English Literature of the Seventeenth 14th Lecture FINAL REVISION 1

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English Literature of the Seventeenth 14th Lecture FINAL REVISION The Puritan Age (1600-1660) 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 rulers James I and Charles I, was ruled from 1603 to 1625 and 1625 to 1649 respectively; and the Restoration Period or the Age of Dryden (1660-1700) 0001 0011 0011 0061 0061 0061 0011 0001 The Seventeenth Century up to 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 0001 In literature of the Puritan age, John Milton was the noblest representative of the Puritan spirit to which he gave a most lofty and enduring expression 1

Puritan poetry The puritan poetry, also called the Jacobean and Caroline poetry during the reigns of James I Charles I respectively, can be divided into three parts 1-Poetry of the school of Spenser 2-Poetry of the Metaphysical school 3-Poetry of the Cavalier Jacobean and Caroline Drama -1- -2- -3- After Shakespeare the drama in England suffered a decline during the reigns of James I and Charles I The heights reached by Shakespeare could not be kept by later dramatists The Jacobean and Caroline dramatists gave expression to passive suffering and lack of mental and physical vigor 2

Jacobean and Caroline Prose- This period was rich in prose The great prose writers were Bacon, Burton, Milton, Sir Thomas Browne, Jeremy Taylor and Clarendon For the first time the great scholars began to write in English rather than Latin So the Bible became the supreme example of earlier English prose style- simple, plain and natural The Restoration Period ( 1660-1700) ( 1660-1700) After the Restoration in 1660, when Charles II came to throne, there was a complete repudiation of the Puritan ideals and way of living 0001 In English literature the period from 1660-1700 is called the period of Restoration, because monarchy restored in England, and Charles II, the son of Charles I who had been defeated and beheaded, came back to England from his exile in France and became the king 0001 0011 3

It is called the Age of Dryden, because Dryden was the dominating and most representative literary figure of the Age Restoration Drama In 1642 the theatres were closed by the authority of the Parliament which was dominated by Puritans and so no good plays were written from 1642 till the Restoration 0066 0066 During the Restoration Period the emphasis was on prose as the medium of expression Comedy of Manners In it there are two groups of characters, the wits who claim our sympathy and the gulls or the dull ones who arouse our laughter The end is not the victory of the good over the evil but the witty over the stupid 4

The Comedy of Manners was the most popular form of drama which portrayed the sophisticated life of the dominant class of society Restoration Poetry John Dryden (1631) The Restoration period was mostly satirical, realistic and written in the heroic couplet of which Dryden was the supreme master 0010 He was the dominating figure of the Restoration Period, and he made his mark in the fields of poetry drama and prose The poetry of Dryden can be conveniently divided under three heads- Political Satires, Doctrinal Poems and The Fables 1 0 6 1 The poetry of Dryden possesses all the characteristics of the Restoration Period and therefore thoroughly representative of that age 5

(c ) Restoration Prose The Restoration period was deficient in poetry and drama, but in prose it holds it head much higher It was during the Restoration Period that English prose was developed as a medium for expressing clearly and precisely average ideas and feelings about miscellaneous matters for which prose is really meant Dryden presented a model of the new prose Paradise Lost John Milton Milton s Life John Milton was born on December 9, 1608, in London 0011 1 Milton s father was a prosperous merchant Milton excelled in school, and went on to study privately in his twenties and thirties In 1638 he made a trip to Italy, studying in Florence, Siena, and Rome, but felt obliged to return home upon the outbreak of civil war in England, in 1639 0011 6

0011 Upon his return from Italy, he began planning an epic poem, the first ever written in English Women and Marriage Much of Milton s social commentary in Paradise Lost focuses on the proper role of women In Book IV he makes clear that he does not think men and women are equals, alluding to biblical passages that identify man as the master of woman Although Milton viewed women as inferior to men, believing that wives should be subservient to their husbands, he did not see himself as a woman-hater I Plot Overview Milton s speaker begins Paradise Lost by stating that his subject will be Adam and Eve s disobedience and fall from grace 7

He invokes a heavenly muse and asks for help in relating his ambitious story and God s plan for humankind The action begins with Satan and his fellow rebel angels who are found chained to a lake of fire in Hell They quickly free themselves and fly to land, where they discover minerals and construct Pandemonium, which will be their meeting place The Importance of Obedience to God The first words of Paradise Lost state that the poem s main theme will be Man s first Disobedience Milton narrates the story of Adam and Eve s disobedience, explains how and why it happens, and places the story within the larger context of Satan s rebellion and Jesus resurrection 8

Symbols Symbols are objects, characters, figures, and colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts The Scales in the Sky As Satan prepares to fight Gabriel when he is discovered in Paradise, God causes the image of a pair of golden scales to appear in the sky On one side of the scales, he puts the consequences of Satan s running away, and on the other he puts the consequences of Satan s staying and fighting with Gabriel The side that shows him staying and fighting flies up, signifying its lightness and worthlessness Adam s Wreath The wreath that Adam makes as he and Eve work separately in Book IX is symbolic in several ways First, it represents his love for her and his attraction to her But as he is about to give the wreath to her, his shock in noticing that she has eaten from the Tree of Knowledge makes him drop 9

it to the ground Literary Terms 1-Personification is giving inanimate objects or abstract ideas human qualities or actions; making non-human things appear as human 2-Metaphor: a comparison between two objects for the purpose of describing one of them; a metaphor states that the one object is the other 3- Alliteration: close repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words 4- Diction: an author s choice and use of words; his vocabulary 5- Epic: an extended narrative poem, with heroic subject matter and theme, and exalted tone 6- Rhyme: the use of words with similar sounds in poetry, usually 10

but not always at the ends of lines 7- Stanza: a group of lines in a poem divided off from the others Each stanza is usually the same number of lines in length To Daffodils Surface meaning: In his poem To Daffodils, the poet Robert Herrick begins by saying that we grieve to see the beautiful daffodils being wasted away very quickly The duration of their gloom is so short that it seems even the rising sun still hasn t reached the noon-time Thus, in the very beginning the poet has struck a note of mourning at the fast dying of daffodils The poet then addresses the daffodils and asks them to stay until the clay ends with the evening prayer After praying together he says that they will also accompany the daffodils 11

This is so because like flowers men too have a very transient life and even the youth is also very short-lived Deep meaning: We have short time to stay, as you,we have as short a spring Robert Herrick symbolically refers to the youth as spring in these lines He equates/compares human life with the life of daffodils Further he says that both of them grow very fast to be destroyed later Just like the short duration of the flowers, men too die away soon Their life is as short as the rain of the summer season, which comes for a very short time; and the dew-drops in the morning, which vanish away and never return again 12

Thus, the poet after comparing the flowers to humans later turns to the objects of nature he has compared the life of daffodils with summer rain, dew drops Theme: The short-lived nature of life, the fleeting passage of time Like the flowers we humans have a very short life in this world Beauty is not going to stay forever VIRTUE George Herbert: In "Virtue," which comprises four quatrains altogether, Herbert reflects on the loveliness of the living world but also on the reality of death Building momentum by moving from the glory of a day to the beauty of a rose to the richness of springtime, while reiterating at the end of each quatrain that everything "must die," Herbert leads the reader to the last, slightly varied quatrain 13

Herbert contrasts the passing glories of the mortal world with the eternal glory of the immortal soul and thereby distinguishes between momentary and eternal value ALL FOR LOVE JOHN DRYDEN THE DRAMATIC WORKS OF DRYDEN LARGE NUMBER OF PLAYS, WRITTEN BY DRYDEN Dryden was one of the first writers to take an advantage of the re-opening of the theatres which had been closed when the puritans under Cromwell came to power in England Dryden wrote a large number of dramas which are detailed below under appropriate headings 1-COMEDIES 2-TRAGI- COMEDIES 3-TRAGEDIES INCLUDING HEROIC PLAYS 14

4-OPERAS Dryden was a man of versatile genius He distinguished himself as a poet, as a dramatist, and as a critic He made a name for himself in the writing of both verse and prose However, it is not as a dramatist that he won immortality His greatness rests chiefly upon his poetry and his literary criticism As for his dramas, it is only ALL FOR LOVE which still endures and which will always endure The play was written and first performed in December in 1677 0000 ALL FOR LOVE deserves a very high rank in British drama 15

THE SUB TITLE Dryden gave to his play a sub-title which is THE WORLD WELL LOST The sub- title means that Antony did well to sacrifice his empire for the sake of his love for Cleopatra, and that Cleopatra did well to sacrifice her kingdom and her life for the sake of her love for Antony 16