Emily Dickinson's Poems: My Agreement And Meaning

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Summation of Poem
Emily Dickinson explains a common belief regarding words: they die as soon as they leave lips or pens. She then juxtaposes this idea with her own: words begin their lives upon their creation. The six-lined poem balances both ideas with the opposing opinion comprising the first three lines, and her own opinion taking up the rear in lines four through six. She furthers her point by using the word “say” or “said” in lines two, three, and four instead of “believe” or another word. By physically speaking her opinion, she gives life to its words.

Major Theme Presented in the Poem
Many people do not comprehend the power of words to live and to last.

My Agreement and Reasoning
I strongly agree with miss Dickinson’s belief in a word’s life. Even the best hunters in the world do not know how to kill an idea. Emily Dickinson has proven her beliefs with her own work; her words live in many different languages in books as well as in the hearts of millions. Words can also live in the form of parasites; unforgettable, mean comments also live in the hearts of millions. Words are not dead once they are spoken; a dead word cannot eat away at people like hurtful words do. …show more content…

The bee is calm around her. She understands the butterfly on a level no other human has; all the inhabitants of the woods greet her as they would a close friend. Even the non-living aspects of nature seem to enjoy her company: the burbling of the brooks grows, and the playful races of the breezes increase in exuberance. Dickinson then questions her eyes for crying despite the unique and beautiful friendships nature has given her. She then turns her question to the summer day, almost demanding an answer. The repetition of “Wherefore” in lines seven and eight express her desperation in finding the reason she is crying tears of sadness or, possibly, tears of

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