42-) English Literature
Metaphysical poets
A
metaphysical poet, any of the poets in 17th-century England who inclined to the
personal and intellectual complexity and concentration that is displayed in the
poetry of John Donne, the chief of the Metaphysicals. Others include Henry Vaughan,
Andrew Marvell, John Cleveland, and Abraham Cowley as well as, to a lesser
extent, George Herbert and Richard Crashaw.
Their
work is a blend of emotion and intellectual ingenuity, characterized by conceit
or “wit”—that is, by the sometimes violent yoking together of apparently
unconnected ideas and things so that the reader is startled out of his
complacency and forced to think through the argument of the poem. Metaphysical
poetry is less concerned with expressing feeling than with analyzing it, with the
poet exploring the recesses of his consciousness. The boldness of the literary
devices used—especially obliquity, irony, and paradox—are often reinforced by a
dramatic directness of language and by rhythms derived from that of living
speech.
Esteem
for Metaphysical poetry never stood higher than in the 1930s and ’40s, largely
because of T.S. Eliot’s influential essay “The Metaphysical Poets” (1921), a
review of Herbert J.C. Grierson’s anthology Metaphysical Lyrics & Poems of
the Seventeenth Century. In this essay Eliot argued that the works of these men
embody a fusion of thought and feeling that later poets were unable to achieve
because of a “dissociation of sensibility,” which resulted in works that were
either intellectual or emotional but not both at once. In their own time,
however, the epithet “metaphysical” was used pejoratively: in 1630 the Scottish
poet William Drummond of Hawthornden objected to those of his contemporaries
who attempted to “abstract poetry to metaphysical ideas and scholastic quiddities.”
At the end of the century, John Dryden censured Donne for affecting “the
metaphysics” and for perplexing “the minds of the fair sex with nice
speculations of philosophy when he should engage their hearts . . . with the
softnesses of love.” Samuel Johnson, in referring to the learning that their
poetry displays, also dubbed them “the metaphysical poets,” and the term has
continued in use ever since. Eliot’s adoption of the label as a term of praise
is arguably a better guide to his personal aspirations about his own poetry
than to the Metaphysical poets themselves; his use of metaphysical
underestimates these poets’ debt to lyrical and socially engaged verse.
Nonetheless, the term is useful for identifying the often-intellectual
character of their writing.
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