Title: Early 17th c. Verse
1Early 17th c. Verse
- A Tale of Two Schools?
- The Cavalier Poets---Sons of Ben
- John Donne and the Metaphysicals
2Some Traditional Cavalier Characteristics
- Balance//Parallelism
- Polite Courtly Diction and Tone
- Octosyllabic Couplets and Caesurae
- ExampleStill to be Neat (p. 1444/)
3Still to be neat, still to be dressed, As you
were going to a feast Still to be powdered,
still perfumed Lady, it is to be presumed,
Though art's hid causes are not found, All is
not sweet, all is not sound. Give me a look,
give me a face, That makes simplicity a grace
Robes loosely flowing, hair as free Such sweet
neglect more taketh me Than all the adulteries
of art They strike mine eyes, but not my heart.
4Metaphysical Poets
- Origin of term
- Some characteristics
- Colloquialism (Jonson Donne, for not keeping of
accent deserved hanging) - Intellectual complexity
- Argumentation
- Anti-Petrarchanism
- Metaphysical conceits (discordia
concorsharmonious discord)
5How Ive Organized this Unit
- Religion, Politics, Love
- Elegy 19 (p. 1283/1393)
- The Two Schools
6John Donne
7John Donne
- Jack Donne/Dr. Donne
- Keep track of poetic persona
8The Flea (p. 1263/1373)
- Argumentation
- Metaphysical conceit
- Mixture of secular and religious language
9Secular/Religious language
- The Canonization (p. 1267/1377)
- The Relic (p. 1280/1390)
10A Valediction Forbidding Mourning(p.
1275/1385)
- Blending of religious and secular
- Colloquial, intellectually complex, argumentative
11Carpe Diem Poems
- Herrick To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
(p. 1659/1762) - Trochaic tetrameter
- (Trochee stressed, unstressed)
- Flow, movement
- Classical sources
12Carpe Diem
- Marvell To His Coy Mistress (p. 1703/1796)
- Iambic tetrameter couplets
- (iamb unstressed, stressed)
- Begins with familiar courtly elementshyperbole,
blazon - A darker turn
13Jonson, To Penshurst (p. 1434/1546)
- Sidney family home
- Country house poem
- How is this poem structured?
- Shaped through description of the estate
- Awareness of social hierarchy
- (peasants to kingJonsons background)
- Time also adds order
- Negative contrastclassic Jonson?
14Lanyer Cookham (1319/1436)
- Elegiac (ll. 7, 9, 14, 128)
- How do pastimes differ from Penshurst?
- (line 161)
- Virtuous women (l. 81 ff)
- Preserving the estate through poem (lines 205-210
15Marvell
- An Horatian Ode p. 1712/1806
- Whats an ode? An Horatian Ode?
- Historical situation
- Cromwell as a force of Nature
- Depiction of execution
- Comparison to Rome
- Whose side is he on?
16Marvell
- Bermudas p. 1698/1791
- About a group of Puritan exiles
- Whats left out of this poem?
17Donnes Holy Sonnets
- Calvinism
- Sonnet 1 1295/1410
- Sonnet 9 Direct Address to God p.1296/1412
- Sonnet 10 Personifying Death
- P. 1296/1412
- Sonnet 14 Violent relationship to God
- P. 12971413
18Herrick Corrinas Going A-Mayingp. 1658/1760
- Archbishop Laud
- The Book of Sports
- May Day
- Elements of Carpe Diem/Pastoral
19Herbert The Collar p. 1619/1720
- Shifts in voicing
- Shifts in tense
- Order and outburstexpressing spiritual struggle
- Children of God
- Multiple meanings of the title