Emily Dickinson's 'What Soft-Cherubic Creatures'

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Emily Dickinson depicts pretty or cherubic, upper class, and selfish women in her poem “What Soft-Cherubic Creatures”. Dickinson describes these women as “gentlewomen”, referring to their high social status, as well as implying their marital status, their lack of rights, and their proper behavior in order to fit in with their class, like those from the Victorian womanhood. Dickinson states how horrified these women are of a deity, such as God. They think he is a commoner since he associates with those from the lowest status with their “freckled” appearance, but God too was freckled just like the lowly people because he spent most of his time outside. Dickinson is different from these women because she knows the gentlewomen should be ashamed

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