THE GOOD MORROW BY JOHN DONNE

If our two loves be one, or thou and I
Love so alike that none doe slacken, none can die.

If our two loves ......... none can die.

REFERENCE
(i) Poem: The Good-Morrow
(ii) Poet: John Donne
CONTEXT
(i) Occurrence: Stanza 3 (Lines 20- 21/ 21)
(ii) Content: This poem is considered to be one of the best poems belonging to the metaphysical school of poetry. It describes the poet's profligate past and his present spiritual awakening. The subject is love, love seen as an intense, absolute experience, which isolates the lovers from reality and gives them a different kind of awareness; a simultaneous narrowing and widening of reality. This perfect love is immortal and it makes the lovers immortal too.
EXPLANATION
     In these lines the poet has beautifully applied a metaphor of eternal love. He says that if the total love which is formed with the love of each of the members of the couple is in perfect proportion, that love will be a perfect body, a healthy heavenly being, and it will never weaken or die. Medieval theories of medicine state that diseases and death are caused by an imbalance in bodily humors. According to current thinking; only what is contrary or of different measure can disintegrate. So if the well-balanced love never ceases, dissolution is impossible. It means the couple, John Donne and Anne Moore, will go on living and loving each other forever. Thus perfect love in not only immortal; it makes the lovers immortal, too. In short, this image is very typical of Donne, and a perfect sophism. 

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