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Contributions Of Emily Dickinson

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People say alone time allows the best ideas to flow. When alone an individual can be with their thoughts, dreams and hopes. Emily Dickinson spent years in solitude and confinement which allowed her creative juices to progress. Overtime, her ideas began appearing on paper as magnificent poems. Love, death, life, hope, weapons, birds, bees, flowers, and gardens are all themes used by Emily Dickinson in her poetry. It is unbelievably stunning that Dickinson gives off such beautiful imagery for someone who rarely left the house. She has connected hundreds of thousands of people together through her incredible voice of hope, love, and death. Even more than a century after her death, Dickinson is still extremely relevant in not only today’s …show more content…

Though Mabel Loomis Todd and Higginson published the first selection of her poems in 1890, a complete volume did not appear until 1955. Edited by Thomas H. Johnson, the poems still bore the editorial hand of Todd and Higginson. It was not until R.W. Franklin’s version of Dickinson’s poems appeared in 1998 that her order, unusual punctuation and spelling choices were completely restored. In Dickinson’s other works, opposition frames the system of meaning in her poetry: the reader knows what is, by what is not. In an early poem, “There’s a certain Slant of light, (320)” Dickinson located meaning in a geography of “internal difference.” Her 1862 poem “It was not Death, for I stood up, (355)”, “It was not Death, for I stood up, And all the Dead, lie down - It was not Night, for all the Bells. Put out their, Tongues, for Noon.”picks up on this important thread in her career.
The poem, “Because I could not stop for Death- He kindly stopped for me,” speaks on so many emotional and spiritual levels. It is so beautifully lyrical. It shows that Death isn’t the “ugly truth” he is made out to be. Death wasn’t rushing the speaker to the afterlife, “ Because I could not stop for Death / He kindly stopped for me / We slowly drove, he knew no haste”(1-2, 5) . Americans need to see Death as a fellow entourage and safeguard instead of a cut-throat soldier who brings misery and

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