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Emily Dickinson And Death

Decent Essays

The Death in Emily Dickinson Like many poets, Emily Dickinson explored the themes of death, leading to the answers of so many questions, in which she was concerned herself. Her poetry frequently clarifies her reaction as to why she wrote about death. However, her treatment of death is unique: “Because I could not stop for Death – He kindly stopped for me –” (577). Dickinson expresses herself being able to accept death as an old friend rather than a force of nature. With many of her poems, Dickinson elaborates and questions death being incorporated in daily lives as well as the mysterious life leading after it. Among the understanding of her views of death, numerous people become frightened as if it were some creature prowling behind something ready to take them at any second. Death has been stated frequently throughout her poems, each one composed of frustration, suffering, pain, sorrow, grief, and loneliness. Death is a common theme in her writing. The obsession Dickinson made of death of darkness, “Or rather – He passed Us – The Dews drew quivering and chill – ” (577). She describes death from all imaginable characteristics – as the polite lover, the physical corruptor, and the alarming killer. Dickinson’s views on immortality were a problem that was accepted as …show more content…

Death is a lurking event that is shadowing everyone, but Dickinson sees it as an opportunity to deal with it. I believe that death is going to happen at any moment, but find it unsettling to be able to talk about death as if it would happen shortly. I think Dickinson is impractical to believe that death is just an entity to love; rather it should be something to fear of. She may agree on the fact that death is a gruesome conclusion, but I feel that we shouldn’t just acknowledge it to occur, rather wait for the outcome

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