Ann Bradstreet
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Anne Bradstreet: Poet in Search of Form
Of the many incredible puritan writers of the late 1600s, Anne Bradstreet is found to be quite an enigma. In “Anne Bradstreet: Poet in search of Form”, by Rosemary M. Laughlin and found at www.jstor.org, Laughlin investigates the many voices of Anne Bradstreet. While uncovering many styles, themes, and imagery, many of Bradstreets carefully chosen words reveal her true passion, her family. “The common denominator of her later poetry is evident to the most casual reader; it is the subject matter, the identification of herself and her family” (Laughlin 2). Rosemary M. Laughlin speaks of Bradstreet as a “personal poet” who is also not afraid to reveal her own true individuality. Bradstreets individuality includes her choice and invention of some forms of versification, her principles of poetic organization, imagery, and consistent themes; all of which play an equally important role in her work.
Anne Bradstreet is well known for creating and experimenting with her own forms of versification. To create a visualization of Bradstreets unique versification, Laughlin comments on one of the stanzas in “The Prologue”. Instead of using rhymed couplets in the first four lines (of the eight 6-line stanzas) Bradstreet uses iambic pentameter where the first four lines rhyme alternately and end with only one rhymed couplet.
And oh ye high flown quills that soar the skies,
And ever with your prey still catch your praise,
If eer you deign these lowly lines your eyes,
Give thyme or parsley wreath, I ask no bays;
This mean and unrefined ore of mine,
Will make your glistring gold but more to shine (Laughlin 2).
Laughlin calls this “the Bradstreet version of Spenserian stanza” (4).
Laughlin also comments on another poem, unintended for publication, which has questionable rhythm. Bradstreet forms an interesting experimentation with iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter. The difference is of course being that iambic pentameter is that of which a line has five beats. For example, the pattern would be; ta TUM ta TUM ta TUM ta TUM ta TUM. The pattern in iambic tetrameter is one foot shorter than pentameter. There are only four beats in a line of iambic tetrameter. For example; ta TUM ta TUM ta TUM ta TUM. Bradstreet also uses iambic trimeter, which is simply a three-foot line. An example of this type of line: ta TUM ta TUM ta TUM. Now, where Laughlin expresses Bradstreets deviation is found in “The Tenth Muse”. The experimentation that was never intended for publication was completed in 1632 and titled “Upon a Fit of Sickness”. This is an unbroken thirty-two line poem in which iambic tetrameter alternates with iambic trimester