Who is referred to in the passage as the mighty Architect "who hath enough to do"? God the leader of a Puritan colony the king of England a leader of the American revolution
Verses upon the Burning of Our House by Anne Bradstreet (excerpt) Thou hast a house on high erect Fram'd by that mighty Architect, With glory richly furnished Stands permanent, though this be fled. It's purchased and paid for too By him who hath enough to do. A price so vast as is unknown, Yet by his gift is made thine own. There's wealth enough; I need no more. Farewell, my pelf; farewell, my store. The world no longer let me love; My hope and Treasure lies above.
@Elsa213 @Valirium @tigerlover
hi
hi
any ideas
I would think the King of England. Im not really good at poem stuff like this. :/
thank you
No problem :)
it was wrong
Oh. Sorry. I tried. :/
no reason to apologize i'm just thankful u help
That's why I'm here. :D
:D
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