Emily Dickinson

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    Emily Dickinson: “I felt a Funeral in my Brain.” Have you ever felt an overwhelming sense of sadness or depression? How would you express yourself if you did? Some people use words as an expression and it can be noted as an art form. In the 1800’s, a young teenage girl named Emily Dickinson began composing, revising, and documenting a series of many poems. Between 1858-1865 was eventful time in history, the Civil War. Although this period in time was tragic, Emily Dickinson continued…

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    Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson are two writers during the late 19th and early 20th century. They are often referred to the founders of American poetry. Both writers have many similarities and differences from each other, but neither of them can be imitated through their style. They have influenced many during and long after the Romantic era of literature. A common theme through each of their following poems is that some aspects of nature cannot be taught or learned, but only understood through…

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    Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts on December 10, 1830. Her family was made up of her father Edward Dickinson, her mother Emily Norcross Dickinson, her brother William Austin Dickinson, and her sister Lavinia Norcross Dickinson. Emily Dickinson was seventeen when she studied for seven years at Amherst Academy. She was very close to her brother Austin. Austin married Susan which ruined Emily’s relationship with Austin. Susan which was Emily's sister in law caused her…

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    In the first stanza, Dickinson uses word choice, and metaphor to explain that the bird represents hope and hope is prevalent within us. Dickinson uses a literal and standard definition of hope. Initially, she general categorizes it by saying it “is the thing” and then differentiates it. By doing so, Dickinson is classify hope as a bird. In other words, if Dickinson had called hope a spiritual idea or human ambition, the metaphor would have lost meaning. Instead, by using the word “thing”, the…

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    In “The Last Night that She Lived,” Emily Dickinson takes an in-depth look into what life and death mean to her, along with delving into what the reader might see in life and death. Throughout the poem Emily Dickinson describes the emotions of the visitors as they wait and watch for a loved one to pass on. In examining death and the human response, Emily Dickinson 's poem is centered on how the people in the poem experience a change in how they view death. In the beginning of the poem the…

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    n an American literature, Whitman and Dickinson have a huge contribution. Poets around the world admire their work today and call them their role model. Surprisingly, they were not that famous and recognized during their time; however, in these days, they are regarded as two of the greatest to embrace the genre of poetry. They both had different styles of presenting their ideas through poetry. On one hand, Whitman liked to be loud and noticeable. On the other hand, the tone of Dickinson’s poems…

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    Emily Dickinson was a woman that usually stayed home; she kept to herself and reflected on everything about death and human mortality (Quinn). She wrote hundreds of poems and simply numbered them; so, the names given to her poems are generally the first line of the poem (LaBlanc 61). In many of these poems, there are reoccurring themes and strong symbolism and evidence of sexist societal roles that help explain death and the emotions and thoughts that come with it. In her poems, “I Heard a Fly…

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    Emily Dickinson Archive or EDA is an open access website for the manuscripts of Emily Dickinson. The purpose of this website is to serve as the central place for Dickinson’s manuscripts, poems, and letters. The long term goal of this website is to be the premiere archive host for access to serving Dickinson manuscripts, letters, and modern and historical editors of poems and letters. The funding for this archive has been provided by the Harvard Library, The Sidney Verba Fund, The Houghton…

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    of a new form of writing commonly known as “modern poetry.” During this period arose two great poets; Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman, who in time were labeled as the ‘father and mother of American poetry.’ The true singularity shown by each of these two poets comes out in there true sense of privacy, or lack-there-of, juxtaposed with the persona that is given off through their writing. Dickinson who wrote to be private and gives off through her material a feeling of this privacy, had no intent…

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    Death” by Emily Dickinson was written in 1863, it is still relevant today. Not only does it represent what Dickinson was feeling, and shows how people today can relate to the poem, I’m one of those people that cannot help but to feel emotional towers the poem. Most of Emily Dickinson’s poems reflect what she was going through during the time that she was writing each of her poems. In 1830, Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts where she lives her whole life. Even though Dickinson…

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