Emily Dickinson Literary Devices

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To briefly state, Emily Dickinson introduces the reader to the interpretation of death from the very beginning of her poem. The concept of death to many is viewed as a malevolent and heinous being, but Dickinson introduces death in a most unusual way, by personifying death as a gentleman. Thus, by interpreting death in such a way the reader feels an atmosphere of tranquility as the speaker talks about her journey on the carriage with death. The speaker then begins to explain what she views and what happening on the journey. As the reader begins to reach the final stanza it turns out that the speaker has been dead for a long time and she only is reminiscing about the day death came for her. In this poem, Dickinson is able to portray her conception
This sentence leads the reader to believe that this is no ordinary carriage ride but a journey into the speaker’s afterlife. Another way Dickinson displays her usage of symbolism is found in the lines of twelve and thirteen when the speaker explains “We passed the Setting Sun – Or rather – He passed us”, suggesting that the sun is more than a setting for the poem but a symbol for death itself because as it sets it leaves the speaker in the darkness of night which implies that her journey is about to end. Nearing the end of the poem the speakers says “We paused before a House”, thus this conveys that this may be the final resting place for the speaker. Though Dickinson does not explicitly say that this is the speaker grave, yet she rather conveys it as a house to symbolize that the speaker has accepted her death and is comfortable with it because technically her grave is her home now. Towards the ending the reader discovers the speaker has since long passed but she still “surmised the Horses’ Heads” which to her symbolize that she was going to die and leaves the reader to feel almost surprised that they did not catch this symbol in the beginning of the

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