
I have learned so much from this poem, maybe because I related well to this poem. What I learned about this poem or how I interpreted this poem would be the following. During the line “Mary, the daughter of their youth..” could describe how Mary was the name of the child that the couple, in this case the king and the queen, at such a young age. The following lines, “Yet all heaven’s gifts, being heaven’s due..” could mean that the young infant was a gift to her parents from heaven, but the second line foreshadows her death. Heaven’s due, meaning that she will return to heaven at some point. But, the next line, “At six month’s end, she parted hence with safety of her innocence,” lets the reader know that the young baby girl died at six months of age. When Ben Johnson refers to “safety of her innocence” he means that the infant’s innocent age assures her a place in heaven. The young infant girl also bore the name of Mary, the mother of Jesus. In the poem they call her the Queen of Heaven; I assume that perhaps the family was religious. The following lines refer to where the child was place after death and was buried. “This grave partakes the fleshy birth, which cover lightly, gentle earth.” These lines explain that they place the body of their child in the grave and plead for the dirt to cover her gently.
It’s evident in reading On My First Daughter, that although his daughter’s death was a painful experience, Jonson found some degree of comfort in the idea that his daughter was returning to heaven. Throughout this poem he is expressing gratitude for the brief time he had with her; and furthermore, he is accepting the fact that he had to return her. This was a great poem but very touching.
Image by: Catherine Joll
Web site: http://www.poetryconnection.net/poets/Ben_Jonson
Web site: http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft538nb2zt&chunk.id=d0e3522&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d0e2157&brand=ucpress



