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Characteristics Of Puritan Poetry

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Puritan Poetry
I am going to talking about Puritan Poetry in my essay. I will explain the Puritan’s ideology and their characteristics about poetry. And also I will give an example from Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor for Puritan poetry. Puritanism, begun in England in the 17th century, was a radical Protestant movement to reform the Church of England.
Firstly I want to start with their ideology. According to Puritans, poet should seem little bit opposition as Puritans rejected with the practice of using metaphor and verbal flourishes in their speech and writing. The Puritan movement was one for very literal expression and teaching. But, in time, some part for creative expression arose and Puritan poets such as, Anne Bradstreet, Edward Taylor …show more content…

Her representation of the many aspects in the poem, In Reference to Her Children, 23 June, 1659, are matchles. In my opinioun she was trying to capture the attention of her children because she felt she had sent them out into the “big, bad world” unconsciously. Her later poems, for example “To My Dear and Loving Husband,” are different. It was more personal, she wrote about represent her feelings about the joys and difficulties of every Puritan life. Bradstreet’s poetry reflects the Puritan’s knowledge of the stories and language of the Bible, as well as their interest for the relationship between earthly and heavenly life. Her work also some of the characteristics of the French and English poetry of her day, especially for their nature. Important point here, is the Americanness in her poetry. She focus on American landscape on a dramatic scene of the divine Providence. Anne Bradstreet’s rendition of her family as a herd of birds symbolizes different things. For example, firstly one of them symbolizes her connection to God and. She represents herself and her family as birds because they were also the part of God; but they are not human, that’s why they do not sin. This bird family also symbolizes freedom like always. As they grow up and spread their wings, they can fly by their own. This represents one of the facts of life; children grow up and leave their parents’ homes to find their own …show more content…

He depended on a traditional system of biblical figures created by early Christian commentator and used by later writers. Certain Old Testament stories were said to prefigure the life of Christ that Jonah and the whale, for example, Christ's death and resurrection, as did Abraham's sacrifice. Circumcision prefigured baptism; the Hebrew Passover, the Lord's Supper; and so forth. A meditation centered, for example, on the "wine from Canaan’s Vineyard" offered that communion and themes of suffering and grace, since the wine is Christ's blood. But it also refers to Christ's second coming, since Canaan, the Promised Land, is the type of Christ's kingdom on earth described in Revelations. And the other closer themes of constitutes the basis of all Taylor's work, be it meditation, sermon, history, scientific treatise or verse dialogue. Christographia is a collection of sermons about the human and divine natures of Christ. Like the Mathers, but with a view of Christ's coming that emphasized his love rather than his judgment, Taylor registered divine providences and unusual natural phenomena. He investigated on the medicinal properties of natural things that a work of use of him as a physician. Taylor left much in his verse unpolished and uncorrected. He seems not to have intended his poetry for the public. Evaluation of his work awaits scholarly clarification of the role of the Puritan poet in America and of Taylor's intentions for

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