Emily Dickinson Obsession With Death Essay

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Emily Dickinson's Obsession with Death
Emily Dickinson is one of the most outstanding and prominent poets of American
Romanticism whose rather significant body of work employs themes and motifs characteristic of the movement brushing them off with her unique treatment of visionary nature. Her poetry revolves around several binary oppositions such as life and death, eternity and immediacy, earthly and divine, body and soul that undergo various speculations for
Emily Dickinson approaches them as if she were an eye-witness, sometimes dragged into transcendental states and later sharing her persona’s experiences with the reader. Three poems of Emily Dickinson were chosen for the analysis, namely “Death is a dialogue between…”, “Death sets a thing …show more content…

Taking into account these two propositions the first inference comes into place: poetess chooses one conventional opposition which expands upon the basis of two ambivalent notions and introduces the third member, which turns the metaphysical contrastive pair into a dialectic triad.
Let us apply a close reading technique to the first poem. The opening lines of the poem read: “Death is a dialogue between / The spirit and the dust”. To the limelight comes classical binary opposition in structuralist sense – spirit::dust which is figuratively
Last Name 2 immovable but adding the third element – Death – gives an impulse of eternal motion to the pair, where the spirit becomes a thesis, the dust – an antithesis and Death is a synthesis which signifies a passage from state to movement, from metaphysics to dialectics. The form of the dialogue corresponds to the above discussed scheme, for it presupposes the exchange between two entities and results in a movement of ideas in time and space, and Death is the substance for this dialogue.
The dialogue captures two different realities, equal in their importance: the life itself and the afterlife correspondingly where the Death is the personification of the latter. Death …show more content…

Although the message seems very reassuring and giving hope Emily Dickinson brings into play an almost transparent thread of finiteness for
Last Name 4 everything a man creates in the course of his life falls prey to dust, covered by the mantel of oblivion. The creation is detached from its creator, there is no vital connection anymore, and the artifact becomes pointless and means nothing anymore. A parallel between God and man as His creation suggests itself, but it is rather inappropriate due to the fact that a man is a living being and never an object, therefore, may this suggestion be dropped for good.
Death brings a void into one’s past by means of extracting the Spirit or the Soul out of it. However, the persona of the poem seems to find the way of keeping the deceased one’s soul alive in life after death. This is a specific medium of a word – a book, where the remarks of the deceased friend are left “whose pencil, here and there, / Had notched the place that pleased him, – / At rest his fingers are.” Books and what is written there is one level of presence – the presence of the actual story, its plot and characters, to put it simply,

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