Emily Dickinson
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born in a small town called Amherst in Massachusetts, on the 10th of December in the year 1830. Among the three children in the family Emily was the second youngest. She studied in the Amherst Academy which was discovered by her Grandfather, and the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary.
Emily Dickinson missed a wide span of her school years for the reason that she regularly fell ill and felt depressed, despite her weak body and depression Emily Dickinson was a well-mannered and discipline student in school. Dickinson departed from Amherst Academy in the year 1848; however the explanation of her departure was unknown, it was considered that her delicate emotion was the purpose of her departure from the
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Dickinson was influenced by Leonard Humphrey who was the principal of the Amherst Academy and was too influenced by a family friend named Benjamin Franklin Newton. Williams Wordsworth poetry was introduced to Dickinson with the help from Newton. At the age of twenty five Dickinson decided to venture out of Amherst, as far as Philadelphia. In Philadelphia she met a man named Charles Wadsworth who she admired and then became a correspondent.
Susan Gilbert was Dickinson’s closes friends and adviser, while Emily Dickinson was twenty six, Susan Gilbert Married Emily’s brother, William Austin Dickinson. Emily and her siblings including Susan lived on the large Dickinson Homestead which was located in Amherst.
Gradually along the years Emily Dickinson gained a strong bond with Otis Phillips Lord with a close friend of Edward Dickinson (Emily’s Father), however after Otis’s Wife Elizabeth’s death, Emily Dickinson and Otis Phillips Lord had officially become one. Subsequently over a decade Emily and Lord’s romantic relationship eventually came to a stop, due to the reason that Otis Phillips passed away two years after Dickinson’s mother’s death. In the year 1875 Emily Norcross Dickinson (Emily Dickinson’s mother) suffered a stroke leaving her partially paralyzed. A mother of three and a grandmother of William Austin Dickinson’s three children passed away after 7 years when she was first diagnosed with a