover will be like saints to later generations of lovers.
(Hence the title: "The Canonization" refers to the process by which
people are inducted into the canon of saints).
In the first stanza, the speaker obliquely
details his relationship to the world of politics, wealth, and nobility; by
assuming that these are the concerns of his addressee, he indicates his own
background amid such concerns, and he also indicates the extent to which he has
moved beyond that background. He hopes that the listener will leave him alone
and pursue a career in the court, toadying to aristocrats, preoccupied with
favor (the King's real face) and money (the King's stamped face, as on a coin).
In the second stanza, he parodies contemporary Petrarchan notions of love and
continues to mock his addressee, making the point that his sighs have not
drowned ships and his tears have not caused floods. (Petrarchan love-poems were
full of claims like "My tears are rain, and my sighs storms.") He
also mocks the operations of the everyday world, saying that his love will not
keep soldiers from fighting wars or lawyers from finding court cases--as though
war and legal wrangling were the sole concerns of world outside the confines of
his love affair.
In the third stanza, the
speaker begins spinning off metaphors that will help explain the intensity and
uniqueness of his love. First, he says that he and his lover are like moths
drawn to a candle ("her one, me another fly"), then that they are
like the candle itself. They embody the elements of the eagle (strong and
masculine) and the dove (peaceful and feminine) bound up in the image of the
phoenix, dying and rising by love. In the fourth stanza, the speaker explores
the possibility of canonization in verse, and in the final stanza, he explores
his and his lover's roles as the saints of love, to whom generations of future
lovers will appeal for help. Throughout, the tone of the poem is balanced
between a kind of arch, sophisticated sensibility ("half-acre tombs")
and passionate amorous abandon ("We die and rise the same, and prove /
Mysterious by this love").
"The Canonization" is one of
Donne's most famous and most written-about poems. Its criticism at the hands of
Cleanth Brooks and others has made it a central topic in the argument between
formalist critics and historicist critics; the former argue that the poem is
what it seems to be, an anti-political love poem, while the latter argue, based
on events in Donne's life at the time of the poem's composition, that it is
actually a kind of coded, ironic rumination on the "ruined fortune"
and dashed political hopes of the first stanza. The choice of which argument to
follow is largely a matter of personal temperament. But unless one seeks a
purely biographical understanding of Donne, it is probably best to understand
the poem as the sort of droll, passionate speech-act it is, a highly
sophisticated defense of love against the corrupting values of politics and
privilege.
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