Emily Dickenson's Relationship With Death

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Emily Dickenson has a relationship with Death more than what “normal” people would have with it. Dickenson has wrote a lot of poems about life and death. “Because I could not stop for death” was one of her most famous poems. Death, in the form of a gentleman suitor, stops to pick up the speaker and take her on a ride in his horse-drawn carriage. “Because I could not stop for death” (1) Dickenson is stating that she didn’t have a choice about how she dies and when. We've all probably heard something like this before. Even if we haven’t, she reminds us that it is truly up to the higher power not us as to when we will die. “He kindly stopped for me” (2) this gives us a good clue that the speaker is going to survive this one and come out alive …show more content…

“We slowly drove, he knew no haste” (5) they are taking their time to get to where they want to go. They seem as if time is not an issue and they can do what they want and how fast they want it. “And I put away my labor and my leisure too, for his Civility” (6-8) Dickenson is stating that she decided to put everything to the side and not worry about while she was on a “date” with Death. “We passed the School, where Children Strove at Recess in the Ring” (9-10) Dickinson painted a scene of what they are riding by. It seems so peaceful reading this as if they were having a great and relaxing time enjoying the view. “We passed the Field of Gazing Grain, We passed the Setting Sun” (11-12) the sun and field are much more general descriptions of the scene than the previous lines, yet might even have symbolic significance. The setting sun, for example, signifies the end of the day, but might also stand for the end of

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