The 17 th century opened a generation of great social change that ultimately led to the final execution of Charles I in 1649. This creates an atmosphere of conflict, which has penetrated most literature in this era. The work of John Donne is full of this conflict, which reflects the affection and feminist opinion, fundamental and cynical change inherited from the previous generation of poets. John Donne's way of thinking about love is very different from the medieval court love philosophy expressed in poetry expressed in the sonnet of poet giants such as Sidney and Petrarch.
We can see the sarcastic picture of John Dunne and Alexander's picture to paint the dark side of women's nature. This article will prove that these writers do not use satire as a tool to reduce the essence of women, not as a weapon against the negative qualities of women. This article will support the ideas of these writers who are very tired of women. Their misoperation is mainly due to the social discrimination of women in the 18th century. Furthermore, according to Christian attitudes towards women, the latter represents the combination of purity and justice of Our Lady, and evil and sin of Eve. Social stereotypes, along with religious ideology, the origin of myths, and personal prejudices, create an environment in which authors inhale attacks and prejudices against women.
John Donnet is considered one of the wisest poet of the 17th century and wrote metaphysical poem "flea" and religious poem "St. Sonnet 14". Among these two poems, Dorn is exploring the theme opposite of the body and God's love; in his love poetry "The Flea" he is speaking as an immoral person who only cares about himself I am drawing. In joy, in his holy poem "Sacred Sonnet 14" he is anxious to please God so Donne depicts the speaker as a nobleman.
In the 17th century, Sonnets adapted for other purposes, John Dorn and George Herb started a religious sonnet (see John Donne's St. Sonnet), and John Milton used Sonnets as Sonnets. General meditation poetry Perhaps Milton's most famous sonnet was named after "his blindness" in later "When I think about how my light is being used" . In the meantime, the program that rhymes Shakespeare and Petrarchan is very popular. From 1670 to the Wordsworth era, the Sonnet epidemic appeared with the restoration. However, Sonnet returned strongly during the French Revolution. Wordsworth himself wrote hundreds of sonnets, the most famous among them is "on the Westminster Bridge", "the world is too much for us", and "London, 1802" then write in Milton; he Sonnet basically imitates Milton's