Funeral In My Brain Diction

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The poem "I felt a funeral, in my brain," digests the speaker's descent into insanity. It is a horrifying poem for both the reader and the speaker. The funeral is not simply “experienced” but “felt,” inside her brain. The feeling of the funeral creates a tone of depression and the imagery of the speaker’s mind coming to an end. The speaker goes through the disappearance of herself in the mayhem of the senseless, and the reader undergoes the speaker's falling madness and the terror most of us endure about going insane.
Dickinson uses the metaphor of a funeral to illustrate the speaker's perception that a piece of her is dying. Being overwhelmed by the unreasonable knowledge of her senselessness is known to be the cause of her vanishing. In the first line of the first stanza the speaker says “I felt a funeral in my brain.” The word “funeral” is an important part of imagery in this poem. Death is the most
They tend to add constraint to this horrible brain incident which indicates a force that is driving her away. Also, the speaker thinks that she is losing her sense momentarily, but seems to think that there is hope to save her from this horrid state she is in. Furthermore, the pressure to this brain incident is re-declared with the repetition, “beating, beating.” The next time her mind goes "numb," there will be a further collapse in her state of mind.
In the last stanza, Dickinson uses the metaphor of standing on a plank or board over a precipice, to relate the speaker's fall into irrationality. In other words, her clasp on reasonability was uncertain. The last word of the poem, "then--," does not conclude or stop her undergo but leaves her future left unknown. Not only does the last stanza finalize the sense of the poem, it escalates the psychological effect on the poem. The end of the poem does not only leave the reader in wonder, but it also leaves them in the state of curiosity and

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