Friday, January 24, 2020
Metaphysical Poetry :: essays papers
Metaphysical Poetry    Discuss the uses of metaphors of colonization in metaphysical poetry  and/or Milton.    "Movement across or through space becomes a process   of colonization of that space."    During the period of Milton's Paradise Lost as well as myriad of poets  construction of an epoque submerged in metaphysical literature, a  number of significant events both socio-political, entwined with a  systematic religious metamorphism  of the sixteenth and seventeenth  century led to a time of unrest and discovery.  The creators and  author's of work of this periods placed their emphasis not specifically  on a level of  morality or self understanding but rather a rediscovery  of the body and soul, almost a form of existensionalism or physical  cosmos with a geography.  'All things are subject to the Mind... It  measures in one thought the whole circumference of heaven and by the  same line it takes the geography of the earth.  The seas, the air, the  fire all things of either, are within the comprehension of the mind.    It has an influence on them all, whence it lakes all that may be  useful, all that may be helpful in government.  No limitation is  prescribed to it, no restriction is upon it, but in a free scope it has  a liberty upon all.  And in this liberty is the excellence of the mind;  in this power and composition of the mind is perfection of a man... Man  is an absolute master of himself;  his own safety, and tranquillity by  God... are made dependent on himself.'1 In this short example of  Puritanism text as it stands, alone contains a number of various  references to the process of colonization, of expanding, perceiving all  geographically and manipulating, making man or perhaps more  specifically the colonisers omniscient and God-like.  The crusader  self-reliant and independent with the knowledge that God is his  guardian of safety and tranquillity.  In this particular the growing  number of Puritans played a significant role both in the cultivation  and transformation of the Christian religion and foreign territories.    The Puritans themselves comprised of those in the Church of England  unhappy with limitations of the Elizabethan Settlement; some were  Presbyterians, and all were to some extent or other Calvinists (though  not all Calvinists were Puritans).  They were a people of scrupulous  moral rigour and favoured plain styles of dress, detesting any form of  luxury or decadence.  The name Puritan later became a catch-all label  for the disparate groups who led much of the New World colonization and  won the English Civil Wars.  New World colonization began as early as  1480 by English seamen performing spectacular feats of exploration    					    
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