Metaphysical Poetry
1. Historical and Cultural Background
1603 Death of Elizabeth; accession of James VI of Scotland as James I of England,
union of the crowns of England and Scotland
1604-8 Shakespeare’s plays including Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Antony and
Cleopatra, Coriolanus
1605 Gunpowder plot
Bacon, Advancement of Learning
1608-13 Shakespeare’s last plays including Tempest, Winter’s Tale, Henry VIII
1611 ’Authorized’ version of the Bible
1613 Globe Theatre burned
1616 Death of Shakespeare
Ben Jonson, Works
1620 Pilgrim fathers sail for America
1621 Donne appointed Dean of St Paul’s
1625 Death of James I; accession of Charles I
1633 Donne, Poems (posthumously), Herbert, The Temple
1637 Milton, Lycidas
1642 Theatres closed by order of parliament
1642-49 The English Civil War
1649 Trial and Execution of Charles I
1650 Marvell, ’An Horatian Ode’
1651 Hobbes, Leviathan
1653 Cromwell becomes Lord Protector
1658 Death of Cromwell
1660 Restoration of Charles II; reopening of theatres
1662 Restoration of Church of England and final revision of Book of Common
Prayer
2. The Literary Scene
Elizabethan conventions, genres and topics survive into Jacobean times but there appears a new style and frame of thinking in poetry. The ’New Science’ of the age, following
Copernicus’ (1473-1543), Galileo’s (1564-1642), Bruno’s (1548-1600) and Sir Francis
Bacon’s ideas challenges age old assumptions and promotes, in poetry, genres marked with distance, scepticism and self-doubt, like satire, meditative verse, or epigram. The new poetry exhibits an almost modern interest in psychology and a zest to show the world as it is, not as much as it should be. A small but influential group of poets, later to be called by Dr Johnson ’Metaphysicals’ choose to break free from Tudor conventions and engraft poetry anew by extreme exploitation of the capacities of language through conceits, elaborate puns, far-fetched similes and, very importantly, by borrowing
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s and images from non-poetical fields like medicine, cartography, botany, gardening, law, astronomy, astrology, alchemy or physics. Another standard procedure of this kind of poetry is to forcibly bring together the sublime and the ephemeral, the sacred and the profane, invariably resulting in the profanisation of the former. (C.f. Donne talking about a flea as marriage temple in The Flea.)
The poems are mostly short, colloquial, witty and often rather aggressive towards the addressee (at times even towards the reader c.f. Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress.) They often
and mockingly reason where there is no place for logic i.e. in matters of love and physical desire (see the ’primitive’ rhetoric in The Flea or in To His Coy Mistress) and have a similar
tendency to be sensual about thoughts. As Dr Samuel Johnson spotted so
well ’(Metaphysicals) wrote rather as beholders than partakers of human nature; as beings looking upon good and evil, impassive and at leisure; as Epicurean deities making remarks on the actions of men, and the vicissitudes of life, without interest and without emotion. Their courtship was void of fondness, and their lamentation of sorrow. Their wish was only to say what they hoped had never been said before.”
Their contemporaries held Donne, Herbert, Marvell and the other ’university wits’ in high acclaim and their fame was in the ascendent during the Restoration as well. Then, for almost two centuries, they lay forgotten until the 1921 publication, by Grierson, of the volume Metaphysical Poems. T.S. Eliot (great poet and critic of the time) celebrated them, especially Donne, in an essay, Metaphysical Poets, in these words:
’A thought to Donne was an experience; it modified his sensibility. When a poet’s mind is perfectly equipped for its work, it is constantly amalgamating disparate experience; the ordinary man’s experience is chaotic, irregular, fragmentary. Tha latter falls in love, or reads Spinoza, and these two experiences have nothing to do with each other, or with the noise of the typewriter or the smell of cooking; in the mind of the poet these experiences are always forming new wholes…In the seventeenth century a dissociation of sensibility set in, from which we have never recovered.’
Feminist critics from the 1970s on have led many a jolly attack against the unquestionably male-centred world of these poets. Now in feminist circles it is agreed that despite appearances much of secular Metaphysical poetry was written by disappointed men to console equally disappointed men. Female addressees are either imaginary or long departed, courtship a fantasy, returned love rare
John Donne, George Herbert, Andrew Marvell
As to their lives and work study either A. Sanders’ The Short Oxford History of English
Literature or Margaret Drabble (ed.) The Oxford Companion to English Literature, both of
which are available in our library. Here follows a reading of Donne’s The Ecstasy:
- the poem is a mini erotic narrative, which, despite the use of ’we’ can be seen as a
seduction piece
- the reader is made into some kind of voyeur ’If any, so by love refin’d,/ That he soul’s
language understood,/And by good love were grown all mind,/Within convenient
distance stood…’
- shorthand, sexualized beginning landscape
- important and insidious use of ’we’: forced intimacy
- Donne deliberately abandons Petrarchan language and replaces it by contemporary
scientific idiom
- lurking fertility image int he background, showing the way to the couple
- the scene is almost comic: the lovers are paralysed by desire
- speaks about ’armies’: the suggestion of contest, not only of togetherness
- ’ecstasy’ = your soul is out of your body, very often used in spiritual experience (c.f.
Christ on the cross) or in the visual arts of the age (see the many representations of St
Theresa of Avila in baroque paintings, or Bernini’s famous statue)
- till line 48 the souls are regarded as having physiology: technical things happen
between them
- also the imagery of alchemy (c.f. Love’s Alchemy by Donne), he speaks about the
experience of these souls in terms of a chemical experiment: he argues (following
Plato) that only by being mingled does one gain lucidity, control, knowledge of
oneself
- the whole poem balances (as do so many of Donne’s early poems) on a fine line: are
we to take it seriously or is it a comedy?
- c.f. Book IV. of Castiglione’s The Courtier on why lovers want to kiss each other: so
that through their mouths their souls can meet
- sexuality is a way of expressing yourself, says Donne, and if you flee from your
sexuality you ’keep a prince in prison’
- ’the subtle knot that makes us man’: realization that man is a complex thing, a’knot’ of
sensuality and intellect (a deeply Platonical argument yet again) - finally, Donne hands his poem over to the reader: it is up to you how you see us – if
we appear like animals to you, you are to be blamed for lack of imagination and
refinement, if you see us elevated as written in the text, you are also elevated and
sophisticated. Or very stupid indeed, for to have taken this little rhetorical exercise too
seriously
- indeed, sometimes the best way with Donne is not to take him quite seriously - extremely complicated argumentation all through the poem, presented often by using
other people’s languages like alchemists’, astrologers’
- Donne is often identified by readers with power, masculinity, Englishness, as
wrestling with the language, as an aggressive innovator, a poetical father-figure almost.
Often provoking patricide, by the way
- already by some contemporaries (Carew, e.g.) it was realized that Donne made poetry
difficult, perhaps thus provoking readers to give up reading automatisms of the
threadbare Petrarchan convention
- Wyatt and Shakespeare are also difficult to read but Donne also appears complicated:
he wanted difficulty seen at once
- Donne often bullies the reader, buttonholes him all the time, establishes a complicated,
ambiguous ralationship with him
- some readers hate him for his sophistication, coolness, for the almost acrobatic
deployment of ambiguous meaning in his poetry
- women-readers are often put off by his ’textual harassment’, a term coined by
changing ’sexual harassment’ and meaning instances of the text insulting its reader.
- Donne is one of those poets who, if you do not like at first sight, are unlikely to
become your favourites: divides opinion to the extremes
3. Things to do alone
- Read William Empson’s Donne and the New Philosophy in: Essays on
RenaissanceLiterature Vol. I. ed. by John Haffenden, Cambridge University Press,
1993.
- Study representations of St Theresa of Avila. What seems to be common in them?
- Read Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress. What, in your opinion, might offend the female
reader in that poem?
- The early 17th century abounds in conceits. Find a good dictionary definition of the
term and look for examples, literary and visual.
- Read Herbert’s Easter Wings. Find the joke in it.