Emily Dickinson

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    and yield to the inescapable. As discouraging as this outlook on death may appear, one may be amazed at why Emily Dickinson preferred to make death one among the major themes in her poems. Because numerous poets of the 19th century composed about death, Dickinson was not exceptional in opting for this idea. Nevertheless, she was exceptional when it was about how she composed on death. Dickinson concentrated on Eternity and the “hereafter” part of death; she was positive and deemed death…

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    Poetry is often defined as a “literary work that uses a distinctive style of writing to express an idea or feelings.” Emily Dickinson’s “My Life had stood- a Loaded Gun” serves to be one of the most controversial poems as many individuals take on various interpretations on the work of art. Several readers regarded the poem as demonstrating the inferiority of women to men, which was prevalent during the nineteenth century in which the poem was written. Other readers found the poem to be a…

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    literary devices.. The various poems and story, showed how the early Dark Romantics saw death as a gentleman or kind spirit. Others saw death a form of fear or the wrath of the devil himself. In the poem “Because I could stop not stop for death” by Emily Dickinson, the poem “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe, and the story “The Devil and Tom Walker” by Washington Irving, all use rhetorical strategies of English text to convey their views of death. There are many different interpretations of death,…

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    benefit of a degree of selfishness, are themes that appear throughout How to Read and Why by Harold Bloom and “I Stepped from Plank to Plank” by Emily Dickinson. Harold Bloom’s thesis is that how and what one reads has to be distinctly personalized to themselves; because of our constant race against the clock, reading needs to be for the individual alone. Dickinson enforces this idea of solitary exploration and…

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    “Unable are the loved to die, for love is immortality.” Emily Dickinson lives on in the minds of people who love her and her poetry, even though she never sought the immortality that comes with fame. Dickinson had a very humble and religious upbringing, causing her to reject the idea of God but not entirely abandon the way she was taught to live and think. She lived a reclusive life in her family’s house, alone with her thoughts and emotions. Her failed love affair gave her the knowledge that…

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    Every induvial is born with a finite life span, that of which is unknown. The concept of eternal rest is one that hinders minds, holding different interpretations. Death, the inevitable and unavoidable conclusion to existence, is a facet of life that every individual becomes acquainted with. Writers have used this notion of death as the basis for many literary works. Holding a negative denotation, literary writers have created a new image for the face of death, giving it human…

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    Dickinson And Whitman

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    Styles, Values, Dickinson and Whitman During the Ninetieth century, two critical poets that came about were Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman. These two poets are credited with laying the foundation of modern poetry because of the different poetic styles and messages they presented in their work. Dickson and Whitman came from two different types of lifestyles, which can be credited with shaping their core values. The main difference that exist between Dickinson and Whitman poems is the…

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    Whitman and Dickinson are two extraordinary poets of their time. Main because they different follow the trend of other poets. They went about their own unique writing style when writing their poems and short story. Whitman writing consisted of mainly what was growth and deaf. Dickinson was an aphoristically poet that dealt with a very small words to get her point across. Whitman and Dickinson was both born in the nineteenth century, Whitman was born in 1819 and Dickinson in 1830. Whitman was…

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    “Because I could not stop for Death” by Emily Dickinson is a straightforward, yet neatly articulated poem that outlines the narrator’s journey from mortality to immortality. Surprisingly, throughout the passage, the narrator reveals her feelings about death and the infinite through the use of a variety of literary devices. Her diction while using strong symbolic, figurative language like personification, vivid imagery, and metaphors portray a rather calm and different outlook on death far from…

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    with none being greater than Emily Dickinson, Henry James, and Kate Chopin. In Emily Dickinson’s “In Much Madness is Divinest Sense” and “This was a Poet”, Henry James’s Daisy Miller: A Study, and Kate Chopin’s “A Story of an Hour”, all the authors depict independent thought as a positive trait. In her poems “Much Madness is Divinest Sense” and “This was a Poet”, Emily Dickinson expresses her strong conviction in the concept of self-reliance. The first poem, “Much…

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