Thursday, March 21, 2019
Essay on the Poetry and Life of Emily Dickinson -- Biography Biographi
The Poetry and Life of Emily Dickinson Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born on December 10, 1830. She was from a small town in Amherst, Massachusetts. One coke and seventy-one years later people en gladness reading Emilys metrical composition. There is intrigue behind both her subroutines and her lifespan. Emily Dickinson remains a popular poet her poetry has stood the test of time. Dickinson shunned public attention and during her life, she refused to have her poetry published. Between five and twelve pieces of her poetry were actually published (numbers transfigure according to different sources). She was known as the Myth of Amherst because so teeny-weeny was known about her life. Some of the pleasures Dickinsons poetry elicits are joy, silence and hope, to name only a few. To this day readers likewise enjoy the myths and legends that tease the life of Emily Dickinson. This paper will attempt to classify the manakins of pleasure set up in reading both her poetry and th e stories behind her life many emotions are stirred in the reader of Dickinsons poetry. One kind of pleasure that might be experienced while reading her poetry is joy. While reading poem number 326 I cannot dance upon my Toes- No Man instructed me- But of ten times, among my mind, A Glee possesseth me the reader experiences the joy that the writer expresses in her desire to dance. In Dickinsons poem number 322 There came a Day at Summers full, whole for me- I thought that such were for the Saints, Where Resurrections be The Sun, as common, went abroad, The flowers, accustomed, blew, As if no soul the solstice passed That maketh all things new there is a joy in knowing that beautiful days and flowers can sometim... ...gue. Both Emilys life and her poetry supplicate many pleasurable emotions for the reader such as joy, serenity, and hope. The intrigue and unanswered questions surrounding Dickinsons life keeps the reader piqued and impetuous to seek the answer to the riddle of Emilys intimate side, while also allowing the reader the satisfaction they experience through the readings. Works Cited and Consulted Dickenson, Donna. Emily Dickinson. natural Hampshire iceberg lettuce Publishers Ltd. 1985. Ferlazzo, Paul J. Emily Dickinson. Boston Twayne Publishers. 1976. Johnson, Thomas H. The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson. Boston. Little, Brown And Company. 1960. Thayer, Bonita E. Emily Dickinson An Impact Biography. New York Watts, Franklin. 1989. The Greenhaven Press Literary Companion To American Authors. Readings On Emily Dickinson. CA Greenhaven Press. 1997.
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