Emily Dickinson: The Death Of Death

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Emily Dickinson was a gothic writer in the eighteenth century. Dickinson used a fascination with death in most of her writing. Her interest in death is often criticized for being morbid but today it is seemed to be sensitive and imaginative.
Dickinson grew up around death which affected her greatly. Her seclusion may have contributed to the meanings of her poetry. The isolation from society helped Emily Dickinson’s style evolve into one that can be recognized. This isolation “offered the opportunity for her to explore her mind” (Daniels 2). The death of her mother and father devastated her greatly and influenced her poetry even more.
Many of her poems mentioned God and religion in a nonconventional way. Dickinson’s writing was influenced by the King James Version of the bible (Diyanni, Robert 168). In “Not Any Higher Stands the Grave” Dickinson uses the image of a grave and the distance from all graves to the heavens as a metaphor for man’s relationship with the creator. In “Because I Could Not Stop for Death” Dickinson personifies death as a kind stag...

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