Sexual Freedom and New World Conquest in Francisco de Vitoria's de Indis and John Donne's 'To his Mistress going to bed'.Published in:Notes & Queries, 2022, v. 69, n. 3, p. 231, doi. 10.1093/notesj/gjac081By:Hokama, RhemaPublication type:Article
Existential Self (ves) as reflected in two Metaphysical poets‟: John Donne‟s “A Valediction Forbidding Mourning” and Andrew Marvell‟s “To His Coy Mistress”.Published in:Annals of the Faculty of Arts, 2022, v. 50, n. 6, p. 211By:Munib, Maha MohamedPublication type:Article
Donne's To His Mistress Going To Bed, lines 33-35.Published in:1992By:Ray, Robert H.Publication type:Literary Criticism
Donne's TO HIS MISTRESS GOING TO BED, Lines 7-12.Published in:1983By:Dixon, PeterPublication type:Literary Criticism
In Search of El Dorado: Desire and history in Donne's Language of Colonization.Published in:1996By:Lazo, RodrigoPublication type:Literary Criticism
Donne, Drama and Despotism in 'To his Mistress going to Bed'.Published in:2008By:Dodsworth, MartinPublication type:Literary Criticism
Roberts's TO JOHN DONNE and Donne's ELEGY 19.Published in:2010By:Luft, JoannaPublication type:Poetry Review
‘An Expected Gift’: Literary Resumption of Marital Intimacy from Donne to Updike.Published in:2013By:Read, SaraPublication type:Literary Criticism
Hearing the "harmonious chime" in Donne's "To his Mistress going to bed."Published in:2008By:Dipasquale, Theresa M.Publication type:Essay