We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

Lines 9-10 Summary

Get out the microscope, because we’re going through this poem line-by-line.

Lines 9-10

Yet call not this long life ; but think that I
Am, by being dead, immortal ; can ghosts die ?

  • The poem's final lines are typical of a lot of English Renaissance poetry: a ridiculously clever rhyming couplet that simultaneously sums up the poem and flips it on its head.
  • By this point, we were tempted to call the speaker's condition "insanity," but apparently he thinks we will prefer "long life."
  • Just so we're clear, the speaker has described living 2,400 years since "yesterday."
  • Let's do the computation here: 20 + 40 + 40 + 100 + 200 + 1000 + 1000 = 2,400.
  • If you are now thinking that 2,400 divided by 100 equals the number of hours in a single day, we think you're on the right track.
  • He doesn't want us to say that he has long life simply because he has lived so long. Instead, he introduces a new element for us to ponder: he's dead. That's right: he "died" when he and his lover parted.
  • Because he has died, and people in the Renaissance believed in immortality after death, he must be "immortal." But it's not a good immortality. He has unfinished business back on earth.
  • Without her, he is a mere shadow of himself, a ghost. The final words are, "can ghosts die?", which is a rhetorical question.
  • No, ghosts cannot die, and Donne is stuck haunting the world until he meets his lover again. But you might get the impression that the question also contains the thought, "Wow, I wish I could just die rather than being so obsessed with my lover."
  • It's a bittersweet ending, to be sure.