Musical settings Several British composers have set Donne's sonnets to music.
Hubert Parry included one of the sonnets, "At the round earth's imagined corners", in his collection of six choral
motets,
Songs of Farewell. The pieces were first performed at a concert at the
Royal College of Music on 22 May 1916, and a review in
The Times stated that the setting of Donne's sonnet was "one of the most impressive short choral works written in recent years".
Benjamin Britten (1913–1976) set nine of the sonnets for
soprano or
tenor and piano in his
song cycle The Holy Sonnets of John Donne, Op. 35 (1945). Britten wrote the songs in August 1945 for tenor
Peter Pears, his lover and a musical collaborator since 1934. However, Britten was inspired to compose the work after visiting
concentration camps in Germany after
World War II ended as part of a concert tour for Holocaust survivors organised by violinist
Yehudi Menuhin. Britten was shocked by the experience and Pears later asserted that the horrors of the
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp were an influence on the composition. Britten set the following nine sonnets: :1. Oh my blacke soule! :2. Batter my heart :3. O might those sighes and teares :4. Oh, to vex me :5. What if this present :6. Since she whom I loved :7. At the round earth's imagined corners :8. Thou hast made me :9. Death, be not proud According to Britten biographer
Imogen Holst, Britten's ordering of Donne's sonnets indicates that he "would never have set a cruel subject to music without linking the cruelty to the hope of redemption." Britten's placement of the sonnets are first those whose themes explore conscience, unworthiness and death (Songs 1–5), to the personal melancholy of the sixth song ("Since she whom I loved") written by Donne after the death of his wife, and the last three songs (7–9) the idea of resurrection.
Sonnet XIV and the Trinity site It is thought that theoretical physicist and
Manhattan Project director
J. Robert Oppenheimer (1904–1967), regarded as the "father of the Atomic Bomb", named the site of the first nuclear weapon test site
"Trinity" after a phrase from Donne's Sonnet XIV. At the time of the preparations for the test on 16 July 1945 Oppenheimer reportedly was reading
Holy Sonnets. In 1962, Lieutenant General
Leslie Groves (1896–1970) wrote to Oppenheimer about the origin of the name, asking if he had chosen it because it was a name common to
rivers and peaks in the West and would not attract attention. Oppenheimer replied: Historian
Gregg Herken believes that Oppenheimer named the site in reference to Donne's poetry as a tribute to his deceased mistress, psychiatrist and physician
Jean Tatlock (1914–1944)—the daughter of J.S.P. Tatlock, English literature professor, Chaucer expert and philologist at the University of Michigan — who introduced Oppenheimer to the works of Donne. Tatlock, who suffered from severe depression, committed suicide in January 1944 after the conclusion of her affair with Oppenheimer. The history of the Trinity test, and the stress and anxiety of the Manhattan Project's workers in the preparations for the test was the focus of the 2005 opera
Doctor Atomic by contemporary American composer
John Adams, with
libretto by
Peter Sellars. At the end of Act I, the character of Oppenheimer sings an aria whose text is derived from Sonnet XIV ("Batter my heart, three-person'd God;—"). ==Notes==