Analysis Of Emily Dickinson Poem

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The Understanding of a Boundless Mind An analysis of Emily Dickinson’s Poems Early American literature is an imperative part of the history of the United States; it is something that help define who we are and how our current politics and lifestyle came to be. A significant part of early American literature and the shaping of our country is poetry. Parini says, “The relationship between poetry and national culture is always an intimate if troubled one, and to a large extent what American poets have accomplished as a whole is a measure of what American culture itself has accomplished.” In learning and studying early American literature, reading poetry and deriving its meaning by using your own mind is critical. In fact, many early poets main …show more content…

By this, she means our minds have a capacity beyond anything else on earth. Benstock suggest, “Dickinson claims that the mind is infinitely larger than the physical spaces of sky and sea, which seem so vast. The brain, she says, can “contain” the sky “with ease,” and with room to spare; it can “absorb” the sea as can a sponge.” In Dickinson’s poem, “The Brain—is Wider than the Sky--” she says, “The Brain—is wider than the Sky-- / For—put them side by side-- / The one the other will contain / With ease—and You—beside--…” She goes on to explain how the brain is also deeper than the sea, and it is “just the weight of God.” Dickinson clearly believes the human mind is capable of much more than we give it credit, and she encourages us to seize the opportunity to make use of the fact that our minds are so …show more content…

As she dies, with all her loved ones around her, she notices the buzzing of a fly at the window, as if it is trying to escape. In this poem, Dickinson writes, "I willed my keepsakes--Signed away What portion of me be Assignable--and then it was There interposed a Fly--" this displays the ability of the human mind to be in different mind sets, to understand and see different than NGOs based in the situation. Poole states, "...Both their buzzing and their liminality recall Emily Dickinson 's poem... Where the fly provides a distraction from the deathbed but also functions as a kind of shaman, buzzing between the living and the dead." In this, Poole is obviously agreeing that the fly in this poem represents a distraction from death, one of the most intriguing things. Through this poem Dickinson displays the power of our minds, even in the compelling case of

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