Death, Nature, and Love In the Writings of Emily Dickinson
Not one of Emily Elizabeth Dickinson’s readers has met the woman who lived and died in Amherst, Massachusetts more than a century ago, yet most of those same readers who have come to understand her through her work feel as if they know her closely. However it was her reclusive life that made understanding her quite difficult. However, taking a close look at her verses, one can learn a great deal about this remarkable woman. The poetry of Emily Dickinson dives deep into her mind, exploring and exposing her personal experiences and their influence on her thoughts about religion, love, and death. By examining her life some, and reading her poetry in a certain light, one can see an obvious autobiographical connection. As America’s best-known female poet and one of the foremost authors in American literature, Dickinson is simply constructed yet intensely felt as her acutely intellectual writings take subject issues substantially into humanity, and exposing the agonies and ecstasies of love, sexuality, the horrors of war, God and religious belief, the importance of humor, and the unfathomable nature of death.Born in Amherst, Massachusetts, Dickinson was the middle child of a prominent politician, lawyer, and one-term United States
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Approximate Word count = 4318
Approximate Pages = 17 (250 words per page double spaced)
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