Copyright

William Hutchings

Published On

2023-12-19

Page Range

pp. 121–144

Language

  • English

Print Length

24 pages

11. An Essay on Man

  • William Hutchings (author)
Chapter 11 begins with a précis of Pope’s most ambitious poem, An Essay on Man. It then identifies the poem’s tension in, on the one side, the a priori assumption inherent in the ‘chain of being’ theory of the universe and human society; and, on the other, the empirical method by which its illustrations and applications of that theory operate. By means of detailed analyses of extracts from all four epistles, the chapter then argues that this tension is consistent with the central quality of Pope’s poetry: its flexible capacity to maintain two attitudes or points of view. Like aphorisms, such as ‘The proper study of mankind is man’, the poem’s precision of language both concisely defines an argument and leaves space for an examination of what such expressions necessarily exclude and the context within which they are placed. An Essay on Man, like Pope’s poetry as a whole, incites a reader’s active inquiry.

Contributors

William Hutchings

(author)
Honorary Research Fellow at University of Manchester

William Hutchings was formerly Senior Lecturer in English Literature and Director of the Centre for Excellence in Enquiry-Based Learning at the University of Manchester, UK and he is presently Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures at that university. He now lectures regularly to public groups locally and nationally. He has a wealth of teaching experience on English Literature courses at undergraduate and postgraduate level, and is the editor of Andrew Marvell: Selected Poems, the author of The Poetry of William Cowper, and Literary Criticism: A Practical Guide for Students.