An Essay On Man
An Essay On Man
An Essay On Man
Pope
In these lines the man is placed face to face with his
identity, without parody the good God.
Section I (1-52): Section I argues that man should not pry into
Gods affairs but rather study himself, especially his nature,
powers, limits, and frailties.
She actually intends for man to understand his place in
the universe, the classical meaning of Know thyself is
that man should look inwards for truth rather than
outwards. Having spent most of the first epistle
describing mans relationship to God as well as his fellow
creatures, Popes true meaning of the phrase is clear. He
then confuses the issue by endeavoring to convince man
to avoid the presumptuousness of studying Gods
creation through natural science. Science has given man
the tools to better understand Gods creation, but its
intoxicating power has caused man to imitate God. It
seems that man must look outwards to gain any
understanding of his divine purpose but avoid excessive
analysis of what he sees. To do so would be to assume
the role of God.
An essay on Criticism
An epigram is a short statement similar to making a point
in prose, but it is used specifically in verse.
"An Essay on Criticism" is directed not to the reader, but
to the would-be critic.
It is written in a type of rhyming verse called heroic
couplets.
Not only does this piece provide the budding critic with
sound advice as well as criticism, it also provides an
insight into the "chief literary ideals of Pope's age."
One epigram notes that often mistakes are singularly
made, affecting only the individual, but mistakes take on
enormous ramifications when placed in verse.
A Fool might once himself alone expose,
Now One in Verse makes many more in Prose.
This is his first warning, for the epigrams in this piece
deal primarily with advice for the would-be critic, along
with warnings and pointers. Another epigram notes that it
is hard to find genius in poets, but rarer still to find a
critic with good taste. Here Pope sets his sights
specifically on the critic.
In Poets as true Genius is but rare,
True Taste as seldom is the Critick's Share;
A valediction Forbidding
Mourning- by John Donne
the title reflects the content of the piece: a farewell. The
poem is thus in the tradition of the cong damour, a
consolation when lovers part.
The poem begins with the image of virtuous men mildly
accepting death. The separation of body and soul is so
gentle that those friends surrounding the dying cannot
tell whether the men are alive or not. So, Donne says,
should he and his beloved part, because they do not want
to reveal the quality of their love to the uninitiated. Here,
then, is the first reason to forbid mourning.
Through a series of elaborate metaphors, Donne offers a
second reason. When an earthquake occurs, causing only
small cracks in the ground, everyone is disturbed and
regards the event as ominous, but when planets move
apart, though the distances are great, no harm results.
Earthly lovers, Donne continues, cannot accept
separation; they fear it as people do earthquakes,
because sensory and sensual stimuli make up the
entirety of their affection. Donne and his beloved,
The Cavalier are a group of poets associated with the Court as cavaliers,
not only in the sense of being Royalists in opposition to the Puritan
Roundheads, but also as Renaissance Courtiers, having accepted the ideals
of the Renaissance gentleman popularised by Castigliones The Courtier: at
once a lover, soldier, wit, man of affairs, musician and poet. Moreover, poets
like Thomas Carew, Sir John Suckling, Richard Lovelace and Robert Herrick
were fervent admirers of Ben Jonsons lyric verse, whose eloquence and
elegance they tried to imitate in their own artful poems.
The characteristic theme of their verse is love. Yet its treatment differs from
the Elizabethan praise of an abstracted and idealised beauty, being more
carefree, flippant, and often sexual. The dichotomy between Art / Nature is
also present in much Cavalier poetry, which often contains pastoral scenery
and images, drawn from a combination of a nostalgic English past and
classical mythology. Most poems are also hedonist, embodying the very
essence of the Latin carpe diem (seize the day) philosophy, while the dark
side of the poems is provided by the sense of impending decay or death
implied in the theme of transience.