Emily Dickinson

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    Dickinson and Her Obsession with Death Throughout much of her life Emily Dickinson showed signs of anxiety and obsession. This charming timid young woman retreated to her room and often never left, spending her days locked away writing poetry. When she died she left many works about many different things, but just one look at Emily Dickinson's poems reveals that death is her principal subject, this young spinster had an obsession with it. Other nineteenth-century poets, such as Whitman and…

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    Esteban Borja Pena Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was an American poet. Emily was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, on December 10, 1830. She attended the university of Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley. Some of her quotes are “If I can stop one heart from breaking, I shall not live in vain.”, “Forever is composed of nows.”, “Saying nothing... sometimes says the most.” Throughout most of her life, she seemed to have had very few visitors and sporadically left her house. The people who…

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    The tale of a lost poet Dickinson tells a story in stanzas of a world too big for her, a world to complicated and chaotic. The choice to have her herself locked up in her own and made world of darkness and simplicity. One that goes with her personality. For her way of explaining this is through poems. That tell darkness as home and the light that is seen as a living nightmare that she experienced for herself. Emily Dickinson tells that she likes to experience the world through her eyes and that…

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    Emily Dickinson was a female author of poetry from Amherst, Massachusetts in born in 1830 and died in 1886. Only a handful of her hundreds of poems were published before her death in 1886. Furthermore, Dickinson has since joined Walt Whitman in the literary canon as one of the two most significant American poets of the nineteenth century. (Bluemle, S. R., 2008) I will discuss about her illness she had in her life, the language of her poetry that reflects on her life of how her works was…

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    Emily Dickinson spend an excessive amount of time secluded and isolated in her bedroom. Notably, her bedroom window overlooked a cemetery, therefore, Dickinson was a constant watcher of death. Reflecting in her poems is her exposure to death and the recurring theme of death and demise. As she was exposed to graveyards, tombs, and death since a child, an effect was bound to take place and it is illustrated in her poetry. Dickinson observed the omnipresent death, pain, and suffering, and…

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    Emily Dickinson, an introverted American poet with epilepsy, wrote her way into the world of literature in a distinctive and intriguing manner. Her words, while often unrhymed, have left a perpetual ringing in the minds of her readers. Her poems will forever provide them with wonder, however, one may find themselves speculating about what influenced Miss Dickinson to write her poetry the way that she did. Richard Wilbur, an American poet, described Emily Dickinson with the following quote; “I…

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    Harold Bloom, a Yale literary critic, states “ Dickinson [...] has a mind so original and powerful that we scarcely have begun, even now, to catch up with her”. Poet Emily Dickinson is one of the two pioneers for American poetry, along with Walt Whitman. Although both are prolific writers, the two were radically different; as Whitman toured New England promoting his work, Dickinson barricaded herself in her house. Dickinson’s use of various poetic techniques perfectly illustrates her agonizing…

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    Emily Dickinson Biography

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    Emily Dickinson is one of America’s greatest poets. She was born in the family Homestead in Amherst, Massachusetts on December 10, 1830. The Homestead might have been the first built brick house in Amherst. It was built for Emily’s grandparents, Samuel Fowler Dickinson and Lucretia Gunn Dickinson. Her family consisted of her parents, Edward Dickinson and Emily Norcross Dickinson, and her siblings William Austin Dickinson and Lavinia Dickinson. “For school, she attended Amherst Academy for seven…

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    Something striking about Emily Dickinson’s poetry is the makeshift way it all seems to come together. It’s written on any type of paper—whether envelope or wrinkled, torn corner—in an endless chain of thought, as if her entire body of work was sticky-noted. And so this allows for reproduction upon reproduction. Because of its jotted down nature, Dickinson’s collection of poetry lends itself to a continuous but broken style, which is built around her punctuation and self-revision. To bring this…

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    dramatize the meaning of death and create intense imagery. In the first poem, Emily Dickinson uses personification to shows how she and death travel together in the stanza two “We slowly drove‐He knew no haste”(Dickinson “ Because I could Not Stop For Death” 5). Death is being personified as a person who is driving to death. She said, “I could not stop for Death–/so He kindly stopped for” her (Dickinson 1-2). Dickinson personifies death as a “kindly” because death cannot literally stop to wait…

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