An Analysis Of Emily Dickinson's Poem 'I Heard A Fly Buzz'

657 Words2 Pages

Death will Say Hello Opening a door into the unknown is hard to understand, more so, when it comes to the question, what happens to me when I die; where does my soul go, heaven or hell? Could a small fly be that difference in where your soul ends up or does one in the second before death consumes you, know their destination? These questions come to mind when one reads Emily Dickinson. She pondered and wondered about these questions that all people will face with their own mortality, which can lead to insanity or enlightenment. In Dickinson’s poem “[I heard a Fly buzz/when I died/],” she opens three large questions in my mind: how does death affect loved ones, what is death like for the dying, and is death an old friend to some? (Your thesis should answer a question—not present them.) …show more content…

That the speaker believes that some of the family is only there to see what items will be given to them (Fragment). This thought also comes from the phrase in the poem, “What portion of me be Assignable” (10). The atmosphere of the room being still goes against the expression of what everyone constitutes what death is supposed to be like, which is full of emotion. Where in this poem (Avoid second person you) do not see the family having any emotions towards the speaker, but the speaker mentions, “the eyes- had wrung them dry” (Dickinson 5), which means there may have been some emotion, but not too much from the love

Open Document