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Poetry of Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor

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1 Poetry of Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor
Puritan Poetry Poetry of Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor

2 Know the Background When reading poetry of a certain time period, it is important to know the historical context of the poem. Ask what the writer was experiencing, witnessing, etc.

3 Puritans Unlike most of us today, the Puritans had few possessions, dressed uniformly, and frowned on creative expression. Because they left so few personal belongings behind, they remain a mystery. These poems provide us with glimpses into the poets’ inner lives They show the universal emotions individual Puritans experienced within the confines of their culture.

4 Puritans Puritanism was a religious reform movement that began in England in the sixteenth century. The Puritans sought to reform the Church of England and to reshape English society according to their beliefs. These efforts led to both civil strife and government persecution of the Puritans. In response, many Puritans, including Edward Taylor, fled to American colonies.

5 Edward Taylor ( ) Edward Taylor had worked as a teacher in England. Upon arriving in Boston in 1668, Taylor entered Harvard College as a sophomore, graduating in 1671. After graduation, he accepted the position of minister and physician in the small frontier farming community of Westfield, Mass. He then walked more than one hundred miles, much of it through snow, to his new home.

6 Edward Taylor Experience many hardships including personal tragedies.
Five of his eight children died in infancy. His wife died was she was still a young woman. He remarried and had five or six more children. (Biographies differ on the number).

7 Edward Taylor Is now generally regarded as the best of the North American colonial poets. Yet because he thought of his poetry as a form of personal worship, he allowed only two stanzas to be published during his lifetime. In 1833, one of his descendants gave Taylor’s writings to Yale University, and in 1939, The Political Works of Edward Taylor was published. Most of Taylor’s poetry, including “Huswifery,” uses extravagant comparisons, intellectual wit, and subtle argument to explore religious faith and affection.

8 Anne Bradstreet Armed with convictions of her Puritan upbringing, she left behind her hometown of Northampton, England to start afresh in America. Arrived with her husband in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 when she was only eighteen. It was not an easy life for Bradstreet, who raised eight children and faced many hardships

9 Anne Bradstreet Anne wrote for herself, not for publication.
In 1650, her brother-in-law, John Woodbridge, arranged for the publication in England of a collection of her scholarly poems, The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America, By a Gentlewoman of Those Parts. Generally considered to be the first collection of original poetry written in colonial America. The book examined the rights of women to express themselves.

10 Anne Bradstreet Bradstreet’s later poems, such as “To My Dear and Loving Husband,” are more personal, expressing her feelings about the joys and difficulties of everyday Puritan life. In one she wrote about her thoughts before giving birth. In another, she wrote about the death of a grandchild. Bradstreet’s poetry reflects the Puritan’s knowledge of the stories and language of the Bible, as well as their concern for the relationship between earthly and heavenly life. Her work also exhibits some of the characteristics of the French and English poetry of her day.

11 Puritan Plain Style Writing style reflects the plain style of their lives – spare, simple, straightforward. The Puritan Plain Style is characterized by short words, direct statements, and references to ordinary, everyday objects. Puritans believed that poetry should serve God by clearly expressing only useful or religious ideas. Poetry appealing to the senses or emotions was viewed as dangerous.

12 Lyric Poetry: a song-like poem that expresses the observations and feelings of the speaker
Paradox: an apparent contradiction that is actually true

13 Figurative vs. Literal Language
Literal refers to language that is meant to be interpreted literally—what you see is what you get. Figurative language is NOT meant to be interpreted literally. You must examine the suggestions and associations it expresses. Writers will express abstract ideas with concrete images

14 Conceit One type of figurative language is a CONCEIT.
This is an elaborate and unusual comparison (metaphor) between two very different things

15 The speaker is comparing himself to something. What is it?
Apostrophe: a figure of speech in which a speaker directly addresses a person who is dead or not physically present, a personified object, or an abstract quality/idea. To whom is the speaker talking? The speaker is comparing himself to something. What is it? How does this fit into the historical context of Puritan poetry?


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