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Examples Of Emily Dickinson

Decent Essays

Emily Dickinson: Ambivalence in Nature Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was an American poet from the mid-nineteenth century. She had lived reclusively with her parents, composing approximately 1,800 known works of poetry. When she tried to get some of them published, they were rejected for their strange punctuation and capitalization. Dickinson refused to change her writing style and eventually gave up on poetry. Only until four years after her death was all of her poetry discovered and published by a neighbor and close friend. Since Dickinson never thought her works would be published, none of her poems had titles. Literary scholars identified and numbered these poems 1-1800. It is also acceptable to identify these poems by their first line. …show more content…

Unlike in “A Bird came down the Walk,” Dickinson is interacting with nature in “A narrow Fellow in the Grass,” and she, once again, can be seen experiencing a feeling of ambivalence about nature. When Dickinson writes “His notice instant is - (4)” she seems to describe the two being spontaneously spooked by each other’s presence. However, later in the poem, Dickinson says: Several of Nature’s People I know and they know me I feel for them a transport Of Cordiality (17-20).
By expressing her thoughts with words such as “cordiality,” she suggests that the snake, although potentially dangerous and frightening, can also be calm and gracious. The snake can represent both sides of the spectrum and strengthening Dickinson’s claim of nature’s ambivalence. Dickinson’s poem, “Apparently with no surprise,” expresses her same theme of confusion about nature. In the beginning of the poem, Dickinson says:
Apparently with no surprise,
To any happy flower,
The frost beheads it at its play,
In accidental power.
The blond assassin passes on. (1-5)
She is explaining the process of flowers dying to the cold frost overnight. With her language and comparison of the frost to an assassin, one can assume that Dickinson disapproves of nature’s brutal actions. However, in the first line of the poem, Dickinson introduces the events as “no surprise,” so she understands that it’s a normal course of action in terms of nature and that time will go on. Later in the poem she

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