The views gained from John Dorn and George Herbert's poems provide us with a very unique perspective on God, more common religion. Both were written from the second half of the 16th century to the beginning of the 17th century, but the methods used in each way are quite different. George Herbert (1593 - 1633), born after John Dorn (1572 - 1163), followed mainly Dorn's poetry style, but with minor modifications: obvious to Herbert's poems Dorn It is much easier than words, and the metaphor is easy to understand.
Similar poets such as John Donne, George Herbert, Andrew Marvell, Henry Vaughn, etc. are raising poets. Style that brings out conclusions in a way that philosophical and spiritual subjects are reasonably approached and often contradictory. This group of writers, as a poetic model - established meditation - based on a combination of thought and emotion pursued by Jesuit Ignatia meditation. Romantic and Victorian poets in the 18th and 19th centuries, metaphysical poets bite into it, but readers and scholars of the 20th century tried to understand the imminent political and scientific disorder in metaphysics and regained interest. In particular, T. S. Eliot sees the ability to "swallow all kinds of experiences" among the poets in his article "The Metaphysical Poet".
George Herbert (1593 - 1633) is one of the main metaphysical poets in the UK. He was born in Wales and is educated in Cambridge. He is an English pastor and known for his unique religious poetry. Herbert was heavily influenced by other important metaphysical poet, John Donne's work. He distinguished himself from early poetry (golden poetry) as a technique. As a religious poet, Herbert is known for its purity and effectiveness. His poetry is characterized by the silence of the sound, the accuracy of the word, and the manifestation of cheekiness. Herbert's style stands out in its clarity and directness. Like John Donne, Herbert used his poetry to question the nature of his relationship with God. An example of the concept of Herbert's poetry invention can be seen in his poem: "Love me" and "Ai II"