Emily Dickinson Theme Of Death

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Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson is arguably America’s most well-known female poet. She lived from December 10, 1830 until May 15, 1886. She was born in Amherst, Massachusetts to Edward and Emily Dickinson. Her father was a lawyer as well as treasurer for the Amherst Academy which Emily attended and graduated from in 1847. Since her family was very passionate about education, her father sent her to primary school as well Mount Holyoke Female Seminary for a year once she’d graduated from Amherst Academy (Wolff 3, 77). Dickinson was the middle child and eldest daughter in an established Puritan family. Her great love was poetry, and her letters home while she was away at school. She had always intended for her work to be just for her eyes. Dickinson
She had a lifelong obsession as much of her poetry is centered around the theme of death or someone dying. She spends all this time trying to understand this experience as another form of “the human experience.” In Dickinson’s time it was not uncommon for people to die of things that are easily curable in the 21st century (Bloom 64). She lost many dear friends such as her cousin, Emily Norcross, her nephew, Gilbert, her parents, Edward and Emily, Benjamin Newton, Leonard Humphrey, Sophia Holland and possible lovers like Judge Otis Phillips Lord and Samuel Bowles (Higgins). She had even written a poem in memory of Judge Lord in which she disguised their names as “Awe” and “Circumference” (Bloom 3). The deaths of her loved ones are a big part of why Dickinson struggled to have full faith in God. She became angry with God for taking them away and wrote: “Of Course- I prayed-/ And did God care? / He cared as much as on the Air/ A Bird- had stamped her foot-/ And cried “Give Me” (Todd).” Even the children that she was close to such as her nephew Gilbert were not spared the suffering of an early death, which Emily couldn’t understand. The people of Amherst would have immediately used God’s promise of a resurrection after death as a way of coping with the death of loved ones. Even in her grief, Emily Dickinson still acknowledged that this physical world of borrowed time would not be the final resting place. She writes that “This
“The notion of time seems always to have haunted Dickinson, and she almost never remarked time’s passage without a tremble of fear” (Wolff 83). She sees immortality as the obvious—changeless, but time is a constant change. Eternity will bring bliss and rest from the seemingly endless illusion that is time. Time moved in only one direction and lead to only one destination: Death (Wolff 83). As time passed throughout her life, Emily drew more and more into herself until she ultimately became a recluse altogether. The pain and suffering that she’d experienced in her youth led her to find solitude with only her poetry to bring her comfort. She wrote so much in the span of her life about time—not just poems, but also letters to her family and to her mentors. In her era, death was often personified as something to be feared, but Dickinson used her own view on death to write her poems. She wrote poems such as “The Chariot (Todd 199),” “It was not for death, for I stood up (Todd 205),” and “Afraid? Of whom am I afraid? (Todd 207).” Particularly with “Afraid? Of whom am I afraid?” Dickinson reflects her internal view of the end of her time. She is obviously not afraid of death, life, or of resurrection. Her searching ends with the deducing that eternity is truly the only place where one can experience the peacefulness of a settled

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