Critical Analysis Of Emily Dickinson

1207 Words3 Pages

Grand thoughts and ideas usually require grand length and depth; a powerful message is best relayed through a powerful analysis. This literary formality is an understood truth among most writers and poets, and their knowledge of this principle helps readers to understand what messages and themes are being conveyed. Emily Dickinson challenges this norm by providing a short but poignant poem about something as meaningful as the concept of faith. The poem is broken up into two short stanzas, with the first acting as an analogy to the second. This comparison allows the reader to understand the true meaning. Containing only forty-four words, the poem eloquently states that faith cannot be explained or debated; it is simply an emotional response to the surroundings. The first two …show more content…

These simple lines may be grazed over by the average reader when reading the poem for the first time. There, of course, is a greater significance than ten English words. These lines explain that Dickinson knows she is ignorant and naïve; she has never happened across a Moor or the sea, nor has she set out to find and see these things for herself. Why would she admit this? This seems to be a strange confession that she wanted to relay to the reader before any other groundwork was set. These two statements are followed up by two more lines: “Yet know I how the Heather looks” and “And what a Billow be”. To many modern readers, the meaning of these two lines can be inferred, but it is vital to examine exactly what is being said to understand fully. Dickinson claims that she knows “how the Heather looks”. What or who is Heather? Dickinson is referring to the Heather plant, more commonly known as the Calluna. It is a flower that blossomed in Europe and Asia Minor, which at the time, was inhabited by the Moors (Muslim conquerors). Instead of saying she knows what a Moor is, or what they believe, she states that she knows of a flower that grows in a region where they had settled. Why

More about Critical Analysis Of Emily Dickinson

Open Document