Page:Anne Bradstreet and her time.djvu/241

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ANNE BRADSTREET.
225

manuscript could give them. Now and again it is asserted that the manuscript for the first edition was taken to London without her knowledge and printed in the same way, but there is hardly the slightest ground for such conclusion, while the elaborate dedication and the many friendly tributes included, indicate the fullest knowledge and preparation. All those whose opinion she most valued are represented in the opening pages of the volume.

Evidently they felt it necessary to justify this extraordinary departure from the proper sphere of woman, a sphere as sharply defined and limited by every father, husband and brother, as their own was left uncriticised and unrestrained. Nathaniel Ward forgot his phillipics against the "squirrel's brains" of women, and hastened to speak his delight in the little book, and Woodbridge and John Rogers and sundry others whose initials alone are affixed to their prose or poetical tributes and endorsements, all banded together to sustain this first venture. The title page follows the fashion of the time, and is practically an abstract of what follows.

THE TENTH MUSE,

LATELY SPRUNG UP IN AMERICA,

or

Severall Poems, compiled with great variety of Wit and Learning, full
of Delight, wherein especially is contained a Compleat
Discourse, and Description of

The Four

 

 

Elements,
Constitutions,
Ages of Man,
Seasons of the Year.