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Metaphysical Poets: August 14, 2020

The document discusses several 17th century English poets who were part of the metaphysical poetry movement. It focuses on John Donne, considered the founder of metaphysical poetry, and his use of wit and emotion to explore intellectual and spiritual themes. It also summarizes Andrew Marvel's poem "To His Coy Mistress" and metaphysical elements in his work. Finally, it discusses George Herbert and Henry Vaughan as religious metaphysical poets, with Herbert known for his devotional lyrics and Vaughan exploring nature and spirituality.

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Kush Chaudhry
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
511 views5 pages

Metaphysical Poets: August 14, 2020

The document discusses several 17th century English poets who were part of the metaphysical poetry movement. It focuses on John Donne, considered the founder of metaphysical poetry, and his use of wit and emotion to explore intellectual and spiritual themes. It also summarizes Andrew Marvel's poem "To His Coy Mistress" and metaphysical elements in his work. Finally, it discusses George Herbert and Henry Vaughan as religious metaphysical poets, with Herbert known for his devotional lyrics and Vaughan exploring nature and spirituality.

Uploaded by

Kush Chaudhry
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Metaphysical Poets

August 14, 2020

 The  term “metaphysical” means beyond the physical. The major poets of 17th Century
English Literature belonged to this school of metaphysical poetry writing, which explored
and upheld the fusion of intellect and emotion. Literary critic and poet Samuel Johnson first
coined the term “metaphysical poetry” in his book Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets
(1179 – 1781) (Life of Cowlie section). It was also used by John Dryden to describe
Donne’s poetry. Some common metaphysical questions include Does God Exist? Is there a
difference between perception and reality? Is free-choice not existent i.e, is fate pre-
determined? Is consciousness limited to the brain? In this school certain methods were
rigorously followed. They include a rare clarity and freshness of vision, a harmonious
blending of wit and emotion, use of stock metaphors, the abundant use of conceits, use of
environmental images, a lyrical flow of thought and verse and the manifestation of divinity in
nature.

John Donne (1572 – 1631)

All discourse on metaphysical poetry must begin with John Donne who was especially
noted for being hailed as the father of the “metaphysical school of poetry”. He was not only
a poet, but also a lawyer, priest and satirist. Critics describe his style as inventive, strong,
dramatic and sensual – that of a womanizer despite being religious. He wrote Love Poetry,
Religious Poetry and Elegies and Satires. One of his most exemplary love poems is The
Good Morrow, meaning wishing one’s beloved good morning. He compares his beloved and
himself to two hemispheres of the globe to form one complete whole. Another of his love
poems is A Valediction: Forbidden Mourning. His religious poetry includes The Progress of
the Soul and The Anatomy of the World. His satires are a deliberate imitation of the Greek
writer Persius. He also composed poems like The Flea and The Canonization.
In John Donne’s poetry there is a sense of miraculous exemption from time and all its
entanglements. The freedom from temporal and spatial boundaries is one of the foremost
features of Donne’s poetry. He takes into his purview of discussion the universal cause and
explores in details the mysteries of human life and emotions. There is a lucid and candid
expression and a field of joyous liberty. He also composed 26 holy sonnets along with two
other sonnets which are derogatory in nature, after 1610. Their form is quintessentially
Petrarchan and their themes refers to different aspects of his personality. His deep faith in
divinity led him to compose sonnets which were  extensively replete with his sense of
devotion and conviction in love. The sonnets vary greatly in their value. The themes involve
his personal sense of limitations, his fears, his inadequacies and especially his thoughts
about judgement day. They are philosophical speculations about the reality of human
existence. His poetry was a reaction to the fluency and exuberance of Elizabethan poetry.

Andrew Marvel (1621 – 78)

Andrew Marvel is best known for his elaborate poem on the theme of Carpe diem or “Seize
the Day”- To His Coy Mistress. Marvel’s poem is characterized with urbane energy which
flows through the lines of the poem. The sense of romantic vastness and love for his
beloved charged with remarkable intensity has been portrayed most artistically through the
poem. The poem, incorporates various poetic conventions from French and Italian love
poetry. The sense of immediacy is provided by a typical poetic situation. The poet exhorts
his beloved to consummate their love lest time prevents it. As Marvel belongs to the
metaphysical school of poetry, his poems uphold certain significant metaphysical features.
In his poetry we come across an elegance and precision of style, polish and diction, regular
rhyme and meter, persistent use of couplets and extensive irony of theme. He is a rather
intelligent poet. Nevertheless, it is noticeable that in Marvel, there are some variations from
the common features of the metaphysical school. We do identify a ruggedness of style and
a very bold use of colloquialisms of daily conversation – sometimes bordering on the gross.
Perhaps he tried to bring about a fusion between the metaphysical and Jonsonian styles.
His poetry has a haunting, memorable and intellectual quality. T.S. Elliot had once
commented –

“In Marvel’s poetry one may find a tough reasonableness beneath slight lyrical grace.”

Marvel’s other poems include Horatian Ode upon Oliver Cromwell’s return from Ireland.
There are also other poems on Cromwell- The First Anniversary of the Government and
Under His Highness, the Lord Protector. Marvel was clearly appreciating Cromwell’s
government and personality in heroic couplets in the latter. He was a Puritan and his poems
were circulated in manuscripts among his friends, published posthumously. Another of his
famous poems is The Garden.

George Herbert (1593 – 1633)

The rhythm and intensity of Herbert’s poetry resembled those of the Provencal poets.
Herbert’s poetry celebrates life, energy, rhythm and vitality. He is recognized as “one of the
foremost British devotional lyricists.” He has composed 169 poems in 140 stanza patterns.
The most popular of his works is The Temple which is a collection full of faith and fervour
and also subtlety of thought and ornament. His famous poems include Caller, The Quip and
The Pulley. Herbert made extensive use of the technique of conceit. In it, Herbert was
experimenting with ‘Pattern Poetry’ wherein each stanza represents a picture or an image.
His pictorial poems are Easter Winds, The Altar and other religious poems like Trinity
Sunday. In The Windows, he compares a righteous preacher to a glass through which
God’s light shines more effectively than his words. All his works are visually satisfying as
they draw a pattern through the lines. Herbert was introducing a balance of thought and
content in his poetry which conferred a regularity of patterns on his verse. Samuel Taylor
Coleridge wrote of Herbert’s diction that “Nothing can be more pure, manly, or unaffected”.
Legouis Kazamian says that Herbert –

“is the saint of the metaphysical school…often gives an impression of a sort of sublimity”

Henry Vaughan (1621 – 95)

Vaughan is a religious metaphysical poet. He is chiefly known for the religious poetry
contained in Silex Scintillans, published in 1650, with a second part published in 1655. He
was greatly inspired by George Herbert. He uses several tricks of Herbert’s style like abrupt
openings, ejaculations and whimsical titles. He found God not in the Bible but in nature. In
his poem The Retreat, he quite symbolically explores the retreat into one’s childhood, from
childhood back to infancy, from infancy to the pre-lapsarian stage of the fall before the birth
of human life on Earth. Vaughan explores the belief that the divine almighty power is
invested in nature or the environment that surrounds us. He says in it –

“They are all gone into the world of light”

We are born for a purpose upon the completion of which we would have to return to the
Almighty. It is this one governing impulse, that characterizes Vaughan’s poetry. In
Childhood, he yearns for a place full of love and harmony, a utopian world that is. He is
preoccupied with his religious philosophies and his poems are like a prayer invoking divine
presence. They paved the way for the Caroline school of poetry (the poetry of Herrick,
Waller and Lovelace). The question of whether William Wordsworth knew Vaughan’s work
before writing his ode Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood has
puzzled and fascinated those seeking the origins of English romanticism. Both poems
clearly draw on a common tradition of romantic images to heighten their speakers’
presentations of the value of an earlier time and the losses experienced in reaching
adulthood. His style is free from complications as seen in the poem The World.

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