Emily Dickinson may have been a quiet girl in real life, but her mind was teeming with endless poetry ideas and a colorful imagination to write these stories. "If You Were Coming in the Fall" is a tragically romantic poem that Dickinson writes about a guy she loves. This guy is physically a long ways a way from her and she feels such a deep connection for him that she says she will wait for him for as long as it takes as long as she knows that he will show up in the end. She feels such a passion for this unidentified man that she says she will wait for as long as it takes. "If You Were Coming in the Fall" expresses the deep, passionate connection and love that Dickinson feels for this anonymous man. She speaks of how long she would wait, the agonizing amount of time that she would spend waiting for this man. She states, "If you were coming in the fall,/ I'd brush the summer by/ With half a smile and half a spurn,/ As housewives do a fly" (Dickinson 1-4). This shows her infatuation with this man and her willingness to wait any interval of time for him to come along. She shows a true compassion and desire for this nameless man. …show more content…
An example of this is when she says,"If I could see you in a year,/ I'd wind the months in balls,/ And put them each in separate drawers,/ Until their time befalls" (Dickinson 5-8). She also rhymes when she says,"If only centuries delayed,/ I'd count them on my hand,/ Subtracting till my fingers dropped/ Into Van Diemen's land" (Dickinson 9-12). She uses some simple rhymes such as balls and befalls and hand and land. In her poetry she tends to use more slant rhyme, but this time she is much more blunt with her rhymes. She mixes up her types of poems, always changing up the style and