Big+Wrap-+Up

Obviously all the poems have different aspects of love in them but one that really stood out to me was the //Love's Deity// by John Donne because it had the most depth and it made me think much more than any of the other poems because of its play on god and emotions. I couldn't where his belief of god ended and where his love started because he did such a good job molding together the two aspects of his life. I think that hisplay on word in the end of each stanza showed the indecisiveness of the poem and how he really did not know what he thought of his lover or just the fact he was in love and that he could not have the love that was controlling his life. I liked how he would throw words in such as "lust, rage, atheist" and how he wasn't afraid to write what was happening in his life and how it was effecting him.

The theme displays itself in each poem even though love is in different forms. In //The Canonization// the author does not directly talk about a love of one person but what is going on and what is around him in his life. It feels a little more random to me and the love is shown for the war part of him yet the sensitive part of his life and how he loves both aspects of his life and how much he could not live without of of them. Much like the //Love's Deity// he ends each stanza similarly for example in The Canonization he ends every stanza with the word love and in //Love's Deity// he ends each stanza with the form of love towards himself. As for the //That I Did Always Love// Emily Dickinson talks about love in life and giving parts of herself to the world and people and aspects of her life. She writes about giving rather then her emotions and how god and her environment. //That I Did Always Love// has more to do with //Woman Work// because it has to do with the things she does for others make her love oppose to what is done to her life by others to make her love.