Essay Comparing Anne Bradstreet And Edward Taylor

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Poets, Edward Taylor and Anne Bradstreet both used poetry to meet expectation in a puritan society. The poets both wrote poetry to express their emotional and spiritual distress without letting society surrounding them in on their struggles. With no intended audience for their poems expressing their grievances, the poets could openly express their emotions and address their god in a private, discreet, manner without facing ridicule from fellow citizens. Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor used several literary devices separately, but together they had many more in common. Among the many shared literary devices were, syntactical shifts, rhetorical questions, imagery, and diction. Throughout both the poets work, a robust amount of commas are used. …show more content…

In Taylor’s “Upon Wedlock, and Death of Children”, he refers to his children as ‘primrose, cowslips, roses, lilies” [line nine]. Also in the poem he calls them “flowre, choice, prime”. Taylor refers to his dead children again in the poem as, “spell, charm, joy, and gem”, in line thirty-nine. Similarly Anne Bradstreet refers to her grandchild as, “fair flower”, in poem one, line three, in poem two, she refers to her grandchild as” withering flower”, in poem 3, she refers to her last grandchild as “the last i’ th’ bud”. Continuing the theme of referring to her grandchildren as flowers singularly, she refers to them as a whole in poem three, line three, with, “three flowers, two scarcely blown, the last i’ th’ bud,”. The poets establish the image of their children as flowers to later condemn god for not letting the children live, hence the word “crop” found throughout many of the four poems. Taylor and Bradstreet relatively had the same emotional and spiritual state. Both poets had a forced tone when it came to writing about god or ending their poems on the expectant puritan

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