Love and religion are the two most common themes of poetry, but most of Dorn's poems are about love or religion, but two different themes are to continuously use devices such as cues, metaphors, and putts It is associated with. Each poem has a different background, although each poem has a connection. "Flea", "Holy sonnets" and "Major God's hymns" have different themes, but we use common literary means to find common grounds. Dawn always uses implications in his poem, usually in the Bible.
Born in London in 1572, Dorn was the third child of John Dorn and Elizabeth Haywood. Elizabeth is Joan Lastr, Catholic Tudor John Haywood and Sir Thomas More daughter. Dawn is a Catholic, and his early life will be characterized by deprivation and isolation of those who do not agree with Protestantism in the Protestant countries. In 1596 I left the hotel of Lincoln and served as secretary of Sir Thomas Ekdon at the end of 1597. In Egton's house, Dorn met Mrs. Egdon's niece Ann Moore secretly married in 1601. Marriage caused a scandal. When the second year was revealed, Dawn lost his position and was temporarily imprisoned. Over the years, Dorn and Ann have relied on friends and caring families to provide accommodation and economic support to growing families.
John Donne was born in John Donne on January 21, 1572, is a wealthy blacksmith, one of the guardians of Iron Smith, and his wife is Elizabeth. When his father died, Dorn was trained as a gentleman, instead of preparing to begin trade at the age of 4, hired a private teacher who taught grammar, rhetoric and mathematics using his father's money . History and foreign languages Elizabeth immediately remarried to a wealthy doctor to confirm that her family kept comfortable; therefore it is the son of the blacksmith and as an outsider in his early poem After studying at Oxford's Heart Hall in spite of depicting himself, the private education of Dorn finally got his time studying at Lincoln Hotel, his time between history, poetry, theology and "humanities learning and language" was.