Title: 17th Century
117th Century
2John Donne (1572-1631), by an unknown painter,
ca. 1595
3An older John Donne
4John Donne
- Roman Catholic
- Appointed secretary to high official in QEIs
court - 1601- married Anne More (father opposed and was
actually illegal because she was a minor) - 1614- converted to Anglicanism- became a priest
- Became Dean of St. Pauls Cathedral- highly
influential minister - Twelve children, five died in infancy
5- Deep learning
- Dramatic wit
- Metaphorical style
- Intellectual poetry
- Two categories of poems metaphysical and
religious
6John Donne (1572-1631)
- Metaphysics (OED) The branch of philosophy that
deals with the first principles of things or
reality, including questions about being,
substance, time and space, causation, change, and
identity theoretical philosophy as the ultimate
science of being and knowing.
7Metaphysical Conceit
- Conceit (Silvae Rhetoricae)
- An extended metaphor. Unlike allegory, which
tends to have one-to-one correspondences, a
conceit typically takes one subject and explores
the metaphoric possibilities in the qualities
associated with that subject.
8Metaphysical Poetry
- Rhythms of colloquial (spoken) English
- Speaker often sounds blunt, angry, brooding, or
as if he is thinking out loud - Always using brains- highly intellectual poetry
- Contains conceits metaphors
9Song
- Love poem
- Cynical view of love (disillusioned)
- Playful skepticism about finding true love and a
faithful woman - An example of his unusual comparisons
(child-mandrake catch- a falling star) - Judges women harshly
- Hyperbole and metaphor
10Holy Sonnets
- Divine poems, written before 1615
- Meditations on sin, death, salvation, moving
between extremes to examine the possibility of
redemption
11Holy Sonnet 10
- Sonnet, but not a conventional structure
- An example of his religious poetry
- Death itself will die- eternal life
- Death depends on fate, chance, and kings
- Scornful tone almost pities death
12Meditation 17
- Deeply religious
- All mankind is connected of another
- Compares church to a continent and a living
organism - Affliction- a treasure because it will bring man
closer to God - Death as a means to an end
13Civil War
- Stuart monarchs James I (1603-25), Charles I
(1625-49) - 1629 Charles I dissolves Parliament
- 1642 Civil War begins Parliament (dominated by
Puritans, Roundheads) vs. kings army
(Cavaliers) - 1649 Charles I tried for treason and executed
- Interregnum Puritan Oliver Cromwell (d. 1658)
rules the Commonwealth as Lord Protector - 1660 Restoration of Stuart monarchy under Charles
II
14Above Charles I (1600-49), by an unknown
artist Right Charles II (1630-1685), ca. 1685
15A Cavalier From French for horseman a knight
or horsed warrior, typically one who is also a
courtly gentleman Specifically, the Cavaliers
were those who fought on the Royalist side to
support Charles I in the war between him and
Parliament
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17Cavalier Poets (Sons of Ben)
- Robert Herrick (Anglican priest, friend of
Jonson 1591-1674) - Henry Vaughan (Welsh, fought for Royalist cause
1622-95) - Richard Lovelace (courtier of Charles I, fought
for Royalist cause 1618-57)
18Richard Lovelace (1618-57)
19The Chameleon Andrew Marvell (1621-78) Wrote
poems in praise of both Republicans /
revolutionaries and Royalists Friend of Milton (a
Puritan), but satirized the Restoration regime
under Charles II
20Right Nicholas Ferrar and George Herbert in a
window (installed 1933) at the church of St.
Andrew, parish of Fugglestone-cum-Bemerton, to
which Herbert came as a deacon in 1630