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Analysis of “To My Dear and Loving Husband” and Othello

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Analysis of “To My Dear and Loving Husband” and Othello
Anne Bradstreet was one of the first significant female poets of her time. Although she was England-born, Anne and her family were one of the first puritans to migrate to America around 1630. Because Bradstreet came from a prominent family, she was very well educated, which was an uncommon attribute for a woman of her time. She was married off at a young age to Simon Bradstreet. Because of the threat of a woman being banned or shunned by her community for expressing views/ideas, Anne kept her poetry and other personal works to herself.

The poem “To My Dear and Loving Husband” is a beautifully written poem by a woman who is completely and utterly in love with her husband. This poem is written in a first-person narrative of a wife speaking directly to her husband. This poem can reflect Anne and Simon’s actual relationship with each other. Many of Anne’s works and poems were personal and revolved around her own life. I believe this poem was truly written to her husband Simon. The entire poem elaborates, in such a brilliant and passionate way, on the love the speaker and her husband share for each other and how grateful she is. This is what she wants her readers to understand. Throughout the poem, she reinforces that she is not only one of the luckiest and blessed women, but the luckiest. This poem grabbed my attention immediately because of how in love she is. Throughout my life, I have never experienced a love as explained in this poem. I only hope that one day I could experience the feeling of being the luckiest woman in the world.

“If ever two were one, then surely we” (Line 1) In the very first line in the poem, the author explains that if two people have ever been completely and truly united as one person, it would definitely be the speaker and her husband. This demonstrates how the author incorporates the recurring themes of religion and family into her work. The true definition of marriage is the uniting of two people, a man and a woman, and their

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