preview

Emily Dickinson Poetry Essay

Decent Essays

Emily Dickinson’s Poetry
There is a lot more to poetry than just the words themselves. “What William Shakespeare called, “the mind’s eye” also plays a role” (Borus34). What that means is that your experiences and thoughts will add to your understanding. Dickinson had an active mind and a style so unique and unusual with her writing. Something that was very unusual about her writing was that she never put a title to her poems. Just like many poets, she used a wide assortment of literary devices such as, metaphor, simile, alliteration, and symbolism. “Unlike many writers of her time, Dickinson did not use conventional rhyme, capitalization, or punctuation” (Borus36). For example, she would put dashes not just at the end of a line, but also …show more content…

"For that last Onset-when the King/ Be witnessed-in the Room-" (7-8), “In the first part of this line, the author uses an oxymoron by stating "that last Onset". Last means an "end," while the definition of onset is a "beginning."” (Borus57). Dickinson’s poems use a lot of symbols, things that represent other things. When the speaker describes “Onset- when the King Be witnessed- in the Room-,"(7-8). I feel like the king is being targeted as a symbol of God and death. This is showing connection that the narrator must have a strong belief in religion.
This poem is full of sadness, with the narrator stating, “I Willed my Keepsakes” (9). “Making a will is the last and final way of ensuring the narrator's previously-owned possessions staying with loved ones after death” (Borus62). Most people fear death, the tone of the narrator is merely one of sad acceptance” (Borus62). At the moment of the revealing of the narrators will, “There interposed a Fly-,” This is telling us that the fly is again interrupting (12). The fly seems to come across as a noisy fly. Why is it representing as a noisy fly? Why did the fly appear at the end of someone’s life and at their last breathe? “The description of the fly changes in stanza thirteen as the narrator states, "With Blue- uncertain stumbling Buzz-," thus explaining the fly is no ordinary house fly but a metaphorical figure representing death” (Johnson173). The blue buzz in being

Get Access