World Literature
- 981
- Love Poetry of John Donne
- An essay by Ian Mackean on the role of love in Donne's Songs and Sonnets.
- 982
- New Pleasures Prove: Evidence of Dialectical Disputatio in Early Modern Manuscript Culture
- Margaret Downs-Gamble examines Donne's poems in terms of the manuscript culture of the times.
- 984
- The Metaphysical Sonnets of John Donne and Mikolaj Sep Szarzynski: A Comparison
- Magdalena Kay suggests that "Both poets work out their ideas through paradox and syntactic play."
- 985
- Trumpet Vibrations: Theological Reflections on Donne's Doomsday Sonnet
- G. Richmond Bridge relates the octave of Holy Sonnet VII to "the substance of much millenarian thought and preaching."
- 986
- W[illiam] S[hakespeare]'s "A Funeral Elegy" and the Donnean Moment
- Claude J. Summers argues that "A Funeral Elegy" shares an affinity with Donne's mourning poems, but "rejects those very qualities of expansive symbolism and abstraction that the later plays share with the Anniversaries."
- 987
- Works of John Donne
- E-texts of Donne's Songs and Sonnets, Elegies, Epigrams, Satires, Metempsychosis, Marriage Songs, The Anniversaries, The Holy Sonnets, Latin Poems and Translations, Devotions, and other works.
- 988
- Five Satyres
- Full texts. From The Satires, Epigrams and Verse Letters of John Donne edited by W. Milgate, Oxford, 1967.
- 991
- John Donne
- Short biography and poems: Daybreak, That Time and Absence proves Rather helps than hurts to loves, Death, Song, The Ecstasy, The Dream, The Funeral, A Hymn to God the Father.
- 994
- John Donne: Three Poems
- Holy Sonnets XIV and X; Hymn to God, My God, in my Sickness. Analysis of their poetic form.
- 997
- WzDD's HSC Info Page
- Donne's The Apparition, The Flea, A Valediction Forbidding Mourning and other poems. Analysis of the poems.
- 998
- "But Worth pretends": Discovering Jonsonian Masque in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
- Anita M. Hagerman analyzes "Wroth's connections to Ben Jonson and the possibilities the connections offer regarding both the form and content of Wroth's sonnet sequence Pamphilia to Amphilanthus."