Poetry of Emily Dickinson



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Poetry of Emily Dickinson

  • Soul is innermost core of our being

  • Self engaged with the world but aware of eternity and human mortality

  • Poems were not titled when discovered

  • Capitalized words create emphasis on particular images

“Because I could not stop for Death”



  • captures the inevitability of death

  • suggests belief in an eternal afterlife

  • personification of Death as a coach driver who carries people toward their final resting place

“I heard a Fly buzz – when I died”


“There’s a certain Slant of light”



  • describes unbearable hurt that fills the soul

    • divine visitation send to teach the meaning of our own mortality

  • comes with winter when world is cold and still

  • describes an emotional response that resembles a medical condition unknown in her time

    • referred to as “cabin fever” in 19th century

    • diagnosed in 1980’s as a mood disorder triggered by lack of sunlight

      • seasonal affective disorder (SAD)

“My life closed twice before its close”


“The Soul selects her own Society”



  • depicts Soul as a feminine entity, separate from and indifferent to claims on her attention

  • portrays Soul as choosing a single person to share her society, rejecting all others

“The Brain is wider than the Sky”



  • contrasts brain, as a metaphor for the soul, with the sea and sky

  • notion that the human soul is infinite, like God

“There is a solitude of space”



  • strongest solitude is solitude of inner loneliness

“Water, is taught by thirst”



  • comparison/contrast are useful ways to learn

  • we can only learn things by comparing them with very different things

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