How Does Emily Dickinson Affect Her Poetry

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Emily Dickinson has been described as a very private poet. She did not gain inspiration from her writing from the world around her but instead seemed to get it from her own mind and the thoughts and feelings she was personally having. This makes her poetry not only more interesting but also more personal. This, in turn, makes it more relatable than other poets of this time. Since she was a private poet she was able to be raw and emotional in terms of the feelings and thoughts she was having. “Wild nights-Wild nights!” represents Emily Dickinson as a private poet and shows how being private affected her poetry by showing that she wasn’t afraid of her emotions, how she was done being conventional, and her very almost naïve view of love and romance.
The theme of “Wild nights-Wild nights!” is love, however, Dickinson was not afraid of this emotion in the slightest and even seems to welcome it in her writing. Dickinson writes, “Wild nights should be/ Our luxury,” (3-4). This very passionate and personal way of describing love shows Dickinson not being afraid of her own emotions and feelings and being able …show more content…

“Wild nights-wild nights!” describes love, a feeling that is very personal for everyone in terms of how they view and describe it. Dickinson writes, “To a heart in port-/Done with the Compass-/ Done with the Chart!” (6-8). This shows Dickinson both literally and figuratively saying that she is done with doing things in a conventional way, and is instead taking her heart and emotions into her own hands. By saying that she is done with the “Compass” and the “Chart” she is saying that she is going to let her life take its own course. This decision to do so is a very personal one and shows how her being a private poet affected her poetry. Because if she was in society and being influenced by the people around her she most likely would not have learned about what she truly wanted and been able to put it down in

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