Whether sharing his anxieties about his writing, consoling bereaved friends, complaining about the meanness of a patron or defending himself against malicious gossip, John Donne (1572-1631)
reveals himself in his letters with a directness that can be found nowhere else in his writings.
The 95 letters printed here in their entirety - dating from the late 1590s until a short time before Donne’s death - constitute approximately half of his surviving correspondence. Addressed to
a variety of recipients, they present the author of some of the most enduringly popular English verse as father, son, husband, friend, suitor, courtier and pastor. Although what the letters
reveal of Donne is sometimes far from edifying, they corroborate the impression created by his better-known writings that he was one of the most remarkable figures produced by the English
Renaissance and that he possessed an extraordinarily subtle and creative intelligence.