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  • 8/8/2019 English 10 Compare Contrast

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    Out of vast difference can arise striking parity. EDITHERE. Such is the case with

    the two poems A Red, Red Rose, by Robert Burns, and To My Dear and Loving

    Husband, by Anne Bradstreet. Though both are written by authors of differing

    backgrounds, each illustrates a very positive view of love.

    Anne Bradstreets outlook on life and love grew from her experiences as a young

    woman and one of the first colonists in America. She emigrated from England to the New

    World on the Arabella in 1630, alongside the founders of the Massachusetts Bay colony.

    Witnessing copious death and great hardships, Bradstreet became unwaveringly devoted

    to her husband. When To My Dear and Loving Husband was written in 1641, they had

    been married thirteen yearsa significant part of ones life in seventeenth century

    America. Bradstreets worldly view of love is especially evident in her use of paradox;

    line twelve, which reads, That when we live no more, we may live ever, perpetuates the

    authors hopefulness and desire rather than a conviction. As an educated and faithful

    wife and mother, Bradstreet was a paragon of Puritan ideals in the early colonial erain

    contrast, Robert Burns was a young romantic revolutionary. An affluent gentleman

    during the Enlightenment, he was held as the national poet of Scotland; however, known

    for his casual love affairs with numerous women, Burns moral reputation was starkly

    contrary to his literary standing. His navet in love is evident in Burns enthusiasm and

    assuredness. A Red, Red Rose is characterized by a run of exclamatory sentences in the

    last stanza, expressing Burns profound emotionone closer to infatuation and adulation

    than true love: And fare thee weel my only Luve! / And I will come again, my Luve, /

    Tho it were ten thousand mile! The mere declaration that the recipient of this poem is

    his only love unveils the prominence of fervor over lasting and honest affection; in his

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    thirty-seven years on earth, Burns never truly settled down or even settled on any one

    woman.

    Despite vast disparity between the two authors histories, A Red, Red Rose and

    To My Dear and Loving Husband exhibit remarkable similarity; most notably, the

    pieces have near-identical themes. Both works are written directly to a lover, as

    evidenced by the use and context of a second-person point of view; for example, lines 11

    & 12 of A Red, Red Rose read, And I will love thee still, my Dear, / Till all the seas

    gang dry, and Bradstreet addresses her husband in phrases such as, Thy love is such I

    can no way repay in line 9. Imagery in both works emphasizes a deep, even everlasting

    love between author and recipient, like Burns declaration on line 12 that he will love his

    bonnie lass While the sands olife shall run, and Bradstreets on line 7 that My love

    is such that Rivers cannot quench. Despite differences in the authors backgrounds, the

    poems themes seem near identical. Both make a statement about the vast power and

    expanse of love.

    Though both authors speak highly of love, I tend to agree more with Bradstreet in

    that love is something to be treasured and persevered for. Love is an amazing thing to

    give and to have, but Burns view neglects the hardships that one experiences for love.