Common Themes In Emily Dickinson's Poetry

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Emily Dickinson is a very familiar name to most people who have ever been in any kind of Literature class. Dickinson wrote many poems. The total count falls just short of 1,800. However, only about ten were published in her lifetime (Roberts 735). There are several common themes in her poetry, but grief is present in almost all of them. Emily Dickinson’s poetry is a little diverse, but most of her poetry falls into one of these four categories: nature, love, God, or death.
The first ironic theme in Dickinson’s poems is nature. Dickinson was a very recluse person. She spent much time alone and never made many friends. She also only published a few poems in her lifetime, all against her will (academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu). Since she was reclusive, …show more content…

Love is a very common theme for most people, but for Dickinson it is a different story. She never had a real love affair, but there were some rumors. She is rumored to have loved Reverend Charles Wadsworth. They met on a trip to Philadelphia and he visited her home. Right after that, he left for the West Coast which most believe caused her heartache in the following years (poets.org). Another love affair she is rumored to have had is with widower Judge Otis Lord, one of her father’s friends (biography.com). It is very ironic that Dickinson wrote her poetry about love as though she had experienced it every day. The poem "In Vain" is considered her best love poem and may very well be her most famous love poem. Poems like "Wild Nights! Wild Nights!" show how much her imagination must have come into play in these poems. This is considering she had never been with a man, but was still writing poems with lines such as, "Wild Nights should be/ Our luxury!" …show more content…

All of her family and close friends were saved during her childhood, but she never experienced God 's calling. It is not as though she did not want to be converted. She wrote, "Tis a dangerous moment for any one when the meaning goes out of things and Life stands straight--and punctual--and yet no signal comes" in an undated prose (academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu). This is believed to be a reference to never receiving a signal from God. The fact that she never really believed in God makes Him an ironic topic for many of her poems. It is also ironic considering she was writing in the American Enlightenment Era, a time where most were searching for God through new schools. Dickinson, however, gladly stood out at her school and called herself a pagan (biography.com). How she perceives God has given her poems a wide range of thoughts on God. All things from friendliness to anger can be found in her various

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