Dickinson Death Theme

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Every poet has a different understanding of topics that are major concerns in everyday life. Death is one of the most recurring subjects in all literature, especially poetry. Each poet has their own perception of death; however, they are usually very common views. The same cannot be said about Emily Dickinson, a famous female poet. She represents death much differently than most other poets of her time and it is a constant theme of her works. “Death is not merely metaphorical for Dickinson; it is the greatest subject of her work” (Reisman: I: 462). In one of Dickinson’s most famous poems, “Because I Could Not Stop for Death,” death is accompanied by the presence of immortality. Life and death are two topics that are unified in Dickinson’s …show more content…

She writes, “The Dews drew quivering and chill. For only Gossamer, my Gown. My Tippet, only Tulle” (Dickinson). Night is beginning to fall and there is a mention of the light clothing that the speaker is wearing. This is a reference to how cold she is growing, reminding readers that she is dying (Napierkowski and Ruby: I: 29). Where Death is taking the woman is still unknown, to even the woman herself. At this point, one may be sure that the poem will end in the speaker’s demise. Dickinson extends this idea by describing the next destination the carriage had stopped at. “We paused before a House that seemed a swelling of the ground. The Roof was scarcely visible. The Cornice, in the ground” (Dickinson). This “house” she is describing is actually her burial spot which Death had been leading her too this whole time. The speaker seems at ease with her journey coming to an end. Dickinson then writes, “Since then ‘tis Centuries and yet, feels shorter than the day I first surmised the Horses’ Heads were toward Eternity” (Dickinson). Before this stanza, the poem read as if the carriage ride with Death was a recent memory; however, it is now clear that this had happened years ago and the speaker could have possibly been dead the whole time. In final two lines of the poem, Dickinson throws readers yet another curveball. “She looks at the heads of the horses and sees that they are pointed toward eternity and suddenly she remembers that Immortality has been sitting beside her all along” (Napierkowski and Ruby: I: 29). This is where the unified themes of immortality and death become evident. Just when Dickinson seems to have been drawing readers into the death of the speaker, she includes a final reminder of Immorality who has been present all

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