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A Companion to American Poetry


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both poets were influenced by Puritan religious beliefs, Taylor’s poems emphasize the importance of devout faith, religious conviction, and spiritual submission to God’s will. In contrast, family and the experiences of quotidian life are central to Bradstreet, and her poetry expresses reluctance to leave her beloved world for the next.

      In the nineteenth century, especially in the 1850s and 1860s, much American poetry was shaped by a sentimental tradition exemplified by the “Sweet Singer of Hartford,” Lydia Huntley Sigourney (1791–1865). Her poems are characterized by themes of traditional domesticity, conventional religious tropes, and diction that is often bathetic. “Death of an Infant” (1827) illuminates the power of the promise of an eternal home in Heaven to subdue grief—in Sigourney’s case, the deeply painful experience of three miscarriages. This poem assures the reader that death cannot steal the life of her dead baby who is bound for Heaven:

      [...] But there beam’d a smile

      So fix’d and holy from that marble brow, –

      Death gazed and left it there; – he dared not steal

      The signet-ring of Heaven.

      In the nineteenth century, as in Puritan times, people mostly died at home. A body was kept in the home for several days—the “wake”—in part to ensure that the person was truly dead; the funeral also took place at home (National Museum of Funeral History n.d.). Poetry and other writing reflect this familiarity with the dying body. Lewis Saum notes that letters of the time often describe individuals’ deaths in “physiological detail” (1975, pp. 33–34). Observers felt that a “sober, explicit statement of submission to God’s will by the dying” (Saum 1975, p. 43) signified faith. In the best cases their apparent “Happiness and triumph” showed that “death represented escape from the world’s sadness” (Saum 1975, pp. 46–48). Thus, the smile in “Death of an Infant” was understood in the nineteenth century as proof that the child was going to Heaven.

      Sigourney was one of many writers of “consolation literature,” which regarded mourning as underscoring the belief that “heaven [is] a continuation and a glorification of the domestic sphere” (Douglas 1975, p. 55). This was part of a shift toward the “emergence of a modern Heaven” as a human society where ideal human relationships flourished (McDannell and Lang 1988, pp. 181–227). Until the funeral industry’s professionalization in the late nineteenth century, loved ones washed and dressed the body for burial, and Farrell reports that this task frequently fell to women (1980, p. 147). Differences in domestic responsibilities including those pertaining to death may help to explain gendered dimensions to mourning in poetry. In recalling differences between Bradstreet and Taylor, we might consider whether female American poets in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries often displayed an increased emphasis on the body and earthly life.

      […] Earth, that nourished thee, shall claim

      Thy growth, to be resolved to earth again,

      And, lost each human trace, surrendering up

      Thine individual being, shalt thou go

      To mix for ever with the elements,

      To be a brother to the insensible rock[.]

      (p. 32)

      The universal experience of death as a return to the Earth is an egalitarian—democratic—interpretation of death, unlike the Puritan division between the elect and the damned. Farrell suggests that a novel shift toward viewing death as “reunion of the dead with nature” occurred around this time and was reflected in the rural cemetery movement (1980, p. 105). Bryant also suggests that the best way to experience a sense of peace when confronted by death is to have lived well:

      So live, that when thy summons comes to join

      To that mysterious realm, where each shall take

      His chamber in the silent halls of death,

      Thou go not, like the quarry-slave at night,

      Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed

      By an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave,

      Like one who wraps the drapery of his couch

      About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams.

      (p. 34)

      The shift toward viewing death as a reunion with nature was also reflected in the rural cemeteries. Mount Auburn—formed in 1831—was pleasant for the living to visit due to its pastoral landscaping. These new burial places were made popular not only by logistical factors like “rapid urban growth and population mobility” that pushed burial to rural areas but also by “revisions of religious doctrines, Romantic affection for Nature” (Farrell 1980, p. 102). Stanley French argues that the “creation of Mount Auburn marked a change in prevailing attitudes about death and burial” (1975, p. 70).