Poetry and humanism.

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...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mahood, M. M. (Molly Maureen)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: London, Cape [1950]
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Summary: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.
Physical Description:335 pages 21 cm
Also issued online.
Bibliography:"Notes and references": pages 307-328.