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Anne Bradstreet

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Submitted By jhicks2011
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I chose Anne Bradstreet because I have always found her writings very interesting and seeing her concept on life. “Before the Birth of One of Her Children” she writes about how she and her partner will feel about the death of her while giving birth. In that time frame, dying while giving birth was not uncommon and shows the maternal fears, hope and love that may occur while being pregnant and giving birth. I do feel that she is a puritan writer, because she had a way of expressing the Puritan way of life, with how difficult and limiting that lifestyle was, but still expressed her beliefs and intelligence of women. This poem expresses the love for her husband, her children and concerns of giving birth and also explaining to her children that death is also a part of life. Just as she expresses in the poem,
“No ties so strong, no friends so dear and sweet,
But death’s parting blow is sure to meet.”

Anne suffered most of her life being ill, so it’s easy to understand why she would write a poem of such a thing. Whether she was pregnant at the time and it was a possibility to happy in the future or that she just expresses in such a way to her children that death can sometimes happen just so easily. My expression of her being a Puritan writer is because she voices her expression how easily death may or can occur, and explains that, hey, this is part of life. But no matter what happens there will always be a bond between her, her husband and her kids. Just as she expresses:
“We are both ignorant, yet love bids me
These farewell lines to recommend to thee,
That when the knot’s untied that made us one,
I may seem thine, who in effect am none.”

In the religious belief some religions believe that when it’s time for you to go, it’s because you have been on this earth long enough and you did what you were suppose to do. The fear of dying was always on Anne’s

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