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Book Reviews his illness, and, in general, it synthesizes his ideas on metaphysics and literature, medicine and cosmology, and, having recently faced death, the relationship of man to God.It is also autobiographical, and Donne uses his encounter with illness to ponder on the significance of his life as a whole.The Devotions appears here (pp.3-127) with textual apparatus and full commen- tary (pp.129-187), preceded by an 'Introduction', in which the editor discusses the possible nature of Donne's illness, his religion and metaphysics, and the bibliographi- cal details of the book.Each of the twenty-three sections is divided into 'Meditation', 'Expostulation' and 'Prayer'.Professor Raspa, who has a chair of English atUniversite du Quebec a Chicoutimi, has produced a scholarly work which contains many references to early seventeenth-century medicine.It will be of great value therefore to historians of medicine who are concerned with the renaissance, and as an out- standing source it can be thoroughly recommended.
Gargan et al. (Wed,) studied this question.