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Spiritual and Devotional Writings

Despite the religious turmoil that marked this period in English history, England remained a Christian nation, and its literature reflects the beliefs of its people. Spiritual and devotional writings became some of the most popular and influential works of the day. In fact, the King James Biblelikely did more to mold English prose style than any other work.

Spiritual Writing • Early efforts to translate the Bible were censured by the church. • The King James Bible was created by a committee of scholars; it became the most influential English translation. • Milton’s Paradise Lost is based on a biblical story. • Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress is an allegory of the journey to the afterlife.
For centuries, the church had resisted calls to translate the Latin Bible into languages the common people could understand, on the grounds that it would diminish church authority and lead to heresy. In fact, when the first English version of the Bible was translated by the 14th-century scholar John Wycliffe,he was attacked by a British archbishop as “that wretched and pestilent fellow ... who crowned his wickedness by translating the Scriptures into the mother tongue.” Another English translator, William Tyndale,fled to the continent during the early years of Henry VIII’s reign, only to be condemned as a heretic and burned at the stake.

The King James BibleIronically, in the meantime Henry had broken with Rome, and in the following years English translations of the Bible proliferated. Finally, in 1604, James I commissioned 54 leading biblical scholars to create a new, “authorized” version, one based on the original Hebrew and Greek as well as on earlier translations from the Latin. Masterpieces of literature are not generally created by committee, but the King James Bible, completed in 1611, proved to be an exception. Its beautiful imagery, graceful simplicity, and measured cadences made it the principal Protestant Bible in English for more than 300 years, and it still remains the most important and influential of all the English translations.

Two MasterpiecesOne of the earliest writers to be influenced by the King James Bible was the Puritan poet John Milton.In fact, it has been said that he knew the Bible by heart. His epic blank-verse poem Paradise Lost is based on the biblical story of the first humans, Adam and Eve, who are tempted by Satan to eat the forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge. They eat and then are punished by being driven from the Garden of Eden out into the world, where they and all their descendants must suffer and die. A devout believer, Milton filled his work with energy and power, and none of the many “rebel” characters in literature since can equal his portrayal of Satan, the fallen angel. Dignified and elevated, even biblical, Milton’s language is meant to evoke reverence for his religious themes. His rich and complex style, married with his devotion to religious themes, places Milton with other Renaissance Christian humanists, but his talent sets him apart as an artist.



Milton was a typical “Renaissance man”—a scholar who read widely, studying the classics as well as the Bible, and who was fluent in many languages. Fellow Puritan writer John Bunyan,on the other hand, was an uneducated tinker and preacher who spent many years in jail for his religious beliefs. While in jail, Bunyan wrote his greatest work, The Pilgrim’s Progress—an allegoryin which a character named Christian undertakes a dangerous journey from this world to the next. Along the way, he encounters such obstacles as the Slough of Despond and meets characters with such names as Mr. Moneylove and Ignorance. Bunyan modeled his style on that of the English Bible, and he used concrete language and details familiar to most readers, enabling even the most basic of readers to share in Christian’s experiences. Though The Pilgrim’s Progress lacks the grandeur and complexity of Paradise Lost, its deeply felt simplicity made it one of the most widely read books in the English language.

Reading   Batter my heart, three-personed God by John Donne Batter my heart, three-personed God; for, you Yet dearly I love you, and would be loved fain, As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend; But am betrothed unto your enemy: That I may rise, and stand, o’erthrow me, and bend Divorce me, untie, or break that knot again, Your force to break, blow, burn and make me new. Take me to you, imprison me, for I I, like an usurped town, to another due, Except you enthral me, never shall be free, Labor to admit you, but oh, to no end, Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me. Reason your viceroy in me, me should defend, But is captived, and proves weak or untrue,    
Reading Check 1. How does the word choice in this sonnet reflect both the sacred and the secular? 2. What does Donne refer to with the word “another”?

 

 



Date: 2016-03-03; view: 1483


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