Death, a Theme in Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman´s Poetry

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Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson’s poetry is very different; however death seems to be a familiar topic amongst both poets. Opposites attract, and you could say the same for Whitman and Dickinson because though they have different writing styles both repeatedly write about death. Once more, although both Whitman and Dickinson have many different feelings about death, they also share many similar feelings about it as well. Although Walt Whitman's poetry is rather long and quite simple and Emily Dickinson's are often short and complex, the theme of death strongly ties their works together.
To begin with, both Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson spoke about not only a person dying, but the people who were left to live through that person’s death. Whitman aims his attention on the people who have to suffer through the death of a loved one and says that the one who dies no longer has to suffer. “Sickly white in the face, and dull in the head, very faint/ By the jamb of a door leans […]/ But the mother needs to be better; / She, with thin form, presently drest in black; / By day her meals untouch'd-then at night fitfully sleeping, often waking, / In the midnight waking, weeping, longing with one deep longing, / O that she might withdraw unnoticed-silent from life, escape and withdraw, / To follow, to seek, to be with her dear dead son” (Whitman “Come Up From the Fields Father” Lines 24-25, 32-37). At first the thought of the son being dead is kind of shocking to the mother, but as time passes and the fact that her son is dead starts to sink in, the mother becomes very unhealthy. She changes in every way in that she goes from a happy, normal mother and wife, to this depressed woman who only wears black and hopes to die soon so she can be wi...

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...at even though the body and the person is dead, the legacy behind a person can keep them alive. Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson don’t agree on the same kind of immortality, but they both acknowledge some form of it.

Ultimately, although Walt Whitman's poetry is rather long and quite simple and Emily Dickinson's are often short and complex, the theme of death strongly ties their works together. Whitman and Dickinson both acknowledge that much suffering can come from those left after death, instead of suffering only from the one died. Both poets know that no matter what, everyone dies, and there’s no avoiding it. Finally, Dickinson may not believe in the afterlife like Whitman does, however she does still believe in some form of immortality. Whitman and Dickinson and two opposite people whose works are opposites as well; however both share the key theme of death.

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