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Emily Dickinson 's Life And Work

Decent Essays

Emily Dickinson is considered to be one of the best and most original American poets. Her writing style and views on themes such as religion, love, and death are what make her stand out from other poets of the nineteenth century. Dickinson was a recluse; she spent most of her time within the confines of her home and avoided most other people (Brand). Because of this hermit-like behavior it is questioned where the inspiration for her poems came from. Although Dickinson had an uneventful social life, her mind was an exciting place, her imagination always at work (“Emily Dickinson’s Life and Work” 804). One of the most interesting themes Dickinson covers is death. She has an interesting relationship with death in her poetry. It is thought the death of her childhood friend, Sophia Holland, could have motivated Dickinson to write about death (“Emily Dickinson’s Life and Work” 803). Something that is unique about her poems on death is the point of view. Like in many of her other works, the speaker speaks in first person making what is being said feel more personal. When reading the poem the reader may feel like they are truly a part of what is going on and that makes it easier to imagine and relate to what is being expressed. In her poems she makes clear that she believes death is inevitable and is not something to be feared itself. According to her it is the oblivion afterwards that is to be feared, not death itself (“Death in the Poems of Emily Dickinson”). In “Because I

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