Explore how three great poets shaped and reflected their era’s deepest questions about faith, science, and meaning.This study turns a close eye on Davies, Pope, and Tennyson to show how their religious views and metaphysical claims reveal more about their times than about any single creed. The book places these poets in a broad educational and cultural landscape, from humanism and naturalism to the rise of modern science, and asks how their art becomes a personal voice within public thought.
Delving into the intersections of poetry, philosophy, and history, the author traces how each poet both mirrors and challenges the beliefs of his age. It looks at how evolving scientific ideas, new kinds of historical thinking, and shifts in education influenced how these poets expressed religion, meaning, and the search for truth. The result is a thoughtful portrait of poetry as a living conversation with the worldview of its time.
- See how each poet balances personal feeling with the ideas of his culture.
- Learn how scientific and historical currents shaped religious expression in poetry.
- Understand the role of education in forming a poet’s philosophical voice.
- Appreciate how the poets’ works speak to questions that still matter today.
Ideal for readers of literary criticism and those who love poetry with a philosophical heartbeat, this edition invites curiosity about how art and thought evolve together.