Poetry and HumanismCape, 1950 - 335 Seiten The strength of the seventeenth-century writers lies in their power to meet a challenge which later religious poets evaded. Donne and his followers are humanists, alive to all new discoveries about the physical world and the nature of man; but they are theocentric humanists, able to reconcile these discoveries with the central tenets of their faith as Christians. This book attempts to trace this reintegration in the work of the Metaphysical poets and of Milton, and suggests that in this reintegration lies the real affinity between seventeenth-century poetry and the Baroque mode in the visual arts. |
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Seite 102
... intellectual satisfaction as for an emotional one . The circumstances of his early life intensified the ardour for learning which he shared with all the humanists of his age . His first training was in the scholastic philosophy ...
... intellectual satisfaction as for an emotional one . The circumstances of his early life intensified the ardour for learning which he shared with all the humanists of his age . His first training was in the scholastic philosophy ...
Seite 110
... intellectual fight to reorientate himself ; by vexing the pool , he argues his ८ way out of the desire to die . To himself , the prospective suicide , Donne says in effect , ' Go on , jump ' - with the result that in his next prose ...
... intellectual fight to reorientate himself ; by vexing the pool , he argues his ८ way out of the desire to die . To himself , the prospective suicide , Donne says in effect , ' Go on , jump ' - with the result that in his next prose ...
Seite 219
... intellectual pride betrays her into thinking herself the argumenta- tive match for one able to reason intuitively ( as angels do ) rather than discursively , as a human being . Feminine intuition never had a more fatal result . And to ...
... intellectual pride betrays her into thinking herself the argumenta- tive match for one able to reason intuitively ( as angels do ) rather than discursively , as a human being . Feminine intuition never had a more fatal result . And to ...
Inhalt
PREFACE | 7 |
TWO ANGLICAN POETS | 22 |
MARLOWES HEROES | 54 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
angels artists Barabas Baroque art beauty body centre century Christ Christian Christina Rossetti Church conflict creation creatures death desire despair devotional Divine Donne's E. M. W. Tillyard earth echo Eighty Sermons Elegie Elizabethan emblem emblem books English epic eternity experience expression faith Fall fame Faustus Faustus's feeling fire glory God's hath heart Heaven heavenly Hell Henry Vaughan Herbert hero heroic human humanist Ibid idea Ignatius his Conclave imagery imagination intellectual Jesuit John Donne knowledge light Lord man's Mannerist Marlowe Marlowe's medieval metaphysical Milton mind nature Oxford Movement Paradise Lost Paradise Regain'd passage perfect philosophy physical poem poetry pride prose Raphael reason reintegration religious poets Renaissance rest Samson Satan sense seventeenth seventeenth-century Silex Scintillans Sonnet soul spirit stanza suggest Sunne symbol Tamburlaine thee theme theocentric things Thomas Vaughan thou thought tion Tractarians Traherne true verse words writings