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EMILY
DICKINSON (Elizabeth)
Born: December 10, 1830, in
Amherst, Massachusetts, United States
Died: May 15, 1886, in Amherst, Massachusetts, United States
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'The
mind in its own place and in itself
Can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven.- Paradise Lost
'What if earth Be but the shadow of heaven and things therein,
Each to other like, more than on earth is thought?' - Paradist Lost
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Emily Dickinson was a prolific
and significant American poet whose reluctance to publish and reclusive
lifestyle in later years has earned her the nickname the "New England
Mystic." She was born the second child of three in a religious family with
deep New England roots. Her father, Edward Dickinson, was a lawyer who
served as treasurer of Amherst College (founded by his father) from 1835-72.
He additionally served a term in congress from 1853-55.
Her youngest sister, Lavinia, never married and stayed in the family home.
Her older brother married one of Emily's
friends and moved in next door. Dickinson herself was educated at Amherst
Academy and then Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, and became quite reclusive
in later years.
Dickinson is best known for experimentation in rhythm and rhymes. She began
to write in 1850 and wrote only a handful of poems before 1858. Her early
poems are considered quite conventional and she was heavily influenced by
Ralph Waldo Emerson and Emily Brontë. However, after this initial period,
she began to experiment with form, style, and language. Her predominant
poetic form was the iambic quatrain and a great deal of the meters match
those of hymn writer Isaac Watts, William Shakespeare, or the King James
version of the Bible. However Dickinson stripped her poems of superfluous
words and, as a result, most of her poetry is terse. She frequently played
with syntax and words to shock the reader. Themes of her poems often include
love, death and nature.
Dickinson did receive encouragement for her literary efforts, for example
from her friend Thomas Higginson. And unlike Higginson, who advised her not
to publish her unconventional verse, some, like Dickinson's friend novelist
Helen Jackson, urged her to publish a collection of her poetry. Such
entreaties were in vain, however, and in fact only seven of her poems were
even individually published during her lifetime. Other friends included
Reverend
Charles Wadsworth, whom Dickinson met on a trip to Washington to visit her
father.
During the Civil War Dickinson wrote approximately 800 pieces. While not
specifically about the war, these poems reflect an uneasy sense of tension
and internal conflict. During this time she felt isolated and separated from
her friends: Wadsworth was in San Francisco and Thomas Wentworth Higgson was
an officer in the war. In addition she encountered eye problems during this
period. Tension in her writing has also been attributed to her religious
skepticism.
Her literary work slowed considerably after 1870, at which time she began to
lose several of her closest friends and family members to death, including
her father, mother, nephew, Wadsworth, and Holland. She became a recluse
later in life, wearing only white and well guarded by her sister. After her
death in 1886 her works were published by her sister, edited by Higginson
and Dickinson's niece Mabel Loomis Todd.
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EMILY DICKINSON FROM 'THE
POEMS' |
HAVE you got a
brook in your little heart, Where bashful flowers blow, And blushing
birds go down to drink, And shadows tremble so?
And nobody knows, so still it flows, That any brook is there; And
yet your little draught of life Is daily drunken there;
Then look out for the little brook in March, When the rivers
overflow, And the snows come hurrying from the hills,And the bridges
often go.
And later, in August it may be, When the meadows parching lie,
Beware, lest this little brook of life Some burning noon go dry!
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American poet whose works were
uniformly short, usually consisting of four-line stanzas.
Though Emily wrote close to two-thousand poems, only seven
were published during her lifetime. Poems (1890) - After
Dickinson’s death her sister, Lavinia, discovered hundreds
of poems in her room. Lavinia persuaded an editor and a
family friend to publish the verses. “Poems” is the first
published collection of her work, consisting of 125 short
poems. |
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More Poems Here
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