13 - Henry Vaughan
from Part 2 - Some poets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
Summary
The American feminist poet, Adrienne Rich, remarks how, as a student in her early twenties, she was led to believe that poetry was 'the expression of a higher world view, what the critic Edward Said has termed “a quasireligious wonder,” instead of a human sign to be understood in secular and social terms'. My starting place is to remark that whatever conditions underlie Rich's sense of the opposition between poetry as transcendental expression and poetry as a sign system to be understood in secular and social terms, the conflict is misleading, although in interesting ways, when applied to a pre-Romantic (who is sometimes thought to be a proto- Romantic) like Vaughan, despite the fact that he is almost always remembered as the signal instance of a seventeenth-century poet who became memorable once he became a poet of transcendence: 'Lord, then said I, On me one breath, I And let me dye before my death'
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to English Poetry, Donne to Marvell , pp. 256 - 274Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993