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Comparison Of Emily Dickinson's Life And Death

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Emily Elizabeth Dickinson, one of the greatest female poets to ever live, was born December 10, 1830. During her lifetime she wrote many poems, but while living, none of her poems where published. Emily Dickinson wrote about topics that she knew well including nature, religion, law, and inevitably death. According to Dr. Ball “She lived during the civil war, which had a death count of over 750,000 lives” (Ball). While Dickinson lived at the home of Edward and Emily (Norcross) Dickinson, her parents, for the majority of her life but she was well informed about situations surrounding her. Throughout Dickinson’s life she experienced her fair amounts of death as can be seen in her poetry as according to Dr. Ball “1/3rd of her 1800 poems featured the manifestation of death” (Ball). …show more content…

Towards the later part of Dickinson’s life she experienced the constant thought of death as her Father passed, and shortly after her bedridden mother passed, followed by her nephew and close childhood friend. Emily Dickinson was ruled by death and what was to come when life finally ceases, influenced by her Calvinist religion she commonly refers to a greater being, which I take to be God. The three poems that I feel show what a great poet Emily Dickinson is are through the poems Safe in their alabaster chambers, I Heard a fly buzz-when I died , and Because I could not stop for Death. Through Emily Dickinson’s effective use of literary elements, vivid imagery, and precise style of writing it can be understood and accepted that she did not fear death but that it revealed the ultimate reality that no one can escape

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