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- W4386349836 abstract "Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image sizeKeywords: George Herbert“Justice (I)”poetic formdelay Notes1 Because Herbert gave duplicate titles to several poems in The Temple, editors have added numerals after the titles, based on the order in which the poems appear, to differentiate between the poems. Herbert has two poems called “Justice.”Helen Wilcox’s overview of modern criticism on “Justice (I)” in her English Poems of George Herbert cites only five scholarly studies on this poem, the most recent being from 1987 (Wilcox 345). Some of the concepts that I develop in this article appeared in earlier versions in my 2013 blog post on “Justice (I).”2 The texts of Herbert’s poems cited in this essay are from Wilcox’s English Poems of George Herbert and are referred to by line numbers.3 Both Wilcox and F. E. Hutchinson in his Works of George Herbert (Oxford, 1941) follow the 1633 first edition of Herbert’s The Temple in separating “Justice (I)” into two stanzas.4 The primary meaning of “mark” here would be “observe” or “consider” (OED def. III.25.a). The related sense of “assess,” which modern readers might assume at first glance, is not recorded until the nineteenth century (OED def. I.9.b).5 See “make, v.1” as to ordain a priest (OED def. I.16.a), to create a nobleman (OED def. II.33.b), and to “secure the success or advancement of” someone, as well as “to endow (a person) with fortune or prosperity” (OED def. VI.69.a). Herbert develops his complaint of hardships related to these earthly advantages in his poem “Affliction (I).”6 See “fit, n.2” in the OED for the word’s historical associations with hardship, pain, and illness, as well as “fit, n.1” for its obsolete use regarding poetry. Herbert’s seventeenth-century biographer, Izaak Walton, praises Herbert’s attitude of submission to God in his “extream Fits” of illness. David Thorley explains that this idea may have been taken more from Herbert’s poems than from Walton’s direct knowledge of Herbert’s responses during his times of ill health (13). Although Thorley considers the medical evidence of Herbert’s illnesses and references to ailments in Herbert’s poetry, he does not mention “Justice (I).”7 Contrast “Justice (I)” with “Thanksgiving” and “Easter,” where Herbert desires, respectively, to “mend mine own [ways] without delayes” and sing the Lord’s praise “without delayes” (“Thanksgiving” [33-34] & “Easter” [2])." @default.
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- W4386349836 date "2023-04-03" @default.
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- W4386349836 title "Skilled at Delay: George Herbert’s “Justice (I)”" @default.
- W4386349836 cites W2031989906 @default.
- W4386349836 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/00144940.2023.2253554" @default.
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