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We Grow Accustomed To The Dark Analysis

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Most of us are accustomed to the light, we live and prosper in the light; it’s such a familiar thing. But imagine one day that light vanishes and it’s gone, the only thing that’s left is the darkness and it’ll be there forever, so growing accustomed to it is not an option. That’s exactly what Dickinson’s poems “We Grow Accustomed To The Dark” and “Before I Got My Eyes Put Out” are about, but on a metaphorical level. In those two poems she gives a message about how happiness disappears and depression comes, but also how her viewpoint is changed and how she takes a safer and more isolating approach. In “We Grow Accustomed To The Dark” Dickinson starts off the poem with “We grow accustomed to the dark//When light is put away” right off the bat she mentions how you get comfortable with the dark or depression when the light or happiness is put away. In the second stanza of her poem, she says “We uncertain step//For newness of the night” by this she’s saying how our first few moments are uncertain but eventually a step will be taken and that’s how we learn the dark. “Then – fit our Vision to the Dark –” In this quote Dickinson says that we will fit our eyes to grow accustomed to the dark, but what she really means is that we’ll mentally grow used to that bad state of mind, our minds will adapt and once it does it’ll no longer be affected by it. She then says “And meet the Road – erect –” After adjusting to see in the dark and not in the light, walk the road with your back

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