skip navigation

17th Century

A ‘Perfect Circle’? Alchemy in the Poetry of Hester Pulter

By Jayne Archer, University of Warwick (August 2005)


Sections: 17th Century

Subject: Literature.

Periods: 1000 - 1999, 1600-1699.

Key Topics: gender, poetry, science, sexuality, literary history.

Abstract

Relatively little is known about women's knowledge of natural philosophy in early modern England. Manuscript and printed receipt books show that women, by virtue of their work in the household, were experts in the alchemical processes of sublimation, fermentation, calcination and distillation. The poetry of Hester Pulter (1596–1678) is remarkable for a sophisticated use of terms, images and conceits drawn from alchemy. As such, it provides important evidence of one woman's imaginative and intellectual engagements with the experimental, esoteric and emblematic traditions in alchemy. Paying particular attention to a cycle of poems entitled ‘The Circle’, I show how Pulter tirelessly worked and reworked alchemical concepts and images, and, just like an alchemist, transformed them into something new.

DOI: 10.1111/j.1741-4113.2005.00160.x

This article abstract has been viewed 4067 times.

view cite Add to my Compass

Add to VLE/CMS feedback


Top 5 related articles

Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters

Quick Search

Related Blackwell Reference Chapters

Literature Compass - Personal Subscription Rates
 
[ access key 0 : accessibility information including access key list ] [ access key 1 : home page ] [ access key 2 : skip navigation] [ access key 6 : help ]