For example, prior to the sixteenth century, people did not tend to identify themselves in terms of their nationality, but in terms of locality, dynasty or, most importantly, religion. However, mercifully distant though Donne’s life might seem, part of the book’s interest for me lay in its description of changes that formed the foundations of the world we live in today. If I lived in that world, I too would aspire to the metaphysical. Alongside endless physical pain came constant mental torment resulting from the frequent death of children. An arbitrary, ferociously cruel justice system, no antibiotics, no contraception, no dentistry. Reading Super-Infinite I got a better sense of why a poet in Donne’s lifetime would want to be metaphysical – it might have something to do with the fact that his physical world was so relentlessly horrible. I didn’t really know what metaphysical meant – guessing it was something about being above and beyond the boring physical realm in which my classroom was situated. Apparently, he was a ‘metaphysical poet’. Unexpectedly, for the biography of a late sixteenth, early seventeenth century poet, the book became a Sunday Times top ten bestseller. Super-Infinite is Katherine Rundell’s biography of the poet John Donne, published in 2022.
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