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Puritan Poetry. Anne Bradstreet. Essential Questions. What is inversion? How does Bradstreet use inversion to achieve meter and rhyme?. Anne Bradstreet. First American writer, an English woman While we have writings before Bradstreet, she is the first producer of what we call literature.
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Puritan Poetry Anne Bradstreet
Essential Questions • What is inversion? • How does Bradstreet use inversion to achieve meter and rhyme?
Anne Bradstreet • First American writer, an English woman • While we have writings before Bradstreet, she is the first producer of what we call literature. • In 1630, Anne journeyed across the Atlantic aboard the Arbella to the part of New England around Salem that would become known as the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Style • Unlike the ornate “high style” popular in England at the time, the Puritan plainstyle used simple sentences and common words from everyday speech. • The plain style contained few or no classical allusions, Latin quotations, or elaborate figures of speech.
Plain Style • The plain style, Puritans felt, was much more effective in revealing God’s truth than the ornate style. • Despite the fact that the style used by Puritan writers now seems hard to read, it was once considered simple and direct in the 1600s.
Bradstreet’s Use of Plain Style • Although Anne Bradstreet’s “Upon the Burning of Our House” contains some figurative language, it is a good example of the plain style.
Inversion • Bradstreet also used inversion. • Inversion is the reversal of the normal word order in a sentence or phrase. • Write this in – it is not in your notes.
Inversion • For example, Bradstreet writes “I wakened was with thund’ring noise” instead of “I was wakened with thund’ring noise.” • Inversion is often used to make a poem’s rhyme scheme work out or to maintain a fixed meter.
Rhyme • Rhyme is the repetition of vowel sounds in accented syllables and succeeding syllables. Types of rhyme include • end rhyme • internal rhyme • approximate, or slant, rhyme
Rhyme Scheme • End rhyme refers to rhyming words at the end of lines. • End rhymes usually follow a regular pattern within a poem, called its rhyme scheme. Love is not all: it is not meat nor drinkA Nor slumber nor a roof against the rain; B Nor yet a floating spar to men that sinkA And rise and sink and rise and sink again . .B
Rhythm and Meter • Rhythm is the alternation of stressed and unstressed syllables in language. Rhythm occurs naturally in all forms of spoken and written language. • Meter is the regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry. • One meter commonly used in poetry is iambic meter—an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.