Who Is Emily Dickinson?

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The writers of the Romanticism Period mainly focused on emotion, individualism, and the different aspects of nature in their works. The movement emphasized different kinds of emotions, such as awe, horror, terror, sadness, and much more. It experimented with different subjects and broke through the expectations of the structure of poetry. This had a huge impact on many of the poets of this literary period, including Emily Dickinson. Emily Dickinson was a widely famous poet of the Romanticism period because of her unusual writing style, unique structure of her poems, and the themes of her poems, which often were related to her emotional and isolated lifestyle.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born on December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts.
She, along with her two siblings,
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This loneliness was evident in many of her poems. For example, in her poem I’m Nobody! Who are you?, Dickinson writes “How dreary – to be – Somebody! / How public – “ (poets.org). This shows how Dickinson disliked the public and how she was isolated from everyone. Because she was always locked away in her room, she never saw anyone, which led her to believe that people had forgotten about her and that she had become “nobody”. Another example of this would be in her poem I measure every Grief I meet, when she writes “I measure every Grief I meet / With narrow, probing, eyes - / I wonder if It weighs like Mine - / Or has an Easier size” (poets.org). This shows that her isolation and loneliness has caused her grief. She says that she watches other people’s grief to see if it is as bad as hers. This shows that she wonders if anyone feels the same way she does: alone and forgotten.
Dickinson’s poetry was marvelous for the time period she was in. In the Romanticism
Literary Period, many people were experimenting with new themes, such as death and grief.
Emily was one of these people. Along with her new themes, she also had a very different

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