Title: The Metaphysical Period
1The Metaphysical Period
2- Metaphysical concerns are the common subject of
their poetry, which investigates the world by
rational discussion of its phenomena rather than
by intuition or mysticism.
http//www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/metaintro.htm
3- Reacting against the deliberately smooth and
sweet tones of much 16th-century verse, the
metaphysical poets adopted a style that is
energetic, uneven, and rigorous. (Johnson decried
its roughness and violation of decorum, the
deliberate mixture of different styles.) It has
also been labelled the 'poetry of strong lines'.
http//www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/metaintro.htm
4AP termsDefine and categorizeWord, Style, Form,
or Technique
- Irony
- Pun
- Couplet
- Novel
- Epigram
- Feminist
- Metaphor
- Dialect
- Alliteration
- Repetition
Epic poem Lyric poem Conceit Denotation Diction Pr
overb Sonnet Mood Paradox Simile
Personification Tone Flashback Satire Rhyme Antith
esis Colloquial Controlling image Anecdote Rhyme
scheme
5John Milton
- John Milton was born in London. His mother Sarah
Jeffrey, a very religious person, was the
daughter of a merchant sailor. His father, also
named John, had risen to prosperity as a
scrivener or law writer - he also composed music.
http//www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jmilton.htm
6- At the age of twelve Milton was admitted to St
Paul's School near his home and five years later
he entered Christ's College, Cambridge. During
this period, while considering himself destined
for the ministry, he began to write poetry in
Latin, Italian, and English.
7- In 1651 Milton became blind, but like Jorge Luis
Borges centuries later, blindness helped him to
stimulate his verbal richness. "He sacrificed his
sight, and then he remembered his first desire,
that of being a poet," Borges wrote in one of his
lectures. One of his assistants was the poet and
satirist Andrew Marvell (1621-78), who spoke for
him in Parliament, when his political opinions
arouse much controversy.
8- After the Restoration of Charles II in 1660,
Milton was arrested as a noted defender of the
Commonwealth, but was soon released. Milton paid
a massive fine for his opposition. Besides public
burning of EIKONKLASTES (1649) and the first
DEFENSIO (1651) in Paris and Toulouse, Milton
escaped from more punishment after Restoration,
but he became a relatively poor man. The
manuscript of Paradise Lost he sold for 5 to
Samuel Simmons, and was promised another 5 if
the first edition of 1,300 copies sold out.
9- The poem tells a biblical story of Adam and Eve,
with God, and Lucifer (Satan), who is thrown out
of Heaven to corrupt humankind. Satan, the most
beautiful of the angels, is at his most
impressive he wakes up, on a burning lake in
Hell, to find himself surrounded by his stunned
followers. He has been defeated in the War of
Heaven.
10- The theme of Fall and expulsion from Eden in
Paradise Lost had been in Milton's mind from
1640s. His ambition was to compose an epic poem
to rival the works of ancient writers, such as
Homer and Virgil, whose grand vision in Aeneid
left traced in his poem.
11Paradise Lost
- Milton created a powerful and sympathetic
portrait of Lucifer. His character bears
similarities with Shakespeare's hero-villains
Iago and Macbeth, whose intellectual nihilism is
transformed into metaphysical drama. - Some critics have a problem with Lucifer being
connected with heroes.
12Paradise Lost
- Milton's view influenced deeply Romantic poets
William Blake and Percy Bysshe Shelley, who saw
Satan as the real hero of the poem and a rebel
against the tyranny of Heaven.
13Paradise Lost
- Many other works of art have been inspired by
Paradise Lost, among them Joseph Haydn's oratorio
The Creation, Alexander Pope's The Rape of the
Lock and The Dunciad, John Keat's poem Endymion,
Lord Byron's The Vision of Judgment, satanic
Sauron in J.R.R. Tolkien's saga The Lord of the
Rings.
14Structure
- Epic
- begins with an invocation
- The story continues in medias res (in the middle
of the story) - -just like Beowulf
- high, lofty language
- -just like Beowulf
15Purpose of PL
- Milton wrote Paradise Lost not long after the
civil war in England. - Could have been written to explain the suffering
or to give meaning to the suffering after the war.
16- http//www.dartmouth.edu/milton/reading_room/pl/b
ook_1/index.shtml
17Invocation (lines 1 26)
- On whom does Milton call to help him tell
- the story?
18What does Milton say he wants to explain first?
- What caused Adam and Eve to fall from grace and
break Gods command.
Satan
How is Satan described?
Direct or indirect characterization?
19- Summarize the story of Adam and Eve as
- Milton tells it.
How is the fall of Adam and Eve connected to the
fall of Satan and his league of demons?
20Hell (lines 60 77)
Who is Beelzebub?
21- What does Beelzebub say to Satan? (line 84 - )
What is Satans reaction to his fall into Hell?
(lines 94-99)
What do they plan to do?
22Evil
- Stubborn
- Vengeful
- Spiteful
- How is this portrayed in lines 125 155?
23Anti-/Heroic qualities of Satan
24Physical description of Satan
25Symbolism of chains
- Gods hold on Satan?
- Hatred?
- Lack of ambition?
26Word, style, form, and technique
- Word
- syntax ..but rather darkness visible
-
- diction descriptions of Hell, Satan, etc.
-
- Style
- sentence structure
- long supporting clauses
- shorter main clauses
-
27- Form
- epic
- high language
- invocation
- in medias res
- Technique
- indirect characterization
- allusion
- comparing Satan to creatures from other
literary works
28Sonnets of Milton
- Analyze using list of AP terms
29Satire so far
- Gullivers Travels
- Political satire
- Tories and Whigs
- Protestants and Catholics
- Warfare Science and Technology
- Societal satire
- Human nature
30Satire so far
- Animal Farm
- Political satire
- Stalin
- Trotsky
- Communism
- Karl Marx Modernization/Industrialization
31Satire so far
- Paradise Lost
- Religious/societal satire
- Sufferings of war
- Fall of man
- Defeat of the establishment
- Righteousness of a higher power
32Is satire always funny?
- Remember the definition of satire
- writing that exposes or finds fault
- Sometime funny sometimes not
33- Imagine that you would always have someone in
your life at your beck and call. In a journal
entry or informal essay, describe all the things
that you would expect this person to do for you.
http//cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/miller5/
chapter8/custom3/deluxe-content.html
34I Want a Wife
- Prentice Hall
- White - 395
As you read.
Brady uses a sarcastic, or even bitter, tone to
highlight how unfair she thinks the roles of
wives are. Discuss what you think might have led
her to this sarcasm or bitterness. Be
imaginative, and use clues from the essay to help
you shape your story.
35As you read.
- Brady uses a sarcastic, or even bitter, tone to
highlight how unfair she thinks the roles of
wives are. Discuss what you think might have led
her to this sarcasm or bitterness. Be
imaginative, and use clues from the essay to help
you shape your story.
36Subject and Purpose
- Is Brady being fair? Justify.
- Why did she write this?
37(No Transcript)
38Whats In Your Toothpaste?
Prentice Hall White - 183
As you read.
- Did you know some or all of the ingredients?
Were you surprised or shocked by what ingredients
are actually in toothpaste? Are you now going to
try to find a more "natural" toothpaste?
39- Bodanis' description is intentionally
shocking--linking the ingredients to substances
that we would never consider putting in our
mouths. - Divide into three groups.
- Group A Chalk, and titanium dioxideGroup B
Glycerine glycol, seaweedGroup C Detergent,
formaldehyde - To what does the author link these items? Why?
40(No Transcript)
41Homework
- Write a satire in the vein of I Want a Wife or
Whats In Your Toothpaste - One page