God and Religion

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"God has become a Deus absconditus, hidden somewhere behind the silence of infinite spaces, and our literary symbols can make only the most distant allusions to him, or to the natural world which used to be his abiding place and home." (Miller, 68) This quote taken from J. Hillis Miller's article "The Theme of the disappearance of God in Victorian poetry" is reflected in Matthew Arnold's poem, "To Marguerite - Continued". This poem is not only a comment on love, and human isolation, but on religious doubt, a central issue in the Victorian era. In the course of developing the theme of religious doubt, and conveying tone in this poem, Arnold also employs a number of poetic techniques and literary devices.

It is important to note that questions of God and religion are inevitably raised in response to a particular social environment. Religious doubt is not a homogenous concept, and appreciation of the particular nature of Arnold’s doubt requires some contextual understanding. The Victorian Era unfolded against an increasingly industrialized, scientific backdrop – commerce, manufacturing ability and the individualisation of society produced a burgeoning middle class in England. ‘Progress’ was manifested in creations of man and the age of machinery. No longer were men and women bound to seek truth or comfort in religious teaching; indeed, the rejection of God, is in some ways, a reflection of mankind’s belief in its own ability to obtain truth.

The first stanza of ‘To Marguerite’ sets a metaphor for Arnold’s particular sense of religious disconnect. Humanity is represented as a series of islands, surrounded by ‘life’ (the water that flows between). Beginning in first-person, the first stanza almost immediately conveys the bitte...

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...ting independently of man stand in stark contrast to the fractured and distinctly human setting of 19th century England. As Miller states, "The history of modern literature is in part the history of the splitting apart of this communion which has been matched by a similar dispersal of the cultural unity of man. God, nature, and language." Arnold’s doubt is not that of man who disbelieves - a doubt that religion, gods or God do exist or have existed – but that of man suffering from a more longing emotion, a despair flowing from the awareness that a God that should exist and has existed is now absent.

Works cited

Miller, J. Hillis. The Theme of the Disappearance of God in Victorian Poetry. Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1963. Print.

Ricks, Christopher. The New Oxford book of Victorian verse. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987. p 303. Print.

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