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Analysis Of Verses Upon The Burning Of Our House

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Anne Bradstreet was and is a highly regarded Puritan poet of seventeenth-century American literature. She defied cultural expectations of women at the time and became the first accomplished woman poet of the New World. As evident in her poetry, she was strictly loyal to God and her Puritan beliefs, but she was not exempt from grief and doubt in the face of tragedy. Some, however, would argue that her grief and doubt in response to those tragedies showed a stray from her strict Puritan belief system. One controversial tragic event, in particular, that she wrote about exemplified her struggle between earthly desires and heavenly truths: the blaze that overtook her family's home. Anne Bradstreet, in her poem "Verses upon the Burning of Our House," demonstrates the common internal conflict of Christians as she battles between her Puritan theology and her innate human emotions in response to her devastating house fire.
Anne was born in the early seventeenth century in England. She was privileged with an excellent education because her father, Thomas Dudley, was a steward to a prominent figure. She married Simon Bradstreet at just sixteen years of age while still residing in England. When Anne was still a teenager, the Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Company made the decision to leave and settle together in the New World, the Dudleys and Bradstreets journeyed with them. In contrast to the way she was raised, the life of settlers proved to be difficult in the colony because of

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