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Anne Bradstreet Contemplations

Decent Essays

“Contemplations” by Anne Bradstreet is a poem of thirty-three, seven-line stanzas that consider different parts of nature and scriptural history and reflect upon their profound importance. The title recommends that the poem is an accumulation of separated reflections, yet inside of the poem are a few structures that each builds on an initial thought over various stanzas. On the whole, these examinations and contemplations are included with the regular scene of pioneer America. These verses are entirely private perceptions of human instinct, using the New England scene as an augmentation of self. As a female, she acquires the male dialect with a particular end goal to make her explanations of sacred text and social ideas of God. Bradstreet at …show more content…

The meter of every stanza is set in a predictable rhyming pattern for the opening six lines of the stanza, and the last line uses an Alexandrine meter of six beats. Every verse uses a septet number, with a rhyme scheme of ABAB CCC. The stanzas' example demonstrates that the opening sextet shows a noteworthy image of her surroundings. The closure couplet displays a divine interpretation of her meditations and a resolution is then obtained. The resulting final line acts as a resolution, a moral to the stanza. Stanza’s 18-20 all the more particularly moves the idea of the poem back to the natural landscape surrounding Bradstreet and its unusually long and repetitive life cycle; differentiating humanities short term of life. “But man grows old, lies down, remains where once he’s laid” (Bradstreet 125). She does resolve in spite of this by saying, “man was made for endless immortality” (Bradstreet …show more content…

Bradstreet also mentions that during the different season’s earth changes but always comes back to its youthful greenness. Bradstreet uses this stanza as a metaphor comparing life and death of earth to the changing of seasons that is continuous, but the stanza is also a contrast to human life. Bradstreet contemplates Earth, her cycles, and seasons of death and resurrection or rebirth. She is dismal to examine that people do not have this resurrection or rebirth; Bradstreet states “But man grows old, lies down, remains where once he’s laid” (Bradstreet 125). In stanza 19 Bradstreet continues with the idea that humans are not given the opportunity of birth and rebirth in continuous cycles but also points out that humans are nobler than creatures of the earth. “By birth more noble than those creatures all/ yet seems by nature and by custom cursed” (Bradstreet 127-128). Bradstreet argues that we do not retain youth, spring, or wisdom, which seems a bit of euphemistic because Bradstreet mentions that we as humans are nobler than any other creature. At the beginning of Stanza 20 Bradstreet begins to question if it is plausible to praise these entities of the natural world like the heavens, trees, and the Earth, because they live longer than humans do, which is a

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