Great Female Queen Elizabeth example essay topic
Bradstreet's poems are focused on the simple pleasures found in the realities of the present. She rejoices in the presence of nature that she sees surrounding her in "Contemplations", rather than that in the pleasure of Jesus and her Puritan religion (like Phyllis Wheatley does). Part of the reality for Bradstreet is living as a female in a male-dominated society. Bradstreet embraces this, but at the same time questions the views towards females. Women in Puritan society played a subordinate role in a traditional patriarchal family structure, and were relatively restricted in their opportunities. They were not generally viewed as equals to men, and in "The Prologue", Bradstreet questions her role, and thus a woman's role, in writing poetry.
At the end of the prologue Bradstreet writes, "Let Greeks be Greeks, and woman what they are; Men have precedency and still excel, It is but vain unjustly to wage war; Men can do best, and women know it well". Bradstreet's tone seems to be sincere, but a hint of humor and sarcasm also lurks between the verses. This tone ventures farther across that thin line as she writes about the great female Queen Elizabeth I: "Now say, have women worth? Or they have none? Or had they some, but with our Queen is't gone?
Nay masculines, you have thus taxed us long, But she, though dead, will vindicate our wrong, Let such as say our sex be void of reason, Know 'tis a slander now but once was treason". Here Bradstreet almost masks her female identity by using humor to laugh at the Puritan beliefs on women as being unfit and unreasonable as compared to men. However, while questioning and laughing somewhat at the traditional view of women in her society, Bradstreet does not take a feminist view. Through the use of Queen Elizabeth as a figure representing the greatness, intellect, power, and reason of a woman, Bradstreet could have pointed to the fact that women can indeed reign over men, and are just as capable. Instead all Bradstreet says is that Elizabeth "will vindicate our (the women's) wrong". In other words, she is one of a kind.
Puritan patriarchy demands this subordination of the female, and this mindset is shared by Bradstreet as she is held in check by her Puritan piety. In her poem to her husband, she writes, "If ever two were one, then surely we". Indeed, this line could also be used to describe Bradstreet's poetry itself, as there are two seemingly conflicting elements of her Puritan beliefs and her feminine identity that create ambivalence and duplicity in her self-portrayals.