How Did Emily Dickinson's Life Influence Her Poetry

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Dickinson was born 10 December 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts, which was where she lived until her death from Bright's disease on 15 May 1886. Dickinson’s lively childhood and youth were filled with schooling, reading, explorations of nature, religious activities, significant friendships, and several key encounters with poetry which imprinted a Calvinist, orthodox, and conservative approach to Christianity in her heart. Emily Dickinson lived in a world of isolation, for she rarely left her home or had visitors that came for her; however, people who got in contact with her, indeed had a heavy influence on her poetry. Dickinson referred Charles Wadsworth, a person she met on a trip to Philadelphia, as “my closest earthly friend” who played a significant role in her life. Even though some critics believed that Wadsworth’s departure made Dickinson heartsick for the following year, the relationship between them was not clear whether is was romantic or not. The unrequited love between them, thought by other people when going through Dickinson’s poetry, was indeed the subject of some of her work. Dickinson also admired the poetry of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, as well as John Keats. Dickinson’s …show more content…

Throughout her poems, she questioned God and wrote about her own sufferings with faith. Furthermore, her poems also focus on her confusion with self-identity because she felt imprisoned in her own body. Poetry became her language and her way to express her feelings to the outside world. She also demonstrated a strong relationship between nature and her poetry as nature became a symbol in her writing which explained the complexity of her relationships. “Hope is the thing with feathers” is number 314 in Dickinson’s poem collection which was a poem that was typical of Dickinson's work: sparse but compact, philosophical but approachable, meditative but

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