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18 pages 36 minutes read

John Donne

Death Be Not Proud

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1633

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Symbols & Motifs

Mortality

Despite undermining death in the very first line and later overthrowing death by promising eternal life, the poem centers mortality. The triumphant sonnet nonetheless paints a grim kaleidoscopic picture of the many unpleasant ways to die: dispatched by kings (for the modern reader, perhaps, “despotic governments”), victimized by “desperate men” (Line 9), poisoned by something no doubt horrible, or getting sick and dying unpleasantly. The poem also suggests that there's no use complaining about dying horribly because “fate” or “chance” (Line 9) have their unfathomable ways and will do what they will no matter what a person thinks or desires.

Perhaps the most telling reference to human mortality comes not in the third quatrain but in the one before it, in Line 7, when the speaker says to death: “Soonest our best men with thee must go.” In other words, the best die young, an observation that offers just a hint of the poignancy and unfairness of human life. The speaker mentions this fact only to shrug off its significance, but the mention of gruesome deaths and dying young is powerful and sad, even despite reassurances of rest and liberation after death.

Sleep

Sleep is a recurring motif that appears in the second and third quatrains as well as in the final couplet. In the first reference, in Line 5, sleep is presented as resembling death; in Line 11, a similar comparison is made, with the opium poppy being able to induce sleep as easily as death can. Donne was not the first person to link sleep with death. In Greek mythology, the personified figure of death was Thanatos, who had a brother named Hypnos (Sleep). The gods disliked them both.

Finally, death is explicitly identified with sleep, as a state of being from which one will awaken. Donne’s reference to a “short sleep” (Line 13) may mean that any amount of time is short in comparison to everlasting life, which is outside of time altogether. However, he may also have had the New Testament’s book of Revelation in mind, since Christ’s angel gives John (the author of the book), a message from Christ that says, “I am coming soon” (Revelation 3:11, repeated in 22:12, 20). In other words, the believer will not have to wait long for the resurrection. It will be only a short sleep in the grave.

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