The Puritan Age (1600-1660) - NeoEnglish
The Puritan Age (1600-1660) - NeoEnglish
The Puritan Age (1600-1660) - NeoEnglish
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The Literature of the Seventeenth Century may be divided into two periods—The Puritan
Age or the Age of Milton (1600-1660), which is further divided into the Jacobean and Caroline
periods after the names of the ruled James I and Charles I, who rules from 1603 to 1625 and
1625 to 1649 respectively; and the Restoration Period or the Age of Dryden (1660-1700).
The Seventeenth Century was marked by the decline of the Renaissance spirit, and the writers
either imitated the great masters of Elizabethan period or followed new paths. We no longer
find great imaginative writers of the stature of Shakespeare, Spenser and Sidney. There is a
marked change in temperament which may be called essentially modern. Though during the
Elizabethan period, the new spirit of the Renaissance had broken away with the medieval
times, and started a new modern development, in fact it was in the seventeenth century that
this task of breaking away with the past was completely accomplished, and the modern spirit,
in the fullest sense of the term, came into being. This spirit may be defined as the spirit of
observation and of preoccupation with details, and a systematic analysis of facts, feelings and
ideas. In other words, it was the spirit of science popularized by such great men as Newton,
Bacon and Descartes. In the field of literature this spirit manifested itself in the form of
criticism, which in England is the creation of the Seventeenth Century. During the Sixteenth
Century England expanded in all directions; in the Seventeenth Century people took stock of
what had been acquired. They also analysed, classified and systematised it. For the first time
the writers began using the English language as a vehicle for storing and conveying facts.
One very important and significant feature of this new spirit of observation and analysis
was the popularisation of the art of biography which was unknown during the Sixteenth
Century. Thus whereas we have no recorded information about the life of such an eminent
dramatist as Shakespeare, in the seventeenth century many authors like Fuller and Aubrey
laboriously collected and chronicled the smallest facts about the great men of their own day,
or of the immediate past. Autobiography also came in the wake of biography, and later on
keeping of diaries and writing of journals became popular, for example Pepy’s Diary and Fox’s
Journal. All these new literary developments were meant to meet the growing demand for
analysis of the feelings and the intimate thoughts and sensations of real men and women. This
newly awakened taste in realism manifested itself also in the ‘Character’, which was a brief
descriptive essay on a contemporary type like a tobacco-seller, or an old shoe-maker. In drama
the portrayal of the foibles of the fashionable contemporary society took a prominent place. In
satire, it were not the common faults of the people which were ridiculed, but actual men
belonging to opposite political and religious groups. The readers who also had become critical
demanded facts from the authors, so that they might judge and take sides in controversial
matters.
The Seventeenth Century upto 1660 was dominated by Puritanism and it may be called
the Puritan Age or the Age of Milton who was the noblest representative of the Puritan spirit.
Broadly speaking, the Puritan movement in literature may be considered as the second and
greater Renaissance, marked by the rebirth of the moral nature of man which followed the
intellectual awakening of Europe in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Though the
Renaissance brought with it culture, it was mostly sensuous and pagan, and it needed some
sort of moral sobriety and profundity which were contributed by the Puritan movement.
Moreover, during the Renaissance period despotism was still the order of the day, and in
politics and religion unscrupulousness and fanaticism were rampant. The Puritan movement
stood for liberty of the people from the shackles of the despotic ruler as well as the
introduction of morality and high ideals in politics. Thus it had two objects—personal
righteousness and civil and religious liberty. In other words, it aimed at making men honest
and free.
Though during the Restoration period the Puritans began to be looked down upon as
narrow-minded, gloomy dogmatists, who were against all sorts of recreations and
amusements, in fact they were not so. Moreover, though they were profoundly religious, they
did not form a separate religious sect. It would be a grave travesty of facts if we call Milton and
Cromwell, who fought for liberty of the people against the tyrannical rule of Charles I, as
narrow-minded fanatics. They were the real champions of liberty and stood for toleration.
The name Puritan was at first given to those who advocated certain changes in the form of
worship of the reformed English Church under Elizabeth. As King Charles I and his
councillors, as well as some of the clergymen with Bishop Laud as their leader, were opposed
to this movement, Puritanism in course of time became a national movement against the
tyrannical rule of the King, and stood for the liberty of the people. Of course the extremists
among Puritans were fanatics and stern, and the long, protracted struggle against despotism
made even the milder ones hard and narrow. So when Charles I was defeated and beheaded in
1649 and Puritanism came out triumphant with the establishment of the Commonwealth
under Cromwell, severe laws passed. Many simple modes of recreation and amusement were
banned, and an austere standard of living was imposed on an unwilling people. But when we
criticize the Puritan for his restrictions on simple and innocent pleasures of life, we should not
forget that it was the same very Puritan who fought for liberty and justice, and who through
self-discipline and austere way of living overthrew despotism and made the life and property
of the people of England safe from the tyranny of rulers.
In literature of the Puritan Age we find the same confusion as we find in religion and
politics. The medieval standards of chivalry, the impossible loves and romances which we find
in Spenser and Sidney, have completely disappeared. As there were no fixed literary
standards, imitations of older poets and exaggeration of the ‘metaphysical’ poets replaced the
original, dignified and highly imaginative compositions of the Elizabethan writers. The literary
achievements of this so-called gloomy age are not of a high order, but it had the honour of
producing one solitary master of verse whose work would shed lustre on any age or people—
John Milton, who was the noblest and indomitable representative of the Puritan spirit to
which he gave a most lofty and enduring expression.
(a) Puritan Poetry
The Puritan poetry, also called the Jacobean and Caroline Poetry during the reigns of
James I and Charles I respectively, can be divided into three parts –(i) Poetry of the School of
Spenser; (ii) Poetry of the Metaphysical School; (iii) Poetry of the Cavalier Poets.
(i) The School of Spenser
The Spenserians were the followers of Spenser. In spite of the changing conditions and
literary tastes which resulted in a reaction against the diffuse, flamboyant, Italianate poetry
which Spenser and Sidney had made fashionable during the sixteenth century, they preferred
to follow Spenser and considered him as their master.
The most thorough-going disciples of Spenser during the reign of James I were Phineas
Fletcher (1582-1648) and Giles Fletcher (1583-1623). They were both priests and Fellows of
Cambridge University. Phineas Fletcher wrote a number of Spenserian pastorals and
allegories. His most ambitious poem The Purple Island, portrays in a minutely detailed
allegory the physical and mental constitution of man, the struggle between Temperance and
his foes, the will of man and Satan. Though the poem follows the allegorical pattern of the
Faerie Queene, it does not lift us to the realm of pure romance as does Spenser’s masterpiece,
and at times the strain of the allegory becomes to unbearable.
Giles Fletcher was more lyrical and mystical than his brother, and he also made a happier
choice of subjects. His Christ’s Victorie and Triumph in Heaven and Earth over and after
Death (1610), which is an allegorical narrative describing in a lyrical strain the Atonement,
Temptation, Crucifixion, and Resurrection of Christ, is a link between the religious poetry of
Spenser and Milton. It is written in a flamboyant, diffuse style of Spenser, but its ethical
aspect is in keeping with the seventeenth century theology which considered man as a puny
creature in the divine scheme of salvation.
Other poets who wrote under the influence of Spenser were William Browne (1590-1645).
George Wither (1588-1667) and William Drummond (1585-1649).
Browne’s important poetical work is Britannia’s Pastorals which shows all the
characteristics of Elizabethan pastoral poetry. It is obviously inspired by Spenser’s Faerie
Queene and Sidney’s Arcadia as it combines allegory with satire. It is a story of wooing and
adventure, of the nymphs who change into streams and flowers. It also sings the praise of
virtue and of poets and dead and living.
The same didactic tone and lyrical strain are noticed in the poetry of George Wither. His
best-known poems are The Shepherd’s Hunting a series of personal eulogues; Fidella an
heroic epistle of over twelve hundred lines; and Fair Virtue, the Mistress of Philarete, a
sustained and detailed lyrical eulogy of an ideal woman. Most of Wither’s poetry is pastoral
which is used by him to convey his personal experience. He writes in an easy, and homely style
free from conceits. He often dwells on the charms of nature and consolation provided by
songs. In his later years Wither wrote didactic and satirical verse, which earned for him the
title of “our English Juvenal”.
Drummond who was a Scottish poet, wrote a number of pastorals, sonnets, songs, elegies
and religious poems. His poetry is the product of a scholar of refined nature, high imaginative
faculty, and musical ear. His indebtedness to Spenser, Sidney and Shakespeare in the matter
of fine phraseology is quite obvious. The greatest and original quality of all his poetry is the
sweetness and musical evolution in which he has few rivals even among the Elizabethan
lyricists. His well-known poems are Tears on the Death of Maliades (an elegy), Sonnets,
Flowers of Sion and Pastorals.
(ii) The Poets of the Metaphysical School
The metaphysical poets were John Donne, Herrick, Thomas Carew, Richard Crashaw,
Henry Vaughan, George Herbet and Lord Herbert of Cherbury. The leader of this school was
Donne. They are called the metaphysical poets not because they are highly philosophical, but
because their poetry is full of conceits, exaggerations, quibbling about the meanings of words,
display of learning and far-fetched similes and metaphors. It was Dr. Johnson who in his
essay on Abraham Cowley in his Lives of the Poets used the term ‘metaphysical’. There he
wrote:
“About the beginning of the seventeenth century appeared a race of writers that
may be termed the metaphysical poets. The metaphysical poets were men of
learning, and to show their learning was their whole endeavour: but, unluckily
resolving to show it in rhyme, instead of writing poetry, they only wrote verses
and very often such verses as stood the trial of the finger better than of the ear; for
the modulation was so imperfect that they were only found to be verses by
counting the syllables.”
Though Dr. Johnson was prejudiced against the Metaphysical school of poets, and the
above statement is full of exaggeration, yet he pointed out the salient characteristics of this
school. One important feature of metaphysical school which Dr. Johnson mentioned was their
“discovery of occult resemblances in things apparently unlike.” Moreover, he was absolutely
right when he further remarked that the Metaphysical poets were perversely strange and
strained: ‘The most heterogeneous ideas are yoked by violence together; nature and art are
ransacked for illustrations, comparisons, and allusions… Their wish was only to say what had
never been said before”.
Dr. Johnson, however, did not fail to notice that beneath the superficial novelty of the
metaphysical poets lay a fundamental originality:
“If they frequently threw away their wit upon false conceits, they likewise
sometimes struck out unexpected truth; if the conceits were far-fetched, they were
often worth the carriage. To write on their plan, it was at least necessary to read
and think, No man could be born a metaphysical poet, nor assume to dignity of a
writer, by descriptions copied from descriptions, by imitations borrowed from
imitations, by traditional imagery, and volubility of syllables.”
The metaphysical poets were honest, original thinkers. They tried to analyse their feelings
and experience—even the experience of love. They were also aware of the life, and were
concerned with death, burial descent into hell etc. Though they hoped for immortality, they
were obsessed by the consciousness of mortality which was often expressed in a mood of
mawkish disgust.
John Donne (1537-1631), the leader of the Metaphysical school of poets, had a very
chequered career until be became the Dean of St. Paul. Though his main work was to deliver
religious sermons, he wrote poetry of a very high order. His best-known works are The
Progress of the Soul; An Anatomy of the World, an elegy; and Epithalamium. His poetry can
be divided into three parts: (1) Amorous (2) Metaphysical (3) Satirical. In his amorous lyrics
which include his earliest work, he broke away from the Petrarcan model so popular among
the Elizabethan poets, and expressed the experience of love in a realistic manner. His
metaphysical and satirical works which from a major portion of his poetry, were written in
later years. The Progress of the Soul and Metempsychosis, in which Donne pursues the
passage of the soul through various transmigrations, including those of a bird and fish, is a
fine illustration of his metaphysical poetry. A good illustration of his satire is his fourth satire
describing the character of a bore. They were written in rhymed couplet, and influenced both
Dryden and Pope.
Donne has often been compared to Browning on account of his metrical roughness,
obscurity, ardent imagination, taste for metaphysics and unexpected divergence into sweet
and delightful music. But there is one important difference between Donne and Browning.
Donne is a poet of wit while Browning is a poet of ardent passion. Donne deliberately broke
away from the Elizabethan tradition of smooth sweetness of verse, and introduced a harsh and
stuccato method. His influence on the contemporary poets was far from being desirable,
because whereas they imitated his harshness, they could not come up to the level of his
original thought and sharp wit. Like Browning, Donne has no sympathy for the reader who
cannot follow his keen and incisive thought, while his poetry is most difficult to understand
because of its careless versification and excessive terseness.
Thus with Donne, the Elizabethan poetry with its mellifluousness, and richly observant
imagination, came to an end, and the Caroline poetry with its harshness and deeply reflective
imagination began. Though Shakespeare and Spenser still exerted some influence on the
poets, yet Donne’s influence was more dominant.
Robert Herrick (1591-1674) wrote amorous as well as religious verse, but it is on account
of the poems of the former type—love poems, for which he is famous. He has much in
common with the Elizabethan song writers, but on account of his pensive fantasy, and a
meditative strain especially in his religious verse, Herrick is included in the metaphysical
school of Donne.
Thomas Carew (1598-1639), on whom the influence of Donne was stronger, was the finest
lyric writer of his age. Though he lacks the spontaneity and freshness of Herrick, he is superior
to him in fine workmanship. Moreover, though possessing the strength and vitality of Donne’s
verse, Carew’s verse is neither rugged nor obscure as that of the master. His Persuasions of
Love is a fine piece of rhythmic cadence and harmony.
Richard Crashaw (1613?-1649) possessed a temperament different from that of Herrick or
Carew. He was a fundamentally religious poet, and his best work is The Flaming Heart.
Though less imaginative than Herrick, and intellectually inferior to Carew, at times Crashaw
reaches the heights of rare excellence in his poetry.
Henry Vaughan (1622-1695), though a mystic like Crashaw, was equally at home in sacred
as well as secular verse. Though lacking the vigour of Crashaw, Vaughan is more uniform and
clear, tranquil and deep.
George Herbert (1593-1633) is the most widely read of all the poets belonging to the
metaphysical school, except, of course, Donne. This is due to the clarity of his expression and
the transparency of his conceits. In his religious verse there is simplicity as well as natural
earnestness. Mixed with the didactic strain there is also a current of quaint humour in his
poetry.
Lord Herbert of Cherbury is inferior as a verse writer to his brother George Herbert, but
he is best remembered as the author of an autobiography. Moreover, he was the first poet to
use the metre which was made famous by Tennyson in In Memoriam.
Other poets who are also included in the group of Metaphysicals are Abrahanm Cowley
(1618-1667), Andrew Marvel (1621-1672) and Edmund Waller (1606-1687). Cowley is famous
for his ‘Pindaric Odes’, which influenced English poetry throughout the eighteenth century.
Marvel is famous for his loyal friendship with Milton, and because his poetry shows the
conflict between the two schools of Spenser and Donne. Waller was the first to use the ‘closed’
couplet which dominated English poetry for the next century.
The Metaphysical poets show the spiritual and moral fervour of the Puritans as well as the
frank amorous tendency of the Elizabethans. Sometimes like the Elizabethans they sing of
making the best of life as it lasts—Gather ye Rosebuds while ye may; and at other times they
seek more permanent comfort in the delight of spiritual experience.
(iii) The Cavalier Poets
Whereas the metaphysical poets followed the lead of Donne, the cavalier poets followed
Ben Jonson. Jonson followed the classical method in his poetry as in his drama. He imitated
Horace by writing, like him, satires, elegies, epistles and complimentary verses. But though his
verse possess classical dignity and good sense, it does not have its grace and ease. His lyrics
and songs also differ from those of Shakespeare. Whereas Shakespeare’s songs are pastoral,
popular and ‘artless’, Jonson’s are sophisticated, particularised, and have intellectual and
emotional rationality.
Like the ‘metaphysical’, the label ‘Cavalier’ is not correct, because a ‘Cavalier’ means a
royalist—one who fought on the side of the king during the Civil War. The followers of Ben
Jonson were not all royalists, but this label once used has stuck to them. Moreover, there is
not much difference between the Cavalier and Metaphysical poets. Some Cavalier poets like
Carew, Suckling and Lovelace were also disciples of Donne. Even some typical poems, of
Donne and Ben Jonson are very much alike. These are, therefore, not two distinct schools, but
they represented two groups of poets who followed two different masters—Donne and Ben
Jonson. Poets of both the schools, of course, turned away from the long, Old-fashioned works
of the Spenserians, and concentrated their efforts on short poems and lyrics dealing with the
themes of love of woman and the love or fear of God. The Cavalier poets normally wrote about
trivial subjects, while the Metaphysical poets wrote generally about serious subjects.
The important Cavalier poets were Herrick, Lovelace, Suckling and Carew. Though they
wrote generally in a lighter vein, yet they could not completely escape the tremendous
seriousness of Puritanism. We have already dealt with Carew and Herrick among the
metaphysical group of poets. Sir John Suckling (1609-1642), a courtier of Charles I, wrote
poetry because it was considered a gentleman’s accomplishment in those days. Most of his
poems are trivial; written in doggerel verse. Sir Richard Lovelace (1618-1658) was another
follower of King Charles I. His volume of love lyrics—Lucasta—are on a higher plane than
Suckling’s work, and some of his poems like “To Lucasta’, and “To Althea, from Prison’, have
won a secure place in English poetry.
(iv) John Milton (1608-1674)
Milton was the greatest poet of the Puritan age, and he stands head and shoulders above
all his contemporaries. Though he completely identified himself with Puritanism, he
possessed such a strong personality that he cannot be taken to represent any one but himself.
Paying a just tribute to the dominating personality of Milton, Wordsworth wrote the famous
line:
They soul was like a star, and dwelt apart.
Though Milton praised Spenser, Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson as poets, he was different
from them all. We do not find the exuberance of Spenser in his poetry. Unlike Shakespeare
Milton is superbly egoistic. In his verse, which is harmonious and musical, we find no trace of
the harshness of Ben Jonson. In all his poetry, Milton sings about himself and his own lofty
soul. Being a deeply religious man and also endowed with artistic merit of a high degree, he
combined in himself the spirits of the Renaissance and the Reformation. In fact no other
English poet was so profoundly religious and so much an artist.
Milton was a great scholar of classical as well as Hebrew literature. He was also a child of
the Renaissance, and a great humanist. As an artist he may be called the last Elizabethan.
From his young days he began to look upon poetry as a serious business of life; and he made
up his mind to dedicate himself to it, and, in course of time, write a poem “which the world
would not let die.”
Milton’s early poetry is lyrical. The important poems of the early period are: The Hymn on
the Nativity (1629); L’Allegro, Il Penseroso (1632); Lycidas (1637); and Comus (1934). The
Hymn, written when Milton was only twenty-one, shows that his lyrical genius was already
highly developed. The complementary poems, L’Allego and Il Penseroso, are full of very
pleasing descriptions of rural scenes and recreations in Spring and Autumn. L’Allegro
represents the poet in a gay and merry mood and it paints an idealised picture of rustic life
from dawn to dusk. Il Penseroso is written in serious and meditative strain. In it the poet
praises the passive joys of the contemplative life. The poet extols the pensive thoughts of a
recluse who spends his days contemplating the calmer beauties of nature. In these two poems,
the lyrical genius of Milton is at its best.
Lycidas is a pastoral elegy and it is the greatest of its type in English literature. It was
written to mourn the death of Milton’s friend, Edward King, but it is also contains serious
criticism of contemporary religion and politics.
Comus marks the development of the Milton’s mind from the merely pastoral and idyllic
to the more serious and purposive tendency. The Puritanic element antagonistic to the
prevailing looseness in religion and politics becomes more prominent. But in spite of its
serious and didactic strain, it retains the lyrical tone which is so characteristic of Milton’s early
poetry.
Besides these poems a few great sonnets such as When the Assault was intended to the
City, also belong to Milton’s early period. Full of deeply-felt emotions, these sonnets are
among the noblest in the English language, and they bridge the gulf between the lyrical tone of
Milton’s early poetry, and the deeply moral and didactic tone of his later poetry.
When the Civil War broke out in 1642, Milton threw himself heart and soul into the
struggle against King Charles I. He devoted the best years of his life, when his poetical powers
were at their peak, to this national movement. Finding himself unfit to fight as a soldier he
became the Latin Secretary to Cromwell. This work he continued to do till 1649, when Charles
I was defeated and Common wealth was proclaimed under Cromwell. But when he returned to
poetry to accomplish the ideal he had in his mind, Milton found himself completely blind.
Moreover, after the death of Cromwell and the coming of Charles II to the throne, Milton
became friendless. His own wife and daughters turned against him. But undaunted by all
these misfortunes, Milton girded up his loins and wrote his greatest poetical works—Paradise
Lost, Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes.
“The subject-matter of Paradise Lost consists of the casting out from Heaven of the fallen
angels, their planning of revenge in Hell, Satan’s flight, Man’s temptation and fall from grace,
and the promise of redemption. Against this vast background Milton projects his own
philosophy of the purposes of human existence, and attempts “to justify the ways of God to
men.” On account of the richness and profusion of its imagery, descriptions of strange lands
and seas, and the use of strange geographical, names, Paradise Lost is called the last great
Elizabethan poem. But its perfectly organized design, its firm outlines and Latinised diction
make it essentially a product of the neo—classical or the Augustan period in English
Literature. In Paradise Lost the most prominent is the figure of Satan who possesses the
qualities of Milton himself, and who represents the indomitable heroism of the Puritans
against Charles I.
What though the field be lost?
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neoenglish / December 16, 2010 / History of English Literature / History of English Literature
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