Exotic Setting Reading The Great Gatsby
Here, I am standing on the dock, looking outward for the green light to which Fitzgerald mentions in The Great Gatsby.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Batter my heart, three-personed God
Paradox is one important and notable element in the poem Batter my heart, three-personed God by John Donne. The speaker, being "betrothed" to evil, seeks God to change themself, and the only means to do so, according to the speaker is imprisonment. "Take me to you, imprison me, for I, except you enthrall me, never shall be free,"(Donne, lines 12-13, pg. 840). The paradox of imprisonment is used to show the speaker finds it necessary to put them in jail in order that they may be free. This seemingly contradiction in fact shows some truth. God should lock them up so as to be with God and imprisoned from the evils that plague them. Imprisonment yields freedom from sin, temptations, and evil. Furthermore, the last stanza is also paradoxical: "Nor ever chaste, except you enthrall me,"(Donne, line 14, pg 840). The speaker will not be chaste if God does not grant them renewal and new form.The speaker wants God to ravish them into being one with God, and for God alone: chastity. There is a somewhat double meaning to this ravishness, the speaker being seduced into wanting God and on the flip side, being taunted and lured into sinfulness.
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