Sunday, August 18, 2019
The Use of Personification in An Essay on Criticism :: English Literature
The Use of Personification in An Essay on Criticism    ââ¬Å"An Essay on Criticismâ⬠ was written by British writer Alexander Pope  around 1709. This poem was written in heroic couplets and its purpose  was to express Popeââ¬â¢s opinion on literature as a poet and critic.   Pope is responding to the debate over whether or not poets should  write ââ¬Å"naturallyâ⬠ or base their work on a set of pre-determined rules  as done by ancient poets. Popeââ¬â¢s poem can be broken down into three  main points. The first section is used by Pope to give general  principles of good criticism and poetry. The second section  identifies the flaws a critic is prone to. The third section  addresses the moral traits a good critic must have and gives examples  of outstanding critics. Popeââ¬â¢s use of personification throughout the  poem allows him to expand his ideas and secure his argument while  creating a very memorable poem. His use of personification allows the  poem to come to life with detail (Pope 2476).    Pope begins the poem by stating it is less offensive to ââ¬Å"tire our  Patience, than mislead our Senseâ⬠ (Pope 4) meaning it is much more  harmful to be a bad critic than a bad poet. ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËTis with our judgments  as our watches, none/ Go just alike, yet each believes his own" (Pope  9). Here Pope uses a watch to personify judgments. Everyone may have  their own opinion that they believe is right. ââ¬Å"Most have seeds of  judgment in their mind; Nature affords at least a glimmââ¬â¢ring lightâ⬠  (Pope 20). Men at one time do have ââ¬Å"seedsâ⬠ of good judgment, but Pope  says that in the search wit they are defaced by false education and  loose their common sense. ââ¬Å"Some neither can for wits nor critics  pass, as heavy mules are neither horse nor assâ⬠ (Pope 38). This line  refers to those who never became intellectuals or good critics. They  are somewhere in between, not worthy of a name. Instead they are  referred to as ââ¬Å"half-formed insects on the banks of Nileâ⬠ (Pope 41).   The bugs represent the critics who swarm every work of literature with  their malicious criticisms.    Pope recommends following nature as the first rule ââ¬Å"By her just  standard, which is still the same [â⬠¦] One clear, unchanged, and  universal lightâ⬠ (Pope 68). Pope here states that rules are necessary  in order to criticize poetry. He compares theses rules to ââ¬Å"unerringâ⬠  nature which is believed to be the epitome of ideal order and  harmony. The rules of the Ancients are useful guidelines for the true  critic, for they are ââ¬Å"Nature Methodizedâ⬠ (Pope 89). He believes that  many recent critics have used the rules without understanding them.  					    
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