How Does Shakespeare Present Death In Emily Dickinson's Poetry

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Among each of these authors, each of their individual pieces share a universal theme of death. Reading poetry written by William Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson, and Robert Frost, I observed that these authors have a distinct way in incorporating death into their writing. Shakespeare using time to represent death that is bound to happen, Dickinson giving death human qualities and letting it consume her inner thoughts (making it a basis for most of her poems), and Robert Frost using a long sleep to define death.
In Shakespeare’s Sonnet 19, it tells a story of how animals (specifically lions and tigers) slowly start to become what they are not over time. From the first line stating “Devouring Time, blunt thou the the lion’s paws,” meaning as time …show more content…

There’s a common theme of death in her poetry. She speaks in first person in most of her writings, and it’s as if death is overcoming her. In “I felt a Funeral, in my Brain”, a poem taking place exactly how the title sounds, we see that Dickinson was consumed of the idea of death. She was so consumed with the thought, that she felt a funeral in her head. Although it wasn’t like any other funeral, as we can see from the mourners walking back and forth, beatings of a drum, and ringings of church bells. This also shows a theme of insanity. We can see this from the beating of the drum making her mind go numb, and the simple fact that funeral was basically planned inside her head. It seems that these two themes can be a universal themes among her writings.
Another example being another one of her poems “Because I could not stop for Death”. In this piece, it seems that death was consuming her life. We can see that it was consuming the author’s life by the fact that she was giving death human qualities (something showed in Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 19”), also from evidence from the first poem cited by Dickinson. In the second stanza of this poem, Dickinson says “And I had put away my labor, and my leisure too, for his civility.” Maybe Dickinson was afraid of death but it was a crucial part of her writings. As she says there, she put it aside for …show more content…

In this poem, the author has a job of apple-picking, and we can assume that he is tired of it from some lines including “But I am done with apple picking now.”, “I am drowsing off”, and “Of apple-picking: I am overtired.” He lets himself not pick some apples due to him being tiresome. The writing has a connection or theme associated with death because of one the associations in one of the lines. He says that the ladder that he does apple picking with is “Toward heaven still”. I believe that the author says this to exaggerate the fact that the job leads you to heaven directly, even from the tiredness. Throughout the poem, he expresses his tiredness and sleeping. I believe that the sleepiness that he feels deals with a deeper meaning of death. Frost uses his tiredness of apple picking as a representation of a long and slow death. I believe his final lines saying “This sleep of mine, whatever sleep it is. Were he not gone, the woodchuck could say whatever it’s like his long sleep, as I describe its coming on, or just human sleep.”. This long or human sleep could represent the long sleep which death is categorized

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