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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume VIII, captures Donne in one of the most somber and inward-looking periods of his ministry. Preached between 1627 and 1629, these sermons reflect the shock of repeated bereavements—his daughter Lucy, his patroness Lucy, Countess of Bedford, his lifelong friend Magdalen Danvers (formerly Herbert), and his confidant Sir Henry Goodyer. With no poetry and only a few letters surviving from these years, the sermons stand as the most revealing testimony of Donne’s spiritual life. They show him struggling with melancholy and death, moving through shadows of morbidity toward renewed hope, while sustaining the oratorical brilliance that made him the most compelling preacher of his age.The volume opens with the Trinity Sunday sermon of 1627, still marked by Donne’s earlier emphasis on joy, but soon enters the darker meditations shaped by loss. In the **Sermon of Commemoration of Lady Danvers**, Donne not only offers a portrait of his friend’s faith, cheerfulness, and piety but also develops his theology of death as “God’s Physic and God’s Music.” Other sermons of these years reveal his obsession with mortality and resurrection: bodies reduced to dust and scattered by worms, floods, or fire, yet known and preserved by God for restoration. His Fifth Prebend Sermon and Christmas sermon of 1627 are unusually bleak, emphasizing terror, judgment, and human insufficiency, almost bereft of the vocabulary of light and joy that characterizes his finest work. Yet in the Easter sermon of 1628, Donne’s imagination is reawakened; he rediscovers the language of light and glory, proclaiming the Beatific Vision as the final hope of the faithful. The volume closes with his 1629 Easter sermon on Job, a meditation on the vision of Eliphaz that rises to poetic power, echoing the Te Deum and Revelation in its vision of countless saints and angels gathered before God. Together these sermons mark Donne’s transition into his final phase as a preacher: less logically rigorous than in earlier years, more burdened with repetition, but charged with a strange, haunting beauty. They are sermons of mortality, often shadowed by melancholy, yet repeatedly breaking into sudden radiance—testimony to Donne’s lifelong effort to transmute despair into faith, and darkness into the light of God.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1956.
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*The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume IX, gathers Donne’s last dated sermons of 1629–1630 along with a group of later undated discourses, many preached during the closing years of his ministry. Here Donne returns insistently to the opening chapters of Genesis, meditating on creation, the image of God in humanity, and the Spirit moving upon the waters. These late sermons combine an elemental simplicity with a poet’s grandeur: the East and West become figures of Christ’s light and man’s mortality, while the primordial waters serve both as emblem of chaos and of baptismal grace. Preaching before King Charles at Whitehall, before citizens at Paul’s Cross, and to his own flock at St. Paul’s, Donne speaks with new directness about human frailty, repentance, and the indwelling Spirit. Though mortality shadows these sermons—Donne was approaching his final illness—the tone is less morbid than in earlier volumes. He stresses instead the joy of forgiveness, the hope of resurrection, and the treasure of grace already present in the faithful heart.The undated sermons collected here, including a long series on Psalm 32, reveal Donne as pastor and confessor, guiding his hearers through the disciplines of penitence, confession, and amendment of life. They show his characteristic blend of searching self-examination, theological depth, and psychological acuity, always rooted in Scripture and the Fathers yet addressed to the anxieties of his London congregations. Donne does not flinch from exposing sin—whether pride, covetousness, or irreverence in worship—but he insists with equal force on the abundance of divine mercy and the joy that springs from reconciliation with God. Volume IX thus stands at the threshold of Donne’s final preaching, culminating soon after in *Deaths Duell*. It presents a preacher who, even as his strength waned, continued to interpret creation, sin, and redemption with undiminished intensity, speaking as both poet of the eternal and pastor of souls.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1958.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume VII, presents Donne at the very height of his preaching powers, a period when his imagination, theological insight, and rhetorical mastery converge with unusual force. Preached in 1626 and 1627, these sermons emerge in the shadow of plague, political unease, and personal loss, yet they are dominated not by despair but by Donne’s determination to console and strengthen his hearers. Where some contemporaries thundered only judgment, Donne insists on mercy, peace, and the consolations of faith. His Second Prebend Sermon in particular stands as one of the great monuments of English prose, a meditation on joy and glory that has been praised for its grandeur of rhythm and vision. Again and again Donne lifts his congregation above melancholy and fear, reminding them that true joy is already a foretaste of heaven, uninterrupted even by death itself.The volume also demonstrates Donne’s skill in adapting his message to occasion and audience—whether in state sermons before Charles I, in public addresses at Paul’s Cross, or in parish preaching at St. Dunstan’s. His themes range widely: the dignity of the body destined for resurrection, the futility of despair, the mercy that undergirds all divine judgment, and the unity of the Church Militant and Triumphant under one roof of Christ. He does not shrink from controversy, defending the ceremonies, images, and sacramental theology of the Church of England against Puritan detractors, while rebuking Rome with equal vigor. Yet even in polemic his deeper concern is pastoral, offering reassurance to troubled consciences and urging confidence in God’s everlasting mercy. The sermons of these years, often shadowed by Donne’s grief at the death of his daughter Lucy, reveal his most personal theology: that in death there is no separation, only a passage from one room of God’s house to another. In their richness and range, the sermons collected here embody Donne’s vision of preaching as both poetry and cure of souls, a vision that shaped his reputation as one of the greatest voices in the English pulpit.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1954.
811 kr
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited with introductions and critical apparatus by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, represents the first comprehensive scholarly edition of the prose works of Donne that established him as one of the foremost preachers of seventeenth-century England. Issued in ten volumes, the series collates Donne’s one hundred and sixty extant sermons, which had previously circulated in seventeenth-century folios (the *LXXX Sermons* of 1640, the *Fifty Sermons* of 1649, and the *XXVI Sermons* of 1661) or as separately printed quartos. Potter and Simpson reconstruct the bibliographical history of these printings, examine extant manuscripts, and document the fraught transmission of Donne’s texts, particularly the interventions of his son, John Donne Jr., whose careless editing shaped the folios. Their editorial introductions situate Donne’s preaching within the political and ecclesiastical contexts of Jacobean and Caroline England, highlighting both the textual corruption and the survival of a rich homiletic corpus that might otherwise have been lost.The edition underscores Donne’s sermons as literary achievements equal in stature to his poetry and devotional prose. The editors analyze their rhetorical brilliance, their blending of theological rigor with imaginative conceit, and their responsiveness to occasions ranging from court preaching at Whitehall to civic addresses at Paul’s Cross. Donne emerges as a preacher attuned to Scripture, controversy, and the performance of eloquence before audiences of power and piety. The critical apparatus provides variant readings, textual notes, and commentary on sources, while the introductions offer detailed accounts of printing history, manuscript provenance, and Donne’s position among contemporary divines. By assembling the full range of his preaching and clarifying its transmission, Potter and Simpson’s edition established *The Sermons of John Donne* as indispensable for scholars of early modern literature, theology, and intellectual history, illuminating the pulpit as the stage on which Donne articulated his most sustained reflections on mortality, grace, and the condition of humankind.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1953.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited with introductions and critical apparatus by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume II, focuses on Donne’s preaching during his tenure as Reader in Divinity at Lincoln’s Inn (1616–1621), a period often considered the most satisfying of his clerical career. Returning to the institution where he had studied law in his youth, Donne cultivated a unique relationship with a congregation of legally trained auditors who remembered his earlier, more worldly reputation. The twenty-three extant Lincoln’s Inn sermons reveal both his struggle to establish credibility as a sincere minister and his success in winning deep affection from his hearers. Blending theological exposition with analogies drawn from law, wit, and personal humility, Donne addressed the spiritual life of a professional audience while also participating in the Inn’s campaign to finance and build a new chapel—an enterprise for which he preached both preparatory and dedicatory sermons. His reflections during this period also disclose a growing self-consciousness about the preacher’s calling and the challenges of speaking God’s Word before skeptical or distracted listeners.The volume also includes significant sermons preached beyond Lincoln’s Inn, including those at Whitehall and before aristocratic patrons such as the Countess of Montgomery. Particularly notable are the *Sermon of Valediction* (1619), delivered before Donne’s departure on Doncaster’s embassy to Germany, and discourses composed during his travels on the Continent. These texts illuminate Donne’s anxieties about mortality, his sense of priestly responsibility, and his ongoing meditation on the tension between human weakness and divine grace. Throughout, the sermons demonstrate Donne’s distinctive style: elaborate but purposeful structures, paradox and wit employed in service of doctrine, and moments of personal disclosure that forge intimacy with his hearers. Potter and Simpson’s edition provides full textual scholarship, distinguishing manuscript versions from revised folio texts and tracing Donne’s rhetorical development. By situating these sermons within their historical, political, and biographical contexts, Volume II of *The Sermons of John Donne* underscores the richness of his pulpit work and its centrality to early modern religious and literary culture.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1955.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited with introductions and critical apparatus by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume III, traces Donne’s preaching from April 1620 to February 1622, a transitional period culminating in his appointment as Dean of St. Paul’s. The sermons of these years reveal striking fluctuations of tone. In the early months Donne is preoccupied with human frailty, lamenting the “vanity of vanities” and expressing unease at the political and religious upheavals of Europe, particularly the collapse of the Elector Palatine’s cause after the Battle of White Mountain. At Lincoln’s Inn, he exhorts patience amid uncertainty, warning his hearers against rash judgments of monarch or state, while at Whitehall he balances admonitions against wealth and ambition with affirmations of national blessings under King James. The sermons of this period display both Donne’s capacity for sombre reflection and his insistence on trust in God despite affliction—a perspective shared with his poetry, including the Holy Sonnets of the same years.As the volume progresses, the tone becomes more luminous, focusing on Christ as the true Light who dispels the “long and frozen winter nights of sinne.” Donne’s first sermon as Dean of St. Paul’s, preached on Christmas Day 1621, exemplifies this shift: drawing on the prologue to John’s Gospel, he presents Christ as the eternal Logos whose light informs reason, grace, and glory alike. Other notable sermons include marriage homilies that expand into meditations on the mystical union between Christ and the Church, and a Trinity Term series at Lincoln’s Inn where Donne examines each person of the Trinity in relation to the believer’s life. By the close of the period, with his formal resignation from Lincoln’s Inn, Donne emerges as a preacher of national stature. These sermons, whether marked by melancholy or radiant hope, demonstrate his gift for weaving theology, Scripture, and lived experience into prose that is at once intellectually rigorous and imaginatively compelling, laying the foundation for his great work at St. Paul’s.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1957.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume IV, marks Donne’s establishment as Dean of St. Paul’s and his full entry into the central arena of London’s ecclesiastical and civic life. Preaching now in “Old St. Paul’s,” Donne found himself at the heart of England’s capital, addressing not only cathedral congregations but also civic gatherings, court audiences, and public assemblies at Paul’s Cross and the Spittle. The sermons of this volume vividly reflect both the ceremonial rhythm of the Church’s year—Christmas, Easter, Whitsunday, and Candlemas—and the political turbulence of the 1620s, when the Palatinate crisis, the Spanish marriage negotiations, and King James’s censorship of preaching weighed heavily on the national conscience. Donne’s texts range widely: meditations on Christ as Light and Resurrection, urgent admonitions against Roman “idolatry,” defenses of the Crown’s Directions to Preachers, and visionary reflections on England’s colonial project in Virginia. In all, Donne combined theological subtlety with a preacher’s responsiveness to the immediate anxieties of Londoners, who listened to him as both spiritual guide and national voice.The volume also reveals Donne’s deepening imaginative grasp of London itself as symbol and stage. His sermons abound in images drawn from the city’s commerce, courts, and river: ships weathering storms, coins newly minted in Christ’s image, and the Thames as both highway and metaphor of spiritual passage. Donne’s appointment as Dean required him to preach at the great festivals, and his Christmas sermons on John’s Gospel and Easter discourses on resurrection are among his most exalted works, uniting scholastic argument with lyrical metaphor. Yet the same volume includes “sermons upon emergent occasions,” crafted to defend the Crown or to rally civic support for church repair or colonial enterprise. Such occasional pieces show Donne negotiating the perils of preaching under James I, balancing fidelity to doctrine with political caution. Together, these sermons embody Donne’s genius for transforming the contingencies of London and the crises of Europe into moments of spiritual encounter, and they establish his voice as the conscience of the city and the Church.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1959.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume V, brings together a substantial body of Donne’s undated sermons, contextualized with meticulous editorial analysis that reconstructs their likely chronology. Out of the 160 extant sermons, nearly half lack precise dating in the Folios, and this volume represents an effort to situate them within Donne’s career by drawing on manuscript evidence, internal references, and historical context. Many of the sermons here fall between Donne’s early years as Divinity Reader at Lincoln’s Inn (1616–1622) and his first years as Dean of St. Paul’s. They display the range of occasions for which he preached—Whitsunday, christenings, churchings, and parish duties—before the greater demands of his later ministry absorbed his energies.The sermons collected in this volume reveal Donne working out his pastoral and theological voice within a rapidly shifting religious and political landscape. In baptismal and churching sermons, he emphasizes the sacramental incorporation of individuals into the larger communion of saints, while also addressing controversies over the sign of the cross or the role of women in devotion. Whitsunday sermons show his fascination with the Spirit as a moving, animating presence, often rendered through nautical metaphors rooted in his seafaring experiences. A number of sermons draw directly on Donne’s earlier *Essays in Divinity*, reworking meditative material on divine names, the mystery of confession, and the paradoxical way sin is folded into providence. What emerges is Donne’s characteristic balance: a preacher alert to polemical disputes of his day but more deeply concerned with guiding his hearers toward humility, penitence, and joy in forgiveness. Volume V thus fills a crucial place in the edition, capturing Donne’s development in the years before his great cathedral preaching and showing how his casuistry, poetic imagination, and pastoral urgency intertwined from the very outset of his ministry.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1959.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume VI, encompasses Donne’s preaching between 1623 and early 1626, a turbulent period marked by the failure of the Spanish Match, the death of James I, the accession of Charles I, and the devastating plague of 1625. These sermons show Donne navigating a nation in anxiety and transition, while also processing his own near-fatal illness of late 1623. The *Devotions upon Emergent Occasions* arose directly from that sickness, and the sermons that follow often carry the same sharpened awareness of mortality, divine judgment, and resurrection. Beginning with his recovery sermon on Easter Day, 1624, Donne reflects repeatedly on bodily frailty and the promise of eternal life, themes woven with his characteristic mixture of casuistry, Scriptural exegesis, and poetic imagination.This volume also includes his first sermons at St. Dunstan’s-in-the-West, where his pastoral manner softened into plainer instruction, emphasizing love between pastor and flock and the daily duties of Christian life. By contrast, his great cathedral and court sermons retain a more elaborate and rhetorical style. His funeral sermon for James I, preached at Denmark House, balances biblical typology with restrained commemoration, markedly different from the florid panegyrics of his contemporaries. Throughout, Donne returns to central convictions: that sin itself, though real, is a privation that God may fold into His providence; that affliction and plague are both judgment and mercy; and that the body, often despised in ascetic extremes, remains honored by God as His creation and destined for resurrection. Particularly moving are the sermons preached during and after the plague, in which Donne evokes the horror of mass mortality yet insists on consolation in the communion of saints and the eternity of divine mercy. Together, these sermons present Donne at the height of his powers, shaping his poetic theology of sin, suffering, and salvation in a moment of national and personal crisis.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1953.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume X, brings to completion the monumental sequence of Donne’s preaching, concluding with his final and most famous sermon, *Deaths Duell*, delivered before King Charles I in February 1631. Spanning the breadth of his ministry, this concluding collection situates Donne’s work in its full arc—from his late and hesitant ordination, through his triumph as Dean of St. Paul’s, to the physical decline and spiritual intensity of his last years. What emerges is not only the record of a preacher of extraordinary rhetorical power but also the unfolding of a life increasingly surrendered to the office he had once resisted.This final volume emphasizes the unity-in-diversity of Donne’s achievement. While anthologies often favor his morbid or rhetorical extremes, the full sermons reveal a more balanced Donne: a preacher of careful structure, plain counsel, pastoral sympathy, and theological depth. Here we find sermons of controversy, defending the English Church against both Roman Catholics and Separatists; sermons of civic and parochial duty, rooted in his life as Vicar of St. Dunstan’s; and sermons of profound spirituality, where images of light, peace, and resurrection dominate. The early undated sermons retain the imaginative flourish of his middle period, while the later ones—though marked by prolixity and repetition—convey an aged preacher intent on plainness, reconciliation, and consolation. *Deaths Duell* epitomizes this dual movement: Donne, visibly dying, preaches both his own farewell and a meditation on Christ’s Passion, closing with words of hope in the Resurrection.Read together, these sermons display Donne as an artist in prose whose variety of moods—quiet, argumentative, imaginative, oratory—parallel the mosaics of Christian art, each figure distinct yet part of a greater pattern. In ending with Donne’s meditation on mortality and divine love, the volume secures his reputation as both poet and preacher, one who turned his own afflictions into testimony, and who, in Yeats’s words, convinces us that “one who is but a man like us has seen God.”This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1962.
754 kr
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume VIII, captures Donne in one of the most somber and inward-looking periods of his ministry. Preached between 1627 and 1629, these sermons reflect the shock of repeated bereavements—his daughter Lucy, his patroness Lucy, Countess of Bedford, his lifelong friend Magdalen Danvers (formerly Herbert), and his confidant Sir Henry Goodyer. With no poetry and only a few letters surviving from these years, the sermons stand as the most revealing testimony of Donne’s spiritual life. They show him struggling with melancholy and death, moving through shadows of morbidity toward renewed hope, while sustaining the oratorical brilliance that made him the most compelling preacher of his age.The volume opens with the Trinity Sunday sermon of 1627, still marked by Donne’s earlier emphasis on joy, but soon enters the darker meditations shaped by loss. In the **Sermon of Commemoration of Lady Danvers**, Donne not only offers a portrait of his friend’s faith, cheerfulness, and piety but also develops his theology of death as “God’s Physic and God’s Music.” Other sermons of these years reveal his obsession with mortality and resurrection: bodies reduced to dust and scattered by worms, floods, or fire, yet known and preserved by God for restoration. His Fifth Prebend Sermon and Christmas sermon of 1627 are unusually bleak, emphasizing terror, judgment, and human insufficiency, almost bereft of the vocabulary of light and joy that characterizes his finest work. Yet in the Easter sermon of 1628, Donne’s imagination is reawakened; he rediscovers the language of light and glory, proclaiming the Beatific Vision as the final hope of the faithful. The volume closes with his 1629 Easter sermon on Job, a meditation on the vision of Eliphaz that rises to poetic power, echoing the Te Deum and Revelation in its vision of countless saints and angels gathered before God. Together these sermons mark Donne’s transition into his final phase as a preacher: less logically rigorous than in earlier years, more burdened with repetition, but charged with a strange, haunting beauty. They are sermons of mortality, often shadowed by melancholy, yet repeatedly breaking into sudden radiance—testimony to Donne’s lifelong effort to transmute despair into faith, and darkness into the light of God.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1956.
754 kr
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume VII, presents Donne at the very height of his preaching powers, a period when his imagination, theological insight, and rhetorical mastery converge with unusual force. Preached in 1626 and 1627, these sermons emerge in the shadow of plague, political unease, and personal loss, yet they are dominated not by despair but by Donne’s determination to console and strengthen his hearers. Where some contemporaries thundered only judgment, Donne insists on mercy, peace, and the consolations of faith. His Second Prebend Sermon in particular stands as one of the great monuments of English prose, a meditation on joy and glory that has been praised for its grandeur of rhythm and vision. Again and again Donne lifts his congregation above melancholy and fear, reminding them that true joy is already a foretaste of heaven, uninterrupted even by death itself.The volume also demonstrates Donne’s skill in adapting his message to occasion and audience—whether in state sermons before Charles I, in public addresses at Paul’s Cross, or in parish preaching at St. Dunstan’s. His themes range widely: the dignity of the body destined for resurrection, the futility of despair, the mercy that undergirds all divine judgment, and the unity of the Church Militant and Triumphant under one roof of Christ. He does not shrink from controversy, defending the ceremonies, images, and sacramental theology of the Church of England against Puritan detractors, while rebuking Rome with equal vigor. Yet even in polemic his deeper concern is pastoral, offering reassurance to troubled consciences and urging confidence in God’s everlasting mercy. The sermons of these years, often shadowed by Donne’s grief at the death of his daughter Lucy, reveal his most personal theology: that in death there is no separation, only a passage from one room of God’s house to another. In their richness and range, the sermons collected here embody Donne’s vision of preaching as both poetry and cure of souls, a vision that shaped his reputation as one of the greatest voices in the English pulpit.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1954.
1 469 kr
Skickas inom 3-6 vardagar
*The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume IX, gathers Donne’s last dated sermons of 1629–1630 along with a group of later undated discourses, many preached during the closing years of his ministry. Here Donne returns insistently to the opening chapters of Genesis, meditating on creation, the image of God in humanity, and the Spirit moving upon the waters. These late sermons combine an elemental simplicity with a poet’s grandeur: the East and West become figures of Christ’s light and man’s mortality, while the primordial waters serve both as emblem of chaos and of baptismal grace. Preaching before King Charles at Whitehall, before citizens at Paul’s Cross, and to his own flock at St. Paul’s, Donne speaks with new directness about human frailty, repentance, and the indwelling Spirit. Though mortality shadows these sermons—Donne was approaching his final illness—the tone is less morbid than in earlier volumes. He stresses instead the joy of forgiveness, the hope of resurrection, and the treasure of grace already present in the faithful heart.The undated sermons collected here, including a long series on Psalm 32, reveal Donne as pastor and confessor, guiding his hearers through the disciplines of penitence, confession, and amendment of life. They show his characteristic blend of searching self-examination, theological depth, and psychological acuity, always rooted in Scripture and the Fathers yet addressed to the anxieties of his London congregations. Donne does not flinch from exposing sin—whether pride, covetousness, or irreverence in worship—but he insists with equal force on the abundance of divine mercy and the joy that springs from reconciliation with God. Volume IX thus stands at the threshold of Donne’s final preaching, culminating soon after in *Deaths Duell*. It presents a preacher who, even as his strength waned, continued to interpret creation, sin, and redemption with undiminished intensity, speaking as both poet of the eternal and pastor of souls.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1958.
1 469 kr
Skickas inom 3-6 vardagar
The Sermons of John Donne, edited with introductions and critical apparatus by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, represents the first comprehensive scholarly edition of the prose works of Donne that established him as one of the foremost preachers of seventeenth-century England. Issued in ten volumes, the series collates Donne’s one hundred and sixty extant sermons, which had previously circulated in seventeenth-century folios (the *LXXX Sermons* of 1640, the *Fifty Sermons* of 1649, and the *XXVI Sermons* of 1661) or as separately printed quartos. Potter and Simpson reconstruct the bibliographical history of these printings, examine extant manuscripts, and document the fraught transmission of Donne’s texts, particularly the interventions of his son, John Donne Jr., whose careless editing shaped the folios. Their editorial introductions situate Donne’s preaching within the political and ecclesiastical contexts of Jacobean and Caroline England, highlighting both the textual corruption and the survival of a rich homiletic corpus that might otherwise have been lost.The edition underscores Donne’s sermons as literary achievements equal in stature to his poetry and devotional prose. The editors analyze their rhetorical brilliance, their blending of theological rigor with imaginative conceit, and their responsiveness to occasions ranging from court preaching at Whitehall to civic addresses at Paul’s Cross. Donne emerges as a preacher attuned to Scripture, controversy, and the performance of eloquence before audiences of power and piety. The critical apparatus provides variant readings, textual notes, and commentary on sources, while the introductions offer detailed accounts of printing history, manuscript provenance, and Donne’s position among contemporary divines. By assembling the full range of his preaching and clarifying its transmission, Potter and Simpson’s edition established *The Sermons of John Donne* as indispensable for scholars of early modern literature, theology, and intellectual history, illuminating the pulpit as the stage on which Donne articulated his most sustained reflections on mortality, grace, and the condition of humankind.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1953.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited with introductions and critical apparatus by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume II, focuses on Donne’s preaching during his tenure as Reader in Divinity at Lincoln’s Inn (1616–1621), a period often considered the most satisfying of his clerical career. Returning to the institution where he had studied law in his youth, Donne cultivated a unique relationship with a congregation of legally trained auditors who remembered his earlier, more worldly reputation. The twenty-three extant Lincoln’s Inn sermons reveal both his struggle to establish credibility as a sincere minister and his success in winning deep affection from his hearers. Blending theological exposition with analogies drawn from law, wit, and personal humility, Donne addressed the spiritual life of a professional audience while also participating in the Inn’s campaign to finance and build a new chapel—an enterprise for which he preached both preparatory and dedicatory sermons. His reflections during this period also disclose a growing self-consciousness about the preacher’s calling and the challenges of speaking God’s Word before skeptical or distracted listeners.The volume also includes significant sermons preached beyond Lincoln’s Inn, including those at Whitehall and before aristocratic patrons such as the Countess of Montgomery. Particularly notable are the *Sermon of Valediction* (1619), delivered before Donne’s departure on Doncaster’s embassy to Germany, and discourses composed during his travels on the Continent. These texts illuminate Donne’s anxieties about mortality, his sense of priestly responsibility, and his ongoing meditation on the tension between human weakness and divine grace. Throughout, the sermons demonstrate Donne’s distinctive style: elaborate but purposeful structures, paradox and wit employed in service of doctrine, and moments of personal disclosure that forge intimacy with his hearers. Potter and Simpson’s edition provides full textual scholarship, distinguishing manuscript versions from revised folio texts and tracing Donne’s rhetorical development. By situating these sermons within their historical, political, and biographical contexts, Volume II of *The Sermons of John Donne* underscores the richness of his pulpit work and its centrality to early modern religious and literary culture.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1955.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited with introductions and critical apparatus by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume III, traces Donne’s preaching from April 1620 to February 1622, a transitional period culminating in his appointment as Dean of St. Paul’s. The sermons of these years reveal striking fluctuations of tone. In the early months Donne is preoccupied with human frailty, lamenting the “vanity of vanities” and expressing unease at the political and religious upheavals of Europe, particularly the collapse of the Elector Palatine’s cause after the Battle of White Mountain. At Lincoln’s Inn, he exhorts patience amid uncertainty, warning his hearers against rash judgments of monarch or state, while at Whitehall he balances admonitions against wealth and ambition with affirmations of national blessings under King James. The sermons of this period display both Donne’s capacity for sombre reflection and his insistence on trust in God despite affliction—a perspective shared with his poetry, including the Holy Sonnets of the same years.As the volume progresses, the tone becomes more luminous, focusing on Christ as the true Light who dispels the “long and frozen winter nights of sinne.” Donne’s first sermon as Dean of St. Paul’s, preached on Christmas Day 1621, exemplifies this shift: drawing on the prologue to John’s Gospel, he presents Christ as the eternal Logos whose light informs reason, grace, and glory alike. Other notable sermons include marriage homilies that expand into meditations on the mystical union between Christ and the Church, and a Trinity Term series at Lincoln’s Inn where Donne examines each person of the Trinity in relation to the believer’s life. By the close of the period, with his formal resignation from Lincoln’s Inn, Donne emerges as a preacher of national stature. These sermons, whether marked by melancholy or radiant hope, demonstrate his gift for weaving theology, Scripture, and lived experience into prose that is at once intellectually rigorous and imaginatively compelling, laying the foundation for his great work at St. Paul’s.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1957.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume IV, marks Donne’s establishment as Dean of St. Paul’s and his full entry into the central arena of London’s ecclesiastical and civic life. Preaching now in “Old St. Paul’s,” Donne found himself at the heart of England’s capital, addressing not only cathedral congregations but also civic gatherings, court audiences, and public assemblies at Paul’s Cross and the Spittle. The sermons of this volume vividly reflect both the ceremonial rhythm of the Church’s year—Christmas, Easter, Whitsunday, and Candlemas—and the political turbulence of the 1620s, when the Palatinate crisis, the Spanish marriage negotiations, and King James’s censorship of preaching weighed heavily on the national conscience. Donne’s texts range widely: meditations on Christ as Light and Resurrection, urgent admonitions against Roman “idolatry,” defenses of the Crown’s Directions to Preachers, and visionary reflections on England’s colonial project in Virginia. In all, Donne combined theological subtlety with a preacher’s responsiveness to the immediate anxieties of Londoners, who listened to him as both spiritual guide and national voice.The volume also reveals Donne’s deepening imaginative grasp of London itself as symbol and stage. His sermons abound in images drawn from the city’s commerce, courts, and river: ships weathering storms, coins newly minted in Christ’s image, and the Thames as both highway and metaphor of spiritual passage. Donne’s appointment as Dean required him to preach at the great festivals, and his Christmas sermons on John’s Gospel and Easter discourses on resurrection are among his most exalted works, uniting scholastic argument with lyrical metaphor. Yet the same volume includes “sermons upon emergent occasions,” crafted to defend the Crown or to rally civic support for church repair or colonial enterprise. Such occasional pieces show Donne negotiating the perils of preaching under James I, balancing fidelity to doctrine with political caution. Together, these sermons embody Donne’s genius for transforming the contingencies of London and the crises of Europe into moments of spiritual encounter, and they establish his voice as the conscience of the city and the Church.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1959.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, Volume V, brings together a substantial body of Donne’s undated sermons, contextualized with meticulous editorial analysis that reconstructs their likely chronology. Out of the 160 extant sermons, nearly half lack precise dating in the Folios, and this volume represents an effort to situate them within Donne’s career by drawing on manuscript evidence, internal references, and historical context. Many of the sermons here fall between Donne’s early years as Divinity Reader at Lincoln’s Inn (1616–1622) and his first years as Dean of St. Paul’s. They display the range of occasions for which he preached—Whitsunday, christenings, churchings, and parish duties—before the greater demands of his later ministry absorbed his energies.The sermons collected in this volume reveal Donne working out his pastoral and theological voice within a rapidly shifting religious and political landscape. In baptismal and churching sermons, he emphasizes the sacramental incorporation of individuals into the larger communion of saints, while also addressing controversies over the sign of the cross or the role of women in devotion. Whitsunday sermons show his fascination with the Spirit as a moving, animating presence, often rendered through nautical metaphors rooted in his seafaring experiences. A number of sermons draw directly on Donne’s earlier *Essays in Divinity*, reworking meditative material on divine names, the mystery of confession, and the paradoxical way sin is folded into providence. What emerges is Donne’s characteristic balance: a preacher alert to polemical disputes of his day but more deeply concerned with guiding his hearers toward humility, penitence, and joy in forgiveness. Volume V thus fills a crucial place in the edition, capturing Donne’s development in the years before his great cathedral preaching and showing how his casuistry, poetic imagination, and pastoral urgency intertwined from the very outset of his ministry.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1959.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume VI, encompasses Donne’s preaching between 1623 and early 1626, a turbulent period marked by the failure of the Spanish Match, the death of James I, the accession of Charles I, and the devastating plague of 1625. These sermons show Donne navigating a nation in anxiety and transition, while also processing his own near-fatal illness of late 1623. The *Devotions upon Emergent Occasions* arose directly from that sickness, and the sermons that follow often carry the same sharpened awareness of mortality, divine judgment, and resurrection. Beginning with his recovery sermon on Easter Day, 1624, Donne reflects repeatedly on bodily frailty and the promise of eternal life, themes woven with his characteristic mixture of casuistry, Scriptural exegesis, and poetic imagination.This volume also includes his first sermons at St. Dunstan’s-in-the-West, where his pastoral manner softened into plainer instruction, emphasizing love between pastor and flock and the daily duties of Christian life. By contrast, his great cathedral and court sermons retain a more elaborate and rhetorical style. His funeral sermon for James I, preached at Denmark House, balances biblical typology with restrained commemoration, markedly different from the florid panegyrics of his contemporaries. Throughout, Donne returns to central convictions: that sin itself, though real, is a privation that God may fold into His providence; that affliction and plague are both judgment and mercy; and that the body, often despised in ascetic extremes, remains honored by God as His creation and destined for resurrection. Particularly moving are the sermons preached during and after the plague, in which Donne evokes the horror of mass mortality yet insists on consolation in the communion of saints and the eternity of divine mercy. Together, these sermons present Donne at the height of his powers, shaping his poetic theology of sin, suffering, and salvation in a moment of national and personal crisis.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1953.
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The Sermons of John Donne, edited by Evelyn M. Simpson and George R. Potter, Volume X, brings to completion the monumental sequence of Donne’s preaching, concluding with his final and most famous sermon, *Deaths Duell*, delivered before King Charles I in February 1631. Spanning the breadth of his ministry, this concluding collection situates Donne’s work in its full arc—from his late and hesitant ordination, through his triumph as Dean of St. Paul’s, to the physical decline and spiritual intensity of his last years. What emerges is not only the record of a preacher of extraordinary rhetorical power but also the unfolding of a life increasingly surrendered to the office he had once resisted.This final volume emphasizes the unity-in-diversity of Donne’s achievement. While anthologies often favor his morbid or rhetorical extremes, the full sermons reveal a more balanced Donne: a preacher of careful structure, plain counsel, pastoral sympathy, and theological depth. Here we find sermons of controversy, defending the English Church against both Roman Catholics and Separatists; sermons of civic and parochial duty, rooted in his life as Vicar of St. Dunstan’s; and sermons of profound spirituality, where images of light, peace, and resurrection dominate. The early undated sermons retain the imaginative flourish of his middle period, while the later ones—though marked by prolixity and repetition—convey an aged preacher intent on plainness, reconciliation, and consolation. *Deaths Duell* epitomizes this dual movement: Donne, visibly dying, preaches both his own farewell and a meditation on Christ’s Passion, closing with words of hope in the Resurrection.Read together, these sermons display Donne as an artist in prose whose variety of moods—quiet, argumentative, imaginative, oratory—parallel the mosaics of Christian art, each figure distinct yet part of a greater pattern. In ending with Donne’s meditation on mortality and divine love, the volume secures his reputation as both poet and preacher, one who turned his own afflictions into testimony, and who, in Yeats’s words, convinces us that “one who is but a man like us has seen God.”This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1962.