Emily Dickinson Research Paper

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Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was a reclusive poet unknown in her time by her readers. Dickinson's idiom was quite unique and differed from the average poet at her time. An idiom is defined as a language, dialect, or style of speaking peculiar to a people. Her writing techniques included; random dashes as well as capitalization. Dickinson’s writing style varied from death and hate to love, she was never able to be placed into one single category.Her variation of poems allows her poems to be considered relatable to all Americans, having at least one genre being understandable to the average American. One large aspect that contributed to her writing was the fact that she was so an introvert that became attached to her home.After the 1860s, Emily …show more content…

“I had no time to hate-/ because/The grave would hinder me-/And life was not so ample I/ Could finish- enmity-/Nor had I time to love-/but since/Some industry must be-/The little toil of love-/I thought/Was large enough for me-”(Dickinson). The major themes of this poem are love and hate and what is to come after death. The author writes with a hint or regret of not living her life to the fullest; but writes as if she is accepting she had accomplished in her lifetime. She says that she doesn’t have time to hate because she could not maintain hate after death. She also says she doesn’t have time for love; making love and hate the same. Dickinson represents love and hate as the same, this is because there is not enough time in the world to fulfill those emotions because life is too short The concept of love, hate, and the afterlife are ideas that are familiar to all. These concepts are elastic enough to be relative to all American readers.An everyday American can relate to this poem because many fear that they aren’t living their lives as well as they could be. Many fear that they aren’t experiencing and living life to the fullest, because life is too

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