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Metaphysical Poetry Essay Research Paper Discuss the (стр. 2 из 2)

necessitated these occasions of profound reverence and occasional

enlightenment, in a journey through their own spirituality. Poetry

was writing for private readership, a confessional in the form of a

diary, debating with themselves and God. The status of body, that of

men and women, the relationship between themselves with one another,

and God were all predominati! ng factors in their writing. Poetry was

written private realms for a private readership with no public address.

A parody may even be draw between Milton circumstances and his vision

of Satan, during on of his profound moments of reflection:

Me miserable! which was shall I fly

Infinite wrath, and infinite despair?

Which way I fly is hell; myself am hell;12

I may be useful to think of Satan in the light of ‘likening spiritual

to corporal forms’, partly as representative of the public world of

politics and rebellion, and his presentation as an exploration of the

ambitions and failures, the egotism and despair, that public life

offers. In this his role is therefore complemented in the poem by the

private, domestic world of Adam and Eve, in whose interpersonal

relations are enacted the possibilities and problems of freedom and

self-restraint. In metaphysical poetry the body was seen as a secular

vessel, embodied with a spiritual love of the world, attached to a

humanist concept that pre mined to embody God within the

body of man. Colonialism expanse across the America’s induced imagery

through language; exploring, discovery, conquering, divine protection,

geometry, geography, astronomy, navigation and science were the

foundations on which metaphysical poetry evidently propelled itself to

growing popularity at a time of general social, political and religious

unrest. The Sunne Rising also created by Donne was slightly more

satirical, yet maintaining that man was ultimately the ruler of his own

world, and God being embodied in wherever he be therein. The sun is

employed as a metaphysical conceit, with man being able to block it

and the other element with a single wink.

Thy beams, so reverend and strong

Why shouldst thou think?

I could eclipse and cloud them with a winke,13

With reference of imperial history he no longer needs to explore to

India, for it is already traced and recorded on a map before him. His

self-elevation and lack of humanity are comparable to that of Milton’s

Satan. Around the same period other works of post-colonial art were be

developed, no doubt heavily influenced by contemporary issues. One

such example is Shakespeare’s final work and tragi-comedy The Tempest

(1611), interposed and concerned with the theme of the elevation of one

myth above another, recurrent impact of colonialism, morality and the

loss of innocence. Shakespeare’s unique style of writing is as a

direct result of a plethora of influences, one of which was

‘Montaigne’s essay Of Cannibals which discussed the value and the way

of life of societies which had not been affected by civilisation of a

European type. In addition to this essay a pamphlet circulate called

The Discovery of the Bermudas , otherwise called the Isle of Divels,

may have played a crucial role. This pamphlet described the bold

adventures of a religious group of colonist travelling in a convoy of

ships from London to Virginia. However during the voyage, the flagship

was separated from the remainder! of the convoy in a storm. The

maverick ship inadvertently blew towards Bermuda before being tossed

onto some rocks. The colonists lived on the islands until they had

built boats in which to continue their voyage. The story of their

almost miraculous survival aroused considerable interest in England and

echoes of their adventure can be found in The Tempest. With little

regard of the more elaborate themes images the tale is one of a landing

on a island, a veritable paradise, already inhabited by Caliban (often

spelt ‘canibal’ by Elizabethans by transposing the letters ‘n’ and ‘l’)

a wild, deformed uncivilised beast (representative of native settlers),

who is quickly manipulated, overthrown and enslaved by Prospero (King

of Milan). Caliban and his environment are parallelled to those of the

Garden of Eden and Caliban himself is elemental. As the story

progresses and the tyrannical relationship between the two continually

increasing, Caliban’s intellect is worthy of argument against Prospero

for having denied him his birthright. Prospero’s aim of teaching

Caliban was to increase his indisputable control over him, by

subverting him into an incomplete and image of his master, defective of

all other attributes ie of magic. Caliban, similar to every colonised

people before him adapted his adopted culture and power of speech

inflic! ted upon him as a weapon to communicate his own indignation

and animosity towards his oppressor. And despite being frequently

referred to as a crude savage, disfigured, and evil Caliban exemplifies

a better set of values than most of the ‘civilised’ characters in the

play. This image derives from speculation regarding the popular

English belief that uncivilised pagans were below their civilised

counterparts in the hierarchy which had God at its apex and inanimate

nature at it base. However a few individuals were beginning to

question this assumption and ‘there is evidence in the play that

Shakespeare believed that the corruption in a civilised man was more

abhorrent than any natural albeit uncivilised behaviour.’14 At a time

when many books and sermons, effected a characteristic Renaissance

union between moral and political implications, and concerned

themselves with the task of persuading the public that exploration was

an honourable and indeed a sanctified activity and Drake was compared

to Moses, combining voyaging and mystagogy a practical justification

of “the lawfulnesse of Discovering”. It was a somewhat sophistical

argument by Purchas, in favour of the propriety of usurping the

rights of native populations, and an insistence, half-mystagogic,

half-propagandist, on the temperate, fruitful nature of the New World,

and the unspoilt purity of its inhabitants. ‘The True Declaration

defends colonizing, on the ground that it diffuses the true religion

and has authority from Solomon’s trade to Ophir (whether it lay in the

East or, as Columbus thought15 in the West Indies). There is room for

all; and in any case the natives cannot be regarded as civilized

people.’16 The revelations of The Tempest of watching Caliban suffer at

the hands of Prospero affords interesting material for examination.

Caliban endures his abuse and insistent that he has deprived him of

what is rightfully his, and this perhaps may have been Shakespeare’s

way of confronting his contemporary pro-colonising audience with the

problems of ownership of newly discovered lands.

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