George Herbert is essentially a religious poet. He wrote a large number of religious, philosophical,
and reflective poems in the service of god. From his very beginning of poetic
career Herbert preferred to write devotional poems rather then to write love
poems. In his metaphysical writing he deals with soul, God, immortality,
life after death and so on. Metaphysical poetry is a blending of thought and
felling,
it is erudite and witty; it is full of conceits and dramatic qualities.
Easter is a festival in the Christian church commemorating the resurrection of the Christ which is
observed on the first Sunday following the full moon that occurs on or just
after March 21. The Sunday on which
this festival is held is called Easter-Sunday.
This is a religious or spiritual poem that laments the utter moral and
spiritual bankruptcy or degeneration human race. The poem celebrates Jesus
Christ’s resurrection. It means Christ’s return to life on the third day his
crucifixion. The biblical story of man’s creation by the almighty and man’s
final fall from blissful Eden (heaven) and man’s abode gifted by the god being
seduced by Satan. On that Easter-Sunday Herbert wished to sing the victory of Jesus Christ soaring above the sky
harmoniously like a lark. The poet says:
“O let me rise
As larks, harmoniously.
And sing the day thy victories;
Than shall the fuH further the flight in me”
The collar is regarded as one of the most important and also as one of the most interesting poems of
Herbert. Its importance lies in the mental and spiritual conflict which Herbert
actually experienced in the course of his priestly life. Having become a
priest, Herbert found that he had sacrificed all worldly ambition and the
pleasure of life, and he therefore felt restless and discontented. He wants to
be free like a road and independent of all restraints. He does not want to lead
a life of slavery to the church and to God. Herbert often wants to revolt against
Christianity but not against God. His attitude is vividly expressed in “The
Collar”-
“I struck the hoard, and cry’d. No more
I will abrood
What? Shall I ever sigh and Pine?
As the poet
was thus arguing and getting more
angry, the voice of God gently rebuked him for this rebelliousness, saying: “My child, do not he rash”. On hearing
God’s gentle warning, the poet at once come back to his sense and realized his
folly. The poet at once rejoined to this voice, and becoming humble and said: “My Lord, I am still your servant.” Thus
the poem began with an angry and with a mood of violence ends in the poet’s
complete surrender to his God.
Herbert
seems to have deep faith in God and Christ. His religious poems are spontaneously written. They come directly
from his heart and have the stamp of sincerity. “Redemption” is a religious poem where the poet’s attitude to God
will have God obedient to him to say- Tour suit is granted.
Metaphysics is a branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of existence, truth and knowledge and this
philosophy inspired Herbert to meditate upon the Divine Authority and discover
the hidden truth lying in our life? Herbert’s poetry is a sequence of religious
poems, conceived and cast in the pattern of a morality play. The chief subjects
of his poetry are the Incarnation, the Passion and the Redemption.
To conclude we can say that all Herbert’s poetry is the
expression of full-faith to his God. Herbert’s theory is that a man should
dedicate all his gifts to God’s service. He offered up to God all that was
graceful and ingenious in his mind. Thus Herbert’s poetry celebrates divine
grace and is dominated by a belief in God’s love.
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