A
Sepal, Petal, and A Thorn
a sepal, petal, and a thorn
upon a common summer's morn—
a flask of dew—a bee or two—
a breeze—a caper in the trees—
and i'm a rose!
A
Shade Upon The Mind There Passes
a shade upon the mind there passes
as when on noon
a cloud the mighty sun encloses
remembering
that some there be too numb to notice
oh god
why give if thou must take away
the loved?
You
Love Me—You are Sure—
you love me—you are sure—
i shall not fear mistake—
i shall not cheated wake—
some grinning morn—
to find the sunrise left—
and orchards—unbereft—
and dollie—gone!
i need not start—you're sure—
that night will never be—
when frightened—home to thee i run—
to find the windows dark—
and no more dollie—mark—
quite none?
be sure you're sure—you know—
i'll bear it better now—
if you'll just tell me so—
than when—a little dull balm grown—
over this pain of mine—
you sting—again!
Biography of Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
grew up in a prominent and prosperous household in Amherst, Massachusetts.
Along with her younger siter Lavinia and older brother Austin, she experienced
a quiet and reserved family life headed by her father Edward Dickinson.
In a letter to Austin at law school, she
once described the atmosphere in her father's house as "pretty much all
sobriety." Her mother, Emily Norcross Dickinson, was not as powerful a
presence in her life; she seems not to have been as emotionally accessible as
Dickinson would have liked. Her daughter is said to have characterized her as
not the sort of mother "to whom you hurry when you are troubled."
Both parents raised Dickinson to be a cultured Christian woman who would one
day be responsible for a family of her own. Her father attempted to protect her
from reading books that might "joggle" her mind, particularly her
religious faith, but Dickinson's
individualistic instincts and irreverent sensibilities created conflicts that
did not allow her to fall into step with the conventional piety, domesticity,
and social duty prescribed by her father and the orthodox Congregationalism of
Amherst.
The Dickinsons were well known in Massachusetts. Her father was a lawyer and
served as the treasurer of Amherst College (a position Austin eventually took
up as well), and her grandfather was one of the college's founders. Although
nineteenth-century politics, economics, and social issues do not appear in the
foreground of her poetry, Dickinson lived in a family environment that was
steeped in them: her father was an active town official and served in the
General Court of Massachusetts, the State Senate, and the United States House
of Representatives.
Dickinson, however, withdrew not only from her father's public world but also
from almost all social life in Amherst. She refused to see most people, and
aside from a single year at South Hadley Female Seminary (now Mount Holyoke
College), one excursion to Philadelphia and Washington, and several brief trips
to Boston to see a doctor about eye problems, she lived all her life in her
father's house. She dressed only in white and developed a reputation as a
reclusive eccentric. Dickinson selected her own society carefully and frugally.
Like her poetry, her relationship to the
world was intensely reticent. Indeed, during the last twenty years of her life
she rarely left the house.
Though Dickinson never married, she had significant relationships with several
men who were friends, confidantes, and mentors. She also enjoyed an intimate relationship
with her friend Susan Huntington Gilbert, who became her sister-in-law by
marrying Austin. Susan and her husband lived next door and were extremely close
with Dickinson. Biographers have attempted to find in a number of her relationships
the source for the passion of some of
her love poems and letters, but no biographer has been able to identify
definitely the object of Dickinson's love. What matters, of course, is not with
whom she was in love--if, in fact, there was any single person--but that she
wrote about such passions so intensely and convincingly in her poetry.
Choosing to live life internally within the confines of her home, Dickinson
brought her life into sharp focus. For she also chose to live within the
limitless expanses of her imagination, a choice she was keenly aware of and
which she described in one of her poems this way: "I dwell in
Possibility." Her small circle of domestic life did not impinge upon her
creative sensibilities. Like Henry David Thoreau, she simplified her life so
that doing without was a means of being within. In a sense she redefined the
meaning of deprivation because being denied something--whether it was faith, love,
literary recognition, or some other desire--provided a sharper, more intense
understanding than she would have experienced had she achieved what she wanted:
"heaven,'" she wrote, "is what I cannot reach!" This line,
along with many others, such as "Water, is taught by thirst" and
"Success is counted sweetest / By those who ne'er succeed," suggest
just how persistently she saw deprivation as a way of sensitizing herself to
the value of what she was missing. For Dickinson hopeful expectation was always
more satisfying than achieving a golden moment.
Writers contemporary to her had little or no effect upon the style of her
writing. In her own work she was original and innovative, but she did draw upon
her knowledge of the Bible, classical
myths, and Shakespeare for allusions and references in her poetry. She also
used contemporary popular church hymns, transforming
their standard rhythms into free-form hymn meters.
Today, Dickinson is regarded as one of America's greatest poets, but when she
died at the age of fifty-six after devoting most of her life to writing poetry,
her nearly 2,000 poems--only a dozen of which were published anonymously during
her lifetime--were unknown except to a small numbers of friends and relatives.
Dickinson was not recognized as a major poet until the twentieth century, when
modern readers ranked her as a major new voice whose literary innovations were
unmatched by any other nineteenth-century poet in the United States.
Dickinson neither completed many poems nor prepared them for publication. She
wrote her drafts on scraps of paper, grocery lists, and
the backs of recipes and used envelopes. Early editors of her poems took the
liberty of making them more accessible to nineteenth-century readers when
several volumes of selected poems were published in the 1890s. The poems were
made to appear like traditional nineteenth-century verse by assigning them
titles, rearranging their syntax, normalizing their grammar, and regularizing
their capitalizations. Instead of dashes editors used standard punctuation;
instead of the highly elliptical telegraphic lines so characteristic of her
poems editors added articles, conjunctions, and prepositions to make them more
readable and in line with conventional expectations. In addition, the poems
were made more predictable by organizing them into categories such friends,
nature, love, and death. Not until 1955, when Thomas Johnson published
Dickinson's complete works in a form that attempted to be true to her manuscript
versions, did readers have an opportunity to see the full range of her style
and themes.
. . . . Dickinson found irony, ambiguity, and paradox lurking in the simplest
and commonest experiences. The materials and subject matter of her poetry are
quite conventional. Her poems are filled with robins, bees, winter light,
household items, and domestic duties. These materials represent the range of
what she experienced in and around her father's house. She used them because
they constituted so much of her life and, more importantly, because she found
meanings latent in them. Though her world was simple, it was also complex in
its beauties and its terrors. Her lyric poems captures impressions of
particular moments, scenes, or moods, and she characteristically focuses upon
topics such as nature, love, immorality, death, faith, doubt, pain, and the
self.
Though her materials were conventional, her treatment of them was innovative,
because she was willing to break whatever poetic conventions stood
in the way of the intensity of her thought and images. Her conciseness,
brevity, and wit are tightly packed. Typically she offers her observations via
one or two images that reveal her thought in a powerful manner. She once
characterized her literary art by writing "My business is
circumference." Her method is to reveal the inadequacy of declarative
statements by evoking qualifications and questions with images that complicate
firm assertions and affirmations. In one of her poems she describes her
strategies this way: "Tell all the Truth but tell it slant--/ Success in
Circuit lies." This might well stand as a working definition of
Dickinson's aesthetics.
Dickinson's poetry is challenging because it is radical and original in its
rejection of most traditional nineteenth-century themes and techniques. Her
poems require active engagement from the reader, because she seems to leave out
so much with her elliptical style and remarkable contracting metaphors. But
these apparent gaps are filled with meaning if we are sensitive to her use of
devices such as personification, allusion, symbolism, and startling syntax and
grammar. Since her use of dashes is sometimes puzzling, it helps to read her
poems aloud to hear how carefully the words are arrange. What might seem
intimidating on a silent page can surprise the reader with meaning when heard.
It's also worth keeping in mind that Dickinson was not always consistent in her
views and they can change from poems, to poem, depending upon how she felt at a
given moment. Dickinson was less interested in absolute answers to questions
than she was in examining and exploring their "circumference." from
Michael Myers,Thinking and Writing About Literature, 138- ..
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