dc.description.abstract | George Herbert's unified poetic text, The Temple, may be read as
Herbert's attempt to gain wholeness through reading the Bible and the signs
of God in the natural universe. For Herbert, holy insight is based on
comparing the one with the many. In "Prayer (1)," for instance, Herbert
provides a long list of prayer's functions. Yet the poem's final phrase,
"something understood," suggests that Herbert has absorbed the learning
represented by this list, has simplified and replaced prayer's multifarious utility.
The relation of part (or function) to whole (or purpose) in people's lives, and in
human history, is repeated in the mysteries of divine history, which Herbert
studies in the two sonnets entitled "The Holy Scriptures." In the second of
these poems, Herbert notes that "This verse marks that, and both do make a
motion/ Unto a third, that ten leaves off doth lie." In reading the Bible, Herbert
is writing his own version of Holy Scriptures. The pun on "lie" suggests his
poetic feigning. Herbert's study of the relationship of reading to writing
presents a complex and paradoxical evaluation of the ways of learning. | |