preview

Emily Dickinson Themes

Decent Essays

Emily Dickinson was one of the greatest American poets. She wrote through the entirety of her adult life, but she only saw less than a dozen of them published. Dickinson never knew the impact of her poems on society. With over 2,000 poems total, no one could have predicted that Emily Dickinson’s themes would still be as pertinent today as they were in the late nineteenth century. Themes such as death, religion, life, and loneliness are some of the most common across her works. Of her 2,000 or more poems, about 600 are on the subject of death. The majority of Dickinson’s life was consumed by death (LaBlanc 63). Due to frequent confrontations with the dead and dying, Dickinson began to view death as a friendly creature and often personified it. It was not uncommon for a single poem to contain multiple themes, sometimes pairing love and death (“Because I Could Not Stop For Death” 3). As for the friendliness of death, Dickinson comforted the living, giving advice on coping with a loss. Poems started with a death and, by the end, had looped backed …show more content…

Throughout her life, Emily Dickinson proclaimed and renounced her in God. She abandoned the conventional marriage and family traditions of her day with no regrets (Bloom 60-61). This resulted in a mix of very interesting and emotionally complex poetry. Most of Dickinson’s poems with themes of renunciation lack mature understanding, suggesting it is some of her earliest work (Ferlazzo 43). She believed that renunciation would lead to divine happiness (Johnson 105-07). “I felt a Funeral in my Brain,” depending on how it is interpreted, describes a funeral for the speaker’s faithful beliefs. It details their former belief system being stomped upon and ultimately, “… the speaker’s loss of faith can only be described using religious terms.” The poem ends with the speaker deciding to be “finished knowing” what was once believed whole-heartedly (Thomason

Get Access