Emily Dickinson Influences

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Emily Dickinson, Chronological/Cause and Effect
"This is my letter to the world, who never wrote to me. The simple news that nature told, with tender majesty," (Dickinson, 21). I, Emily Dickinson, am one of the greatest American poets of all time. I was born on December 10, 1830 on a cold winter day in Amherst, Massachusetts at my family's home, which we called the Homestead ("Emily Dickinson," Bio.). I had one brother, William, and one sister, Lavinia. We all went to Amherst Academy together as children ("Emily Dickinson," Poetry Foundation).
I enjoyed all aspects of school. I liked the teachers, the curriculum, and even the other students ("Emily Dickinson," Poetry Foundation). Although I enjoyed my time there, I left school, due to my fragile emotional state and my sick mother. I eventually became her primary caretaker. I stayed at the Homestead and took care of her until her death in 1882. My sister and I never …show more content…

Some of the people who influenced me include Leonard Humphrey, the principal at Amherst Academy, and Benjamin Franklin Newton, a family friend who introduced me to the works of William Wordsworth, who later became an inspiration to me. Among my friends, my closest one, also my adviser, was a woman named Susan Gilbert, who later married my brother (Emily Dickinson, Bio.).
I became close to Reverend Charles Wadsworth, and eventually fell in love with him. He, unfortunately for me, was married. Years later, I met Judge Otis Phillips Lord. We fell into a mutual love, but we never married. It is believed that a spirit like mine needed to be and stay free (Godden, 9).
From 1860 on, I lived a reclusive life at the Homestead. During this time, I wrote most of my poems, while taking care of my mother ("Emily Dickinson," Bio). The only people I found any camaraderie with was the children who would play in my yard. I was known as a very good cook, so I would make gingerbread for them and lower it into the yard in a basket. (Godden,

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