Inventing the English Sappho:
Katherine Philips's Donnean Poetry*
Paula Loscocco, Barnard College
Katherine Philips's Donnean poems of love and friendship, which are
integral to her sophisticated, innovative, and largely unrecognized poetics,
have given rise to a number of critical myths. Scholars claim that in those
verses that invoke the love lyrics of John Donne, Philips reveals herself
to be (unappealingly) royalist in her politics and conservative in her
social and professional loyalties. They argue that her Donnean marriage
poems lack genuine feeling, and that the true content of her Donnean friendship poems is lesbian passion. They assume that Philips's poetry
is an authentic report of autobiographical emotion, whether political or
amorous. They claim that Philips manifests both internal ambivalence (in
the face of competing political, social, and sexual loyalties) and external
defensiveness (against imposed cultural barriers), and that her Donnean
poems are correspondingly either conflicted or strategic. And they insist
that Philips used literary figures such as Donne not only to signal covertly
her political loyalties, as many writers did in the 1650s, but to screen her
professional ambition and private sexuality.
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