Ineffable Attempts
Ineffable attempts have been made by the Puritan writers to declaim poetry. With the aid of their expeditious acumen, these catalytic writers venture advertently to impose moral dogmas upon the masses, by stifling the vox populi. They shelve and dodge the descriptions of the germane virtues poetry bestows. Rather, they deliberately concoct a dilution of defamation to cast against poetry. The orthodox preceptors of moral policing stand as a massive and momentous balk against the literary writers and aficionados. While the literary persons make forays into unexplored regions of esemplastic imagination, as literature is no doubt a wonderful bonanza of fancy, the rigid preceptors time and again endeavour to waylay the progress. The teleological dialogues in which the Puritan critics immerse themselves regarding poetry since antiquity are testified by the great defenders of poetry as mere claptraps. They could sparsely deliver a modicum of reasonable arguments against poetry. Plato, the forebear to these orthodox Puritans, had brought articulate charges which have been repeated and refuted simultaneously by generations of writers and critics.
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