How Does Emily Dickinson Believe In Life After Death

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As Emily Dickinson goes through the poem she starts explaining what her life after death could consist of as well as going back on previous memories she could of had while still living. In the beginning of the poem she talks about ‘death’ stopping for her as she could not stop for it. She makes it seem as though she has no choice in the matter of dying and gets in the carriage with ‘death’ and goes along. As ‘death’ and she go along in the carriage they revisit many places that she grew up around and also other landmarks in her life that bring back significant memories. Going through the poem the theme is quite clear that she believes in life after death and that there is civility and peace when you are deceased.
In the first stanza she refers …show more content…

She also uses many metaphors like death which is an extended metaphor of what death might be like when it actually happens. Another metaphor used is the carriage that ‘death’ and she take a ride in on their way toward eternity referred to in the first stanza. The carriage could be her interpretation of what obtaining immortality might feel like, because she says that with her and death in the carriage was ‘immortality (Schmoop). As the poem ensues the speaker or Emily Dickinson are taking a rider through various settings and scenes, these settings could possibly be memories of her childhood and life. In stanza 3, Dickinson and ‘death’ pass through a school with children at recess. During her life as a writer she would pass down food to the children at the school next to her house. This scene could be a representation of that part of her life. Continuing in stanza 3 she states that they pass “Fields of Gazing Grain” and “Passed the Setting Sun”. This scene connects itself with stanza 4 using personification stating “Or rather--- He passed Us”, Dickinson could have used this personification as a foreshadowing of death (Schmoop). In the second half of stanza 4 she describes her clothing as a white

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