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Emily Dickinson

Emily Elizabeth Dickinson (December 10, 1830 – May 15, 1886) was an American poet. Little-known during her life, she has since been regarded as one of the most important figures in American poetry.[2] Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, into a prominent family with strong ties to its community. After studying at the Amherst Academy for seven years in her youth, she briefly attended the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary before returning to her family's home in Amherst. Evidence suggests that Dickinson lived much of her life in isolation. Considered an eccentric by locals, she developed a penchant for white clothing and was known for her reluctance to greet guests or, later in life, even to leave her bedroom. Dickinson never married, and most friendships between her and others depended entirely upon correspondence.[3]

Emily Dickinson
Daguerreotype taken at Mount Holyoke, December 1846 or early 1847; the only authenticated portrait of Dickinson after early childhood[1]
Born(1830-12-10)December 10, 1830
Amherst, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedMay 15, 1886(1886-05-15) (aged 55)
Amherst, Massachusetts, U.S.
Resting placeAmherst West Cemetery
OccupationPoet
Alma materMount Holyoke Female Seminary
Notable worksList of poems
ParentsEdward Dickinson
Emily Norcross Dickinson
RelativesWilliam Austin Dickinson (brother)
Lavinia Norcross Dickinson (sister)

While Dickinson was a prolific writer, her only publications during her lifetime were 10 of her nearly 1,800 poems, and one letter.[4] The poems published then were usually edited significantly to fit conventional poetic rules. Her poems were unique for her era; they contain short lines, typically lack titles, and often use slant rhyme as well as unconventional capitalization and punctuation.[5] Many of her poems deal with themes of death and immortality, two recurring topics in letters to her friends, and also explore aesthetics, society, nature, and spirituality.[6]

Although Dickinson's acquaintances were most likely aware of her writing, it was not until after her death in 1886—when Lavinia, Dickinson's younger sister, discovered her cache of poems—that her work became public. Her first collection of poetry was published in 1890 by personal acquaintances Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Mabel Loomis Todd, though both heavily edited the content. A complete collection of her poetry became available for the first time when scholar Thomas H. Johnson published The Poems of Emily Dickinson in 1955.[7] In 1998, The New York Times reported on an infrared technology study revealing that much of Dickinson's work had been deliberately censored to exclude the name "Susan".[8] At least eleven of Dickinson's poems were dedicated to her sister-in-law Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson, though all the dedications were obliterated, presumably by Todd.[8] These edits work to censor the nature of Emily and Susan's relationship, which many scholars have interpreted as romantic.[9][10][11]

Life

Family and early childhood

 
The Dickinson Children (Emily on the left), c. 1840. From the Dickinson Room at Houghton Library, Harvard University.

Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born at the family's homestead in Amherst, Massachusetts, on December 10, 1830, into a prominent, but not wealthy, family.[12] Her father, Edward Dickinson was a lawyer in Amherst and a trustee of Amherst College.[13] Two hundred years earlier, her patrilineal ancestors had arrived in the New World—in the Puritan Great Migration—where they prospered.[14] Emily Dickinson's paternal grandfather, Samuel Dickinson, was one of the founders of Amherst College.[15] In 1813, he built the Homestead, a large mansion on the town's Main Street, that became the focus of Dickinson family life for the better part of a century.[16] Samuel Dickinson's eldest son, Edward, was treasurer of Amherst College from 1835 to 1873, served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1838–1839; 1873) and the Massachusetts Senate (1842–1843), and represented Massachusetts's 10th congressional district in the 33rd U.S. Congress (1853–1855).[17] On May 6, 1828, he married Emily Norcross from Monson, Massachusetts. They had three children:

She was also a distant cousin to Baxter Dickinson and his family, including his grandson the organist and composer Clarence Dickinson.[19]

By all accounts, young Dickinson was a well-behaved girl. On an extended visit to Monson when she was two, Dickinson's Aunt Lavinia described her as "perfectly well and contented—She is a very good child and but little trouble."[20] Dickinson's aunt also noted the girl's affinity for music and her particular talent for the piano, which she called "the moosic".[21]

Dickinson attended primary school in a two-story building on Pleasant Street.[22] Her education was "ambitiously classical for a Victorian girl".[23] Wanting his children well-educated, her father followed their progress even while away on business. When Dickinson was seven, he wrote home, reminding his children to "keep school, and learn, so as to tell me, when I come home, how many new things you have learned".[24] While Dickinson consistently described her father in a warm manner, her correspondence suggests that her mother was regularly cold and aloof. In a letter to a confidante, Dickinson wrote she "always ran Home to Awe [Austin] when a child, if anything befell me. She was an awful Mother, but I liked her better than none."[25]

On September 7, 1840, Dickinson and her sister Lavinia started together at Amherst Academy, a former boys' school that had opened to female students just two years earlier.[22] At about the same time, her father purchased a house on North Pleasant Street.[26] Dickinson's brother Austin later described this large new home as the "mansion" over which he and Dickinson presided as "lord and lady" while their parents were absent.[27] The house overlooked Amherst's burial ground, described by one local minister as treeless and "forbidding".[26]

Teenage years

They shut me up in Prose –
As when a little Girl
They put me in the Closet –
Because they liked me "still" –

Still! Could themself have peeped –
And seen my Brain – go round –
They might as wise have lodged a Bird
For Treason – in the Pound –

Emily Dickinson, c. 1862[28]

Dickinson spent seven years at the academy, taking classes in English and classical literature, Latin, botany, geology, history, "mental philosophy," and arithmetic.[29] Daniel Taggart Fiske, the school's principal at the time, would later recall that Dickinson was "very bright" and "an excellent scholar, of exemplary deportment, faithful in all school duties".[30] Although she had a few terms off due to illness—the longest of which was in 1845–1846, when she was enrolled for only eleven weeks[31]—she enjoyed her strenuous studies, writing to a friend that the academy was "a very fine school".[32]

Dickinson was troubled from a young age by the "deepening menace" of death, especially the deaths of those who were close to her. When Sophia Holland, her second cousin and a close friend, grew ill from typhus and died in April 1844, Dickinson was traumatized.[33] Recalling the incident two years later, she wrote that "it seemed to me I should die too if I could not be permitted to watch over her or even look at her face."[34] She became so melancholic that her parents sent her to stay with family in Boston to recover.[32] With her health and spirits restored, she soon returned to Amherst Academy to continue her studies.[35] During this period, she met people who were to become lifelong friends and correspondents, such as Abiah Root, Abby Wood, Jane Humphrey, and Susan Huntington Gilbert (who later married Dickinson's brother Austin).

In 1845, a religious revival took place in Amherst, resulting in 46 confessions of faith among Dickinson's peers.[36] Dickinson wrote to a friend the following year: "I never enjoyed such perfect peace and happiness as the short time in which I felt I had found my Savior."[37] She went on to say it was her "greatest pleasure to commune alone with the great God & to feel that he would listen to my prayers."[37] The experience did not last: Dickinson never made a formal declaration of faith and attended services regularly for only a few years.[38] After her church-going ended, about 1852, she wrote a poem opening: "Some keep the Sabbath going to Church – I keep it, staying at Home".[39]

During the last year of her stay at the academy, Dickinson became friendly with Leonard Humphrey, its popular new young principal. After finishing her final term at the Academy on August 10, 1847, Dickinson began attending Mary Lyon's Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (which later became Mount Holyoke College) in South Hadley, about ten miles (16 km) from Amherst.[40] She stayed at the seminary for only ten months. Although she liked the girls at Holyoke, Dickinson made no lasting friendships there.[41] The explanations for her brief stay at Holyoke differ considerably: either she was in poor health, her father wanted to have her at home, she rebelled against the evangelical fervor present at the school, she disliked the discipline-minded teachers, or she was simply homesick.[42] Whatever the reasons for leaving Holyoke, her brother Austin appeared on March 25, 1848, to "bring [her] home at all events".[43] Back in Amherst, Dickinson occupied her time with household activities.[44] She took up baking for the family and enjoyed attending local events and activities in the budding college town.[45]

Early influences and writing

When she was eighteen, Dickinson's family befriended a young attorney by the name of Benjamin Franklin Newton. According to a letter written by Dickinson after Newton's death, he had been "with my Father two years, before going to Worcester – in pursuing his studies, and was much in our family".[46] Although their relationship was probably not romantic, Newton was a formative influence and would become the second in a series of older men (after Humphrey) that Dickinson referred to, variously, as her tutor, preceptor, or master.[47]

Newton likely introduced her to the writings of William Wordsworth, and his gift to her of Ralph Waldo Emerson's first book of collected poems had a liberating effect. She wrote later that he, "whose name my Father's Law Student taught me, has touched the secret Spring".[48] Newton held her in high regard, believing in and recognizing her as a poet. When he was dying of tuberculosis, he wrote to her, saying he would like to live until she achieved the greatness he foresaw.[48] Biographers believe that Dickinson's statement of 1862—"When a little Girl, I had a friend, who taught me Immortality – but venturing too near, himself – he never returned"—refers to Newton.[49]

Dickinson was familiar with not only the Bible but also contemporary popular literature.[50] She was probably influenced by Lydia Maria Child's Letters from New York, another gift from Newton[33] (after reading it, she gushed "This then is a book! And there are more of them!"[33]). Her brother smuggled a copy of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Kavanagh into the house for her (because her father might disapprove)[51] and a friend lent her Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre in late 1849.[52] Jane Eyre's influence cannot be measured, but when Dickinson acquired her first and only dog, a Newfoundland, she named him "Carlo" after the character St. John Rivers' dog.[52] William Shakespeare was also a potent influence in her life. Referring to his plays, she wrote to one friend, "Why clasp any hand but this?" and to another, "Why is any other book needed?"[53]

Adulthood and seclusion

In early 1850, Dickinson wrote that "Amherst is alive with fun this winter ... Oh, a very great town this is!"[44] Her high spirits soon turned to melancholy after another death. The Amherst Academy principal, Leonard Humphrey, died suddenly of "brain congestion" at age 25.[54] Two years after his death, she revealed to her friend Abiah Root the extent of her sadness:

... some of my friends are gone, and some of my friends are sleeping – sleeping the churchyard sleep – the hour of evening is sad – it was once my study hour – my master has gone to rest, and the open leaf of the book, and the scholar at school alone, make the tears come, and I cannot brush them away; I would not if I could, for they are the only tribute I can pay the departed Humphrey.[55]

 
The Evergreens, built by Edward Dickinson, was the home of Austin and Susan's family.

During the 1850s, Dickinson's strongest and most affectionate relationship was with her sister-in-law, Susan Gilbert. Dickinson eventually sent her over three hundred letters, more than to any other correspondent, over the course of their relationship. Susan was supportive of the poet, playing the role of "most beloved friend, influence, muse, and adviser" whose editorial suggestions Dickinson sometimes followed.[56] In an 1882 letter to Susan, Dickinson said, "With the exception of Shakespeare, you have told me of more knowledge than any one living."[57]

The importance of Dickinson's relationship with Susan has widely been overlooked due to a point of view first promoted by Mabel Loomis Todd, who was involved for many years in a relationship with Austin Dickinson and who diminished Susan's role in Dickinson's life due to her own poor relationship with her lover's wife.[58] However, the notion of a "cruel" Susan—as promoted by her romantic rival—has been questioned, most especially by Susan and Austin's surviving children, with whom Dickinson was close.[59] Many scholars interpret the relationship between Emily and Susan as a romantic one. In The Emily Dickinson Journal Lena Koski wrote, "Dickinson's letters to Gilbert express strong homoerotic feelings."[10] She quotes from many of their letters, including one from 1852 in which Dickinson proclaims,

Susie, will you indeed come home next Saturday, and be my own again, and kiss me ... I hope for you so much, and feel so eager for you, feel that I cannot wait, feel that now I must have you—that the expectation once more to see your face again, makes me feel hot and feverish, and my heart beats so fast ... my darling, so near I seem to you, that I disdain this pen, and wait for a warmer language.

The relationship between Emily and Susan is portrayed in the film Wild Nights with Emily and explored in the TV series Dickinson.

Sue married Austin in 1856 after a four-year courtship, though their marriage was not a happy one. Edward Dickinson built a house for Austin and Sue naming it the Evergreens, a stand of which was located on the west side of the Homestead.[60]

Until 1855, Dickinson had not strayed far from Amherst. That spring, accompanied by her mother and sister, she took one of her longest and farthest trips away from home.[61] First, they spent three weeks in Washington, where her father was representing Massachusetts in Congress. Then they went to Philadelphia for two weeks to visit family. In Philadelphia, she met Charles Wadsworth, a famous minister of the Arch Street Presbyterian Church, with whom she forged a strong friendship which lasted until his death in 1882.[62] Despite seeing him only twice after 1855 (he moved to San Francisco in 1862), she variously referred to him as "my Philadelphia", "my Clergyman", "my dearest earthly friend" and "my Shepherd from 'Little Girl'hood".[63]

 
In September 2012, the Amherst College Archives and Special Collections unveiled this daguerreotype, proposing it to be Dickinson (left) and her friend Kate Scott Turner (c. 1859); it has not been authenticated.[64]

From the mid-1850s, Dickinson's mother became effectively bedridden with various chronic illnesses until her death in 1882.[65] Writing to a friend in summer 1858, Dickinson said she would visit if she could leave "home, or mother. I do not go out at all, lest father will come and miss me, or miss some little act, which I might forget, should I run away – Mother is much as usual. I Know not what to hope of her".[66] As her mother continued to decline, Dickinson's domestic responsibilities weighed more heavily upon her and she confined herself within the Homestead. Forty years later, Lavinia said that because their mother was chronically ill, one of the daughters had to remain always with her.[66] Dickinson took this role as her own, and "finding the life with her books and nature so congenial, continued to live it".[66]

Withdrawing more and more from the outside world, Dickinson began in the summer of 1858 what would be her lasting legacy. Reviewing poems she had written previously, she began making clean copies of her work, assembling carefully pieced-together manuscript books.[67] The forty fascicles she created from 1858 through 1865 eventually held nearly eight hundred poems.[67] No one was aware of the existence of these books until after her death.

In the late 1850s, the Dickinsons befriended Samuel Bowles, the owner and editor-in-chief of the Springfield Republican, and his wife, Mary.[68] They visited the Dickinsons regularly for years to come. During this time Dickinson sent him over three dozen letters and nearly fifty poems.[69] Their friendship brought out some of her most intense writing and Bowles published a few of her poems in his journal.[70] It was from 1858 to 1861 that Dickinson is believed to have written a trio of letters that have been called "The Master Letters". These three letters, drafted to an unknown man simply referred to as "Master", continue to be the subject of speculation and contention amongst scholars.[71]

The first half of the 1860s, after she had largely withdrawn from social life,[72] proved to be Dickinson's most productive writing period.[73] Modern scholars and researchers are divided as to the cause for Dickinson's withdrawal and extreme seclusion. While she was diagnosed as having "nervous prostration" by a physician during her lifetime,[74] some today believe she may have suffered from illnesses as various as agoraphobia[75] and epilepsy.[76]

Is "my Verse ... alive?"

In April 1862, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a literary critic, radical abolitionist, and ex-minister, wrote a lead piece for The Atlantic Monthly titled, "Letter to a Young Contributor". Higginson's essay, in which he urged aspiring writers to "charge your style with life", contained practical advice for those wishing to break into print.[77] Dickinson's decision to contact Higginson suggests that by 1862 she was contemplating publication and that it may have become increasingly difficult to write poetry without an audience.[78] Seeking literary guidance that no one close to her could provide, Dickinson sent him a letter, which read in full:[79]

 
Thomas Wentworth Higginson in uniform; he was colonel of the First South Carolina Volunteers from 1862 to 1864.

Mr Higginson,
Are you too deeply occupied to say if my Verse is alive?
The Mind is so near itself – it cannot see, distinctly – and I have none to ask –
Should you think it breathed – and had you the leisure to tell me, I should feel quick gratitude –
If I make the mistake – that you dared to tell me – would give me sincerer honor – toward you –
I enclose my name – asking you, if you please – Sir – to tell me what is true?
That you will not betray me – it is needless to ask – since Honor is it's own pawn –

This highly nuanced and largely theatrical letter was unsigned, but she had included her name on a card and enclosed it in an envelope, along with four of her poems.[80] He praised her work but suggested that she delay publishing until she had written longer, being unaware she had already appeared in print. She assured him that publishing was as foreign to her "as Firmament to Fin", but also proposed that "If fame belonged to me, I could not escape her".[81] Dickinson delighted in dramatic self-characterization and mystery in her letters to Higginson.[82] She said of herself, "I am small, like the wren, and my hair is bold, like the chestnut bur, and my eyes like the sherry in the glass that the guest leaves."[83] She stressed her solitary nature, saying her only real companions were the hills, the sundown, and her dog, Carlo. She also mentioned that whereas her mother did not "care for Thought", her father bought her books, but begged her "not to read them – because he fears they joggle the Mind".[84]

Dickinson valued his advice, going from calling him "Mr. Higginson" to "Dear friend" as well as signing her letters, "Your Gnome" and "Your Scholar".[85] His interest in her work certainly provided great moral support; many years later, Dickinson told Higginson that he had saved her life in 1862.[86] They corresponded until her death, but her difficulty in expressing her literary needs and a reluctance to enter into a cooperative exchange left Higginson nonplussed; he did not press her to publish in subsequent correspondence.[87] Dickinson's own ambivalence on the matter militated against the likelihood of publication.[88] Literary critic Edmund Wilson, in his review of Civil War literature, surmised that "with encouragement, she would certainly have published".[89]

The woman in white

In direct opposition to the immense productivity that she displayed in the early 1860s, Dickinson wrote fewer poems in 1866.[90] Beset with personal loss as well as loss of domestic help, Dickinson may have been too overcome to keep up her previous level of writing.[91] Carlo died during this time after having provided sixteen years of companionship; Dickinson never owned another dog. Although the household servant of nine years, Margaret O'Brien, had married and left the Homestead that same year, it was not until 1869 that the Dickinsons brought in a permanent household servant, Margaret Maher, to replace their former maid-of-all-work.[92] Emily once again was responsible for the kitchen, including cooking and cleaning up, as well as the baking at which she excelled.[93]

A solemn thing – it was – I said –
A Woman – White – to be –
And wear – if God should count me fit –
Her blameless mystery –

Emily Dickinson, c. 1861[94]

Around this time, Dickinson's behavior began to change. She did not leave the Homestead unless it was absolutely necessary, and as early as 1867, she began to talk to visitors from the other side of a door rather than speaking to them face to face.[95] She acquired local notoriety; she was rarely seen, and when she was, she was usually clothed in white. Dickinson's one surviving article of clothing is a white cotton dress, possibly sewn circa 1878–1882.[96] Few of the locals who exchanged messages with Dickinson during her last fifteen years ever saw her in person.[97] Austin and his family began to protect Dickinson's privacy, deciding that she was not to be a subject of discussion with outsiders.[98]

Despite her physical seclusion, Dickinson was socially active and expressive through what makes up two-thirds of her surviving notes and letters. When visitors came to either the Homestead or the Evergreens, she would often leave or send over small gifts of poems or flowers.[99] Dickinson also had a good rapport with the children in her life. Mattie Dickinson, the second child of Austin and Sue, later said that "Aunt Emily stood for indulgence."[100] MacGregor (Mac) Jenkins, the son of family friends who later wrote a short article in 1891 called "A Child's Recollection of Emily Dickinson", thought of her as always offering support[clarification needed] to the neighborhood children.[100]

When Higginson urged her to come to Boston in 1868 so they could formally meet for the first time, she declined, writing: "Could it please your convenience to come so far as Amherst I should be very glad, but I do not cross my Father's ground to any House or town".[101] It was not until he came to Amherst in 1870 that they met. Later he referred to her, in the most detailed and vivid physical account of her on record, as "a little plain woman with two smooth bands of reddish hair ... in a very plain & exquisitely clean white piqué & a blue net worsted shawl."[102] He also felt that he never was "with any one who drained my nerve power so much. Without touching her, she drew from me. I am glad not to live near her."[103]

Posies and poesies

Scholar Judith Farr notes that Dickinson, during her lifetime, "was known more widely as a gardener, perhaps, than as a poet".[104] Dickinson studied botany from the age of nine and, along with her sister, tended the garden at Homestead.[104] During her lifetime, she assembled a collection of pressed plants in a sixty-six-page leather-bound herbarium. It contained 424 pressed flower specimens that she collected, classified, and labeled using the Linnaean system.[105] The Homestead garden was well known and admired locally in its time. It has not survived, but efforts to revive it have begun.[106] Dickinson kept no garden notebooks or plant lists, but a clear impression can be formed from the letters and recollections of friends and family. Her niece, Martha Dickinson Bianchi, remembered "carpets of lily-of-the-valley and pansies, platoons of sweetpeas, hyacinths, enough in May to give all the bees of summer dyspepsia. There were ribbons of peony hedges and drifts of daffodils in season, marigolds to distraction—a butterfly utopia".[107] In particular, Dickinson cultivated scented exotic flowers, writing that she "could inhabit the Spice Isles merely by crossing the dining room to the conservatory, where the plants hang in baskets". Dickinson would often send her friends bunches of flowers with verses attached, but "they valued the posy more than the poetry".[107]

Later life

On June 16, 1874, while in Boston, Edward Dickinson suffered a stroke and died. When the simple funeral was held in the Homestead's entrance hall, Dickinson stayed in her room with the door cracked open. Neither did she attend the memorial service on June 28.[108] She wrote to Higginson that her father's "Heart was pure and terrible and I think no other like it exists."[109] A year later, on June 15, 1875, Dickinson's mother also suffered a stroke, which produced a partial lateral paralysis and impaired memory. Lamenting her mother's increasing physical as well as mental demands, Dickinson wrote that "Home is so far from Home".[110]

Though the great Waters sleep,
That they are still the Deep,
We cannot doubt –
No vacillating God
Ignited this Abode
To put it out –

Emily Dickinson, c. 1884[111]

Otis Phillips Lord, an elderly judge on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court from Salem, in 1872 or 1873 became an acquaintance of Dickinson's. After the death of Lord's wife in 1877, his friendship with Dickinson probably became a late-life romance, though as their letters were destroyed, this is surmised.[112] Dickinson found a kindred soul in Lord, especially in terms of shared literary interests; the few letters which survived contain multiple quotations of Shakespeare's work, including the plays Othello, Antony and Cleopatra, Hamlet and King Lear. In 1880 he gave her Cowden Clarke's Complete Concordance to Shakespeare (1877).[113] Dickinson wrote that "While others go to Church, I go to mine, for are you not my Church, and have we not a Hymn that no one knows but us?"[114] She referred to him as "My lovely Salem"[115] and they wrote to each other religiously every Sunday. Dickinson looked forward to this day greatly; a surviving fragment of a letter written by her states that "Tuesday is a deeply depressed Day".[116]

After being critically ill for several years, Judge Lord died in March 1884. Dickinson referred to him as "our latest Lost".[117] Two years before this, on April 1, 1882, Dickinson's "Shepherd from 'Little Girl'hood", Charles Wadsworth, also had died after a long illness.

Decline and death

Although she continued to write in her last years, Dickinson stopped editing and organizing her poems. She also exacted a promise from her sister Lavinia to burn her papers.[118] Lavinia, who never married, remained at the Homestead until her own death in 1899.

 
Emily Dickinson's tombstone in the family plot

The 1880s were a difficult time for the remaining Dickinsons. Irreconcilably alienated from his wife, Austin fell in love in 1882 with Mabel Loomis Todd, an Amherst College faculty wife who had recently moved to the area. Todd never met Dickinson but was intrigued by her, referring to her as "a lady whom the people call the Myth".[119] Austin distanced himself from his family as his affair continued and his wife became sick with grief.[120] Dickinson's mother died on November 14, 1882. Five weeks later, Dickinson wrote, "We were never intimate ... while she was our Mother – but Mines in the same Ground meet by tunneling and when she became our Child, the Affection came."[121] The next year, Austin and Sue's third and youngest child, Gilbert—Emily's favorite—died of typhoid fever.[122]

As death succeeded death, Dickinson found her world upended. In the fall of 1884, she wrote, "The Dyings have been too deep for me, and before I could raise my Heart from one, another has come."[123] That summer she had seen "a great darkness coming" and fainted while baking in the kitchen. She remained unconscious late into the night and weeks of ill health followed. On November 30, 1885, her feebleness and other symptoms were so worrying that Austin canceled a trip to Boston.[124] She was confined to her bed for a few months, but managed to send a final burst of letters in the spring. What is thought to be her last letter was sent to her cousins, Louise and Frances Norcross, and simply read: "Little Cousins, Called Back. Emily".[125] On May 15, 1886, after several days of worsening symptoms, Emily Dickinson died at the age of 55. Austin wrote in his diary that "the day was awful ... she ceased to breathe that terrible breathing just before the [afternoon] whistle sounded for six."[126] Dickinson's chief physician gave the cause of death as Bright's disease and its duration as two and a half years.[127]

Lavinia and Austin asked Susan to wash Dickinson's body upon her death. Susan also wrote Dickinson's obituary for the Springfield Republican, ending it with four lines from one of Dickinson's poems: "Morns like these, we parted; Noons like these, she rose; Fluttering first, then firmer, To her fair repose." Lavinia was perfectly satisfied that Sue should arrange everything, knowing it would be done lovingly.[128] Dickinson was buried, laid in a white coffin with vanilla-scented heliotrope, a lady's slipper orchid, and a "knot of blue field violets" placed about it.[107][129] The funeral service, held in the Homestead's library, was simple and short; Higginson, who had met her only twice, read "No Coward Soul Is Mine", a poem by Emily Brontë that had been a favorite of Dickinson's.[126] At Dickinson's request, her "coffin [was] not driven but carried through fields of buttercups" for burial in the family plot at West Cemetery on Triangle Street.[104]

Publication

Despite Dickinson's prolific writing, only ten poems and a letter were published during her lifetime. After her younger sister Lavinia discovered the collection of nearly 1800 poems, Dickinson's first volume was published four years after her death. Until Thomas H. Johnson published Dickinson's Complete Poems in 1955,[130] Dickinson's poems were considerably edited and altered from their manuscript versions. Since 1890 Dickinson has remained continuously in print.

Contemporary

 
"Safe in their Alabaster Chambers –," titled "The Sleeping," as it was published in the Springfield Republican in 1862.

A few of Dickinson's poems appeared in Samuel Bowles' Springfield Republican between 1858 and 1868. They were published anonymously and heavily edited, with conventionalized punctuation and formal titles.[131] The first poem, "Nobody knows this little rose", may have been published without Dickinson's permission.[132] The Republican also published "A Narrow Fellow in the Grass" as "The Snake", "Safe in their Alabaster Chambers –" as "The Sleeping", and "Blazing in the Gold and quenching in Purple" as "Sunset".[133][134] The poem "I taste a liquor never brewed –" is an example of the edited versions; the last two lines in the first stanza were completely rewritten.[133]

Original wording
I taste a liquor never brewed –
From Tankards scooped in Pearl –
Not all the Frankfort Berries
Yield such an Alcohol!

Republican version
I taste a liquor never brewed –
From Tankards scooped in Pearl –
Not Frankfort Berries yield the sense
Such a delirious whirl!

In 1864, several poems were altered and published in Drum Beat, to raise funds for medical care for Union soldiers in the war.[135] Another appeared in April 1864 in the Brooklyn Daily Union.[136]

In the 1870s, Higginson showed Dickinson's poems to Helen Hunt Jackson, who had coincidentally been at the academy with Dickinson when they were girls.[137] Jackson was deeply involved in the publishing world, and managed to convince Dickinson to publish her poem "Success is counted sweetest" anonymously in a volume called A Masque of Poets.[137] The poem, however, was altered to agree with contemporary taste. It was the last poem published during Dickinson's lifetime.

Posthumous

After Dickinson's death, Lavinia Dickinson kept her promise and burned most of the poet's correspondence. Significantly though, Dickinson had left no instructions about the 40 notebooks and loose sheets gathered in a locked chest.[138] Lavinia recognized the poems' worth and became obsessed with seeing them published.[139] She turned first to her brother's wife and then to Mabel Loomis Todd, his lover, for assistance.[129] A feud ensued, with the manuscripts divided between the Todd and Dickinson houses, preventing complete publication of Dickinson's poetry for more than half a century.[140]

 
Cover of the first edition of Poems, published in 1890

The first volume of Dickinson's Poems, edited jointly by Mabel Loomis Todd and T. W. Higginson, appeared in November 1890.[141] Although Todd claimed that only essential changes were made, the poems were extensively edited to match punctuation and capitalization to late 19th-century standards, with occasional rewordings to reduce Dickinson's obliquity.[142] The first 115-poem volume was a critical and financial success, going through eleven printings in two years.[141] Poems: Second Series followed in 1891, running to five editions by 1893; a third series appeared in 1896. One reviewer, in 1892, wrote: "The world will not rest satisfied till every scrap of her writings, letters as well as literature, has been published".[143]

Nearly a dozen new editions of Dickinson's poetry, whether containing previously unpublished or newly edited poems, were published between 1914 and 1945.[144] Martha Dickinson Bianchi, the daughter of Susan and Austin Dickinson, published collections of her aunt's poetry based on the manuscripts held by her family, whereas Mabel Loomis Todd's daughter, Millicent Todd Bingham, published collections based on the manuscripts held by her mother. These competing editions of Dickinson's poetry, often differing in order and structure, ensured that the poet's work was in the public's eye.[145]

The first scholarly publication came in 1955 with a complete new three-volume set edited by Thomas H. Johnson. Forming the basis of later Dickinson scholarship, Johnson's variorum brought all of Dickinson's known poems together for the first time.[146] Johnson's goal was to present the poems very nearly as Dickinson had left them in her manuscripts.[147] They were untitled, only numbered in an approximate chronological sequence, strewn with dashes and irregularly capitalized, and often extremely elliptical in their language.[148] Three years later, Johnson edited and published, along with Theodora Ward, a complete collection of Dickinson's letters, also presented in three volumes.

In 1981, The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson was published. Using the physical evidence of the original papers, the poems were intended to be published in their original order for the first time. Editor Ralph W. Franklin relied on smudge marks, needle punctures and other clues to reassemble the poet's packets.[147] Since then, many critics have argued for thematic unity in these small collections, believing the ordering of the poems to be more than chronological or convenient.

Dickinson biographer Alfred Habegger wrote in My Wars Are Laid Away in Books: The Life of Emily Dickinson (2001) that "The consequences of the poet's failure to disseminate her work in a faithful and orderly manner are still very much with us".[149]

Poetry

Dickinson's poems generally fall into three distinct periods, the works in each period having certain general characters in common.

  • Pre-1861: In the period before 1858, the poems are most often conventional and sentimental in nature.[150] Thomas H. Johnson, who later published The Poems of Emily Dickinson, was able to date only five of Dickinson's poems as written before 1858.[151] Two of these are mock valentines done in an ornate and humorous style, two others are conventional lyrics, one of which is about missing her brother Austin, and the fifth poem, which begins "I have a Bird in spring", conveys her grief over the feared loss of friendship and was sent to her friend Sue Gilbert.[151] In 1858, Dickinson began to collect her poems in the small hand-sewn books she called fascicles.
  • 1861–1865: This was her most creative period, and these poems represent her most vigorous and creative work. Her poetic production also increased dramatically during this period. Johnson estimated that she composed 35 poems in 1860, 86 poems in 1861, 366 in 1862, 141 in 1863, and 174 in 1864. It was during this period that Dickinson fully developed her themes concerning nature, life, and mortality.[152]
  • Post-1866: Only a third of Dickinson's poems were written in the last twenty years of her life, when her poetic production slowed considerably. During this period, she no longer collected her poems in fascicles.[152]

Structure and syntax

 
Dickinson's handwritten manuscript of her poem "Wild Nights – Wild Nights!"

The extensive use of dashes and unconventional capitalization in Dickinson's manuscripts, and the idiosyncratic vocabulary and imagery, combine to create a body of work that is "far more various in its styles and forms than is commonly supposed".[5][153] Dickinson avoids pentameter, opting more generally for trimeter, tetrameter and, less often, dimeter. Sometimes her use of these meters is regular, but oftentimes it is irregular. The regular form that she most often employs is the ballad stanza, a traditional form that is divided into quatrains, using tetrameter for the first and third lines and trimeter for the second and fourth, while rhyming the second and fourth lines (ABCB). Though Dickinson often uses perfect rhymes for lines two and four, she also makes frequent use of slant rhyme.[154] In some of her poems, she varies the meter from the traditional ballad stanza by using trimeter for lines one, two and four; while using tetrameter for only line three.

Since many of her poems were written in traditional ballad stanzas with ABCB rhyme schemes, some of these poems can be sung to fit the melodies of popular folk songs and hymns that also use the common meter, employing alternating lines of iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter.[155]

Dickinson scholar and poet Anthony Hecht finds resonances in Dickinson's poetry not only with hymns and song-forms but also with psalms and riddles, citing the following example: "Who is the East? / The Yellow Man / Who may be Purple if he can / That carries in the Sun. / Who is the West? / The Purple Man / Who may be Yellow if He can / That lets Him out again."[153]

Late 20th-century scholars are "deeply interested" by Dickinson's highly individual use of punctuation and lineation (line lengths and line breaks).[138] Following the publication of one of the few poems that appeared in her lifetime—"A Narrow Fellow in the Grass", published as "The Snake" in the Republican—Dickinson complained that the edited punctuation (an added comma and a full stop substitution for the original dash) altered the meaning of the entire poem.[133]

Original wording
A narrow Fellow in the Grass
Occasionally rides –
You may have met Him – did you not
His notice sudden is –

Republican version[133]
A narrow Fellow in the Grass
Occasionally rides –
You may have met Him – did you not,
His notice sudden is.

As Farr points out, "snakes instantly notice you"; Dickinson's version captures the "breathless immediacy" of the encounter; and The Republican's punctuation renders "her lines more commonplace".[138] With the increasingly close focus on Dickinson's structures and syntax has come a growing appreciation that they are "aesthetically based".[138] Although Johnson's landmark 1955 edition of poems was relatively unaltered from the original, later scholars critiqued it for deviating from the style and layout of Dickinson's manuscripts. Meaningful distinctions, these scholars assert, can be drawn from varying lengths and angles of dash, and differing arrangements of text on the page.[156] Several volumes have attempted to render Dickinson's handwritten dashes using many typographic symbols of varying length and angle. R. W. Franklin's 1998 variorum edition of the poems provided alternate wordings to those chosen by Johnson, in a more limited editorial intervention. Franklin also used typeset dashes of varying length to approximate the manuscripts' dashes more closely.[147]

Major themes

Dickinson left no formal statement of her aesthetic intentions and, because of the variety of her themes, her work does not fit conveniently into any one genre. She has been regarded, alongside Emerson (whose poems Dickinson admired), as a Transcendentalist.[157] However, Farr disagrees with this analysis, saying that Dickinson's "relentlessly measuring mind ... deflates the airy elevation of the Transcendental".[158] Apart from the major themes discussed below, Dickinson's poetry frequently uses humor, puns, irony and satire.[159]

Flowers and gardens: Farr notes that Dickinson's "poems and letters almost wholly concern flowers" and that allusions to gardens often refer to an "imaginative realm ... wherein flowers [are] often emblems for actions and emotions".[160] She associates some flowers, like gentians and anemones, with youth and humility; others with prudence and insight.[160] Her poems were often sent to friends with accompanying letters and nosegays.[160] Farr notes that one of Dickinson's earlier poems, written about 1859, appears to "conflate her poetry itself with the posies": "My nosegays are for Captives – / Dim – long expectant eyes – / Fingers denied the plucking, / Patient till Paradise – / To such, if they sh'd whisper / Of morning and the moor – / They bear no other errand, / And I, no other prayer".[160]

The Master poems: Dickinson left a large number of poems addressed to "Signor", "Sir" and "Master", who is characterized as Dickinson's "lover for all eternity".[161] These confessional poems are often "searing in their self-inquiry" and "harrowing to the reader" and typically take their metaphors from texts and paintings of Dickinson's day.[161] The Dickinson family themselves believed these poems were addressed to actual individuals but this view is frequently rejected by scholars. Farr, for example, contends that the Master is an unattainable composite figure, "human, with specific characteristics, but godlike" and speculates that Master may be a "kind of Christian muse".[161]

Morbidity: Dickinson's poems reflect her "early and lifelong fascination" with illness, dying and death.[162] Perhaps surprisingly for a New England spinster, her poems allude to death by many methods: "crucifixion, drowning, hanging, suffocation, freezing, premature burial, shooting, stabbing and guillotinage".[162] She reserved her sharpest insights into the "death blow aimed by God" and the "funeral in the brain", often reinforced by images of thirst and starvation. Dickinson scholar Vivian Pollak considers these references an autobiographical reflection of Dickinson's "thirsting-starving persona", an outward expression of her needy self-image as small, thin and frail.[162] Dickinson's most psychologically complex poems explore the theme that the loss of hunger for life causes the death of self and place this at "the interface of murder and suicide".[162] Death and morbidity in Dickinson's poetry is also heavily connected to winter themes. Critic Edwin Folsom analyzes how "winter for Dickinson is the season that forces reality, that strips all hope of transcendence. It is a season of death and a metaphor for death".[163]

Gospel poems: Throughout her life, Dickinson wrote poems reflecting a preoccupation with the teachings of Jesus Christ and, indeed, many are addressed to him.[164] She stresses the Gospels' contemporary pertinence and recreates them, often with "wit and American colloquial language".[164] Scholar Dorothy Oberhaus finds that the "salient feature uniting Christian poets ... is their reverential attention to the life of Jesus Christ" and contends that Dickinson's deep structures place her in the "poetic tradition of Christian devotion" alongside Hopkins, Eliot and Auden.[164] In a Nativity poem, Dickinson combines lightness and wit to revisit an ancient theme: "The Savior must have been / A docile Gentleman – / To come so far so cold a Day / For little Fellowmen / The Road to Bethlehem / Since He and I were Boys / Was leveled, but for that twould be / A rugged billion Miles –".[164]

The Undiscovered Continent: Academic Suzanne Juhasz considers that Dickinson saw the mind and spirit as tangible visitable places and that for much of her life she lived within them.[165] Often, this intensely private place is referred to as the "undiscovered continent" and the "landscape of the spirit" and embellished with nature imagery. At other times, the imagery is darker and forbidding—castles or prisons, complete with corridors and rooms—to create a dwelling place of "oneself" where one resides with one's other selves.[165] An example that brings together many of these ideas is: "Me from Myself – to banish – / Had I Art – / Impregnable my Fortress / Unto All Heart – / But since myself—assault Me – / How have I peace / Except by subjugating / Consciousness. / And since We're mutual Monarch / How this be / Except by Abdication – / Me – of Me?".[165]

Reception

 
Dickinson wrote and sent this poem ("A Route of Evanescence") to Thomas Higginson in 1880.

The surge of posthumous publication gave Dickinson's poetry its first public exposure. Backed by Higginson and with a favorable notice from William Dean Howells, an editor of Harper's Magazine, the poetry received mixed reviews after it was first published in 1890. Higginson himself stated in his preface to the first edition of Dickinson's published work that the poetry's quality "is that of extraordinary grasp and insight",[166] albeit "without the proper control and chastening" that the experience of publishing during her lifetime might have conferred.[167] His judgment that her opus was "incomplete and unsatisfactory" would be echoed in the essays of the New Critics in the 1930s.

Maurice Thompson, who was literary editor of The Independent for twelve years, noted in 1891 that her poetry had "a strange mixture of rare individuality and originality".[168] Some critics hailed Dickinson's effort, but disapproved of her unusual non-traditional style. Andrew Lang, a British writer, dismissed Dickinson's work, stating that "if poetry is to exist at all, it really must have form and grammar, and must rhyme when it professes to rhyme. The wisdom of the ages and the nature of man insist on so much".[169] Thomas Bailey Aldrich, a poet and novelist, equally dismissed Dickinson's poetic technique in The Atlantic Monthly in January 1892: "It is plain that Miss Dickinson possessed an extremely unconventional and grotesque fancy. She was deeply tinged by the mysticism of Blake, and strongly influenced by the mannerism of Emerson ... But the incoherence and formlessness of her—versicles are fatal ... an eccentric, dreamy, half-educated recluse in an out-of-the-way New England village (or anywhere else) cannot with impunity set at defiance the laws of gravitation and grammar".[170]

Critical attention to Dickinson's poetry was meager from 1897 to the early 1920s.[171] By the start of the 20th century, interest in her poetry became broader in scope and some critics began to consider Dickinson as essentially modern. Rather than seeing Dickinson's poetic styling as a result of lack of knowledge or skill, modern critics believed the irregularities were consciously artistic.[172] In a 1915 essay, Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant called the poet's inspiration "daring" and named her "one of the rarest flowers the sterner New England land ever bore".[173] With the growing popularity of modernist poetry in the 1920s, Dickinson's failure to conform to 19th-century poetic form was no longer surprising nor distasteful to new generations of readers. Dickinson was suddenly referred to by various critics as a great woman poet, and a cult following began to form.[174]

In the 1930s, a number of the New Critics—among them R. P. Blackmur, Allen Tate, Cleanth Brooks and Yvor Winters—appraised the significance of Dickinson's poetry. As critic Roland Hagenbüchle pointed out, their "affirmative and prohibitive tenets turned out to be of special relevance to Dickinson scholarship".[175] Blackmur, in an attempt to focus and clarify the major claims for and against the poet's greatness, wrote in a landmark 1937 critical essay: "... she was a private poet who wrote as indefatigably as some women cook or knit. Her gift for words and the cultural predicament of her time drove her to poetry instead of antimacassars ... She came ... at the right time for one kind of poetry: the poetry of sophisticated, eccentric vision."[176]

The second wave of feminism created greater cultural sympathy for her as a female poet. In the first collection of critical essays on Dickinson from a feminist perspective, she is heralded as the greatest woman poet in the English language.[177] Biographers and theorists of the past tended to separate Dickinson's roles as a woman and a poet. For example, George Whicher wrote in his 1952 book This Was a Poet: A Critical Biography of Emily Dickinson, "Perhaps as a poet [Dickinson] could find the fulfillment she had missed as a woman." Feminist criticism, on the other hand, declares that there is a necessary and powerful conjunction between Dickinson being a woman and a poet.[178] Adrienne Rich theorized in Vesuvius at Home: The Power of Emily Dickinson (1976) that Dickinson's identity as a woman poet brought her power: "[she] chose her seclusion, knowing she was exceptional and knowing what she needed ... She carefully selected her society and controlled the disposal of her time ... neither eccentric nor quaint; she was determined to survive, to use her powers, to practice necessary economics."[179]

Some scholars question the poet's sexuality, theorizing that the numerous letters and poems that were dedicated to Susan Gilbert Dickinson indicate a lesbian romance, and speculating about how this may have influenced her poetry.[180] Critics such as John Cody, Lillian Faderman, Vivian R. Pollak, Paula Bennett, Judith Farr, Ellen Louise Hart, and Martha Nell Smith have argued that Susan was the central erotic relationship in Dickinson's life.[9]

Legacy

In the early 20th century, Martha Dickinson Bianchi and Millicent Todd Bingham kept the achievement of Emily Dickinson alive. Bianchi promoted Dickinson's poetic achievement. Bianchi inherited The Evergreens as well as the copyright for her aunt's poetry from her parents, publishing works such as Emily Dickinson Face to Face and Letters of Emily Dickinson, which stoked public curiosity about her aunt. Bianchi's books perpetrated legends about her aunt in the context of family tradition, personal recollection and correspondence. In contrast, Millicent Todd Bingham's took a more objective and realistic approach to the poet.[181]

Emily Dickinson is now considered a powerful and persistent figure in American culture.[182] Although much of the early reception concentrated on Dickinson's eccentric and secluded nature, she has become widely acknowledged as an innovative, proto-modernist poet.[183] As early as 1891, William Dean Howells wrote that "If nothing else had come out of our life but this strange poetry, we should feel that in the work of Emily Dickinson, America, or New England rather, had made a distinctive addition to the literature of the world, and could not be left out of any record of it."[184] Critic Harold Bloom has placed her alongside Walt Whitman, Wallace Stevens, Robert Frost, T. S. Eliot, and Hart Crane as a major American poet,[185] and in 1994 listed her among the 26 central writers of Western civilization.[186]

Dickinson is taught in American literature and poetry classes in the United States from middle school to college. Her poetry is frequently anthologized and has been used as text for art songs by composers such as Aaron Copland, Nick Peros, John Adams and Michael Tilson Thomas.[187] Several schools have been established in her name; for example, Emily Dickinson Elementary Schools exist in Bozeman, Montana;[188] Redmond, Washington;[189] and New York City.[190] A few literary journals—including The Emily Dickinson Journal, the official publication of the Emily Dickinson International Society—have been founded to examine her work.[191] An 8-cent commemorative stamp in honor of Dickinson was issued by the United States Postal Service on August 28, 1971, as the second stamp in the "American Poet" series.[192] Dickinson was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1973.[193] A one-woman play titled The Belle of Amherst appeared on Broadway in 1976, winning several awards; it was later adapted for television.[194]

Dickinson's herbarium, which is now held in the Houghton Library at Harvard University, was published in 2006 as Emily Dickinson's Herbarium by Harvard University Press.[195] The original work was compiled by Dickinson during her years at Amherst Academy, and consists of 424 pressed specimens of plants arranged on 66 pages of a bound album. A digital facsimile of the herbarium is available online.[196] The town of Amherst Jones Library's Special Collections department has an Emily Dickinson Collection consisting of approximately seven thousand items, including original manuscript poems and letters, family correspondence, scholarly articles and books, newspaper clippings, theses, plays, photographs and contemporary artwork and prints.[197] The Archives and Special Collections at Amherst College has substantial holdings of Dickinson's manuscripts and letters as well as a lock of Dickinson's hair and the original of the only positively identified image of the poet. In 1965, in recognition of Dickinson's growing stature as a poet, the Homestead was purchased by Amherst College. It opened to the public for tours, and also served as a faculty residence for many years. The Emily Dickinson Museum was created in 2003 when ownership of the Evergreens, which had been occupied by Dickinson family heirs until 1988, was transferred to the college.[198]

Modern influence and inspiration

 
"Yesterday is History" as a wall poem in The Hague (2016)

Emily Dickinson's life and works have been the source of inspiration to artists, particularly to feminist-oriented artists, of a variety of mediums. A few notable examples are as follows:

Translation

Emily Dickinson's poetry has been translated into languages including French, Spanish, Mandarin Chinese, Persian, Kurdish, Turkish, Georgian, Swedish, and Russian. A few examples of these translations are the following:

  • The Queen of Bashful Violets, a Kurdish translation by Madeh Piryonesi published in 2016.[212][213][214]
  • French translation by Charlotte Melançon which includes 40 poems.[215]
  • Mandarin Chinese translation by Professor Jianxin Zhou[216]
  • Swedish translation by Ann Jäderlund.[217]
  • Persian translations: Three Persian translations of Emily Dickinson are available from Saeed Saeedpoor, Madeh Piryonesi and Okhovat.[212][218]
  • Turkish translation: Selected Poems, translated by Selahattin Özpalabıyıklar in 2006, is available from Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları through its special Hasan Âli Yücel classics series.[219]
  • Translation to Polish: Wiersze, translation by Teresa Pelka, public domain, Internet Archive

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ D'Arienzo (2006); the original is held by Amherst College Archives and Special Collections
  2. ^ "Emily Dickinson". Poetry Foundation. September 5, 2020. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
  3. ^ "Emily Dickinson". Biography.com. February 27, 2018. Archived from the original on March 21, 2022. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  4. ^ . Emilydickinson,useum.org. Archived from the original on August 7, 2018. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  5. ^ a b McNeil (1986), 2.
  6. ^ "About Emily Dickinson's Poems: Death, Immortality, and Religion". www.cliffsnotes.com. July 4, 2020. from the original on May 12, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2020.
  7. ^ "The Poems of Emily Dickinson—Emily Dickinson, Thomas H. Johnson". Harvard University Press. from the original on November 6, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Weiss, Philip (November 29, 1998). "Beethoven's Hair Tells All!". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 26, 2020. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  9. ^ a b Comment (2001), 167.
  10. ^ a b Koski (1996), 26–31.
  11. ^ Dickinson, Emily (1998). Ellen Louise Hart; Martha Nell Smith (eds.). Open me carefully: Emily Dickinson's intimate letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson. Ashfield, MA. ISBN 0-9638183-6-8. OCLC 39746998.
  12. ^ Sewall (1974), 321.
  13. ^ Wolphart, Jim (December 1996). . Itech.fgcu.edu. Archived from the original on October 4, 2016. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
  14. ^ Sewall (1974), 17–18.
  15. ^ Sewall (1974), 337; Wolff (1986), 19–21.
  16. ^ Wolff (1986), 14.
  17. ^ "DICKINSON, Edward – Biographical Information". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. October 4, 2019. Archived from the original on March 21, 2022. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  18. ^ Wolff (1986), 36.
  19. ^ "Collection: Daniel and Tammy Dickinson Family Papers | Amherst College - ArchivesSpace". archivesspace.amherst.edu. Retrieved December 14, 2022.
  20. ^ Sewall (1974), 324.
  21. ^ Habegger (2001), 85.
  22. ^ a b Sewall (1974), 337.
  23. ^ Farr (2005), 1.
  24. ^ Sewall (1974), 335.
  25. ^ Wolff (1986), 45.
  26. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 129.
  27. ^ Sewall (1974) 322.
  28. ^ Johnson (1960), 302.
  29. ^ Habegger (2001). 142.
  30. ^ Sewall (1974), 342.
  31. ^ Habegger (2001), 148.
  32. ^ a b Wolff (1986), 77.
  33. ^ a b c Ford (1966), 18.
  34. ^ Habegger (2001), 172.
  35. ^ Ford (1966), 55.
  36. ^ Ford (1966), 47–48.
  37. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 168.
  38. ^ Ford (1966), 37.
  39. ^ Johnson (1960), 153.
  40. ^ Ford (1966), 46.
  41. ^ Sewall (1974), 368.
  42. ^ Sewall (1974), 358.
  43. ^ Habegger (2001), 211.
  44. ^ a b Pickard (1967), 19.
  45. ^ Habegger (2001), 213.
  46. ^ Habegger (2001), 216.
  47. ^ Sewall (1974), 401.
  48. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 221.
  49. ^ Habegger (2001), 218.
  50. ^ Knapp (1989), 59.
  51. ^ Sewall (1974), 683.
  52. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 226.
  53. ^ Sewall (1974), 700–701.
  54. ^ Sewall (1974), 340.
  55. ^ Sewall (1974), 341.
  56. ^ Martin (2002), 53.
  57. ^ Novy, Marianne (1990). Women's Re-visions of Shakespeare: On the Responses of Dickinson, Woolf, Rich, H.D., George Eliot, and Others. University of Illinois Press. p. 117.
  58. ^ Pickard (1967), 21.
  59. ^ Longenbach, James. (June 16, 2010.) "Ardor and the Abyss". The Nation. Retrieved June 29, 2010.
  60. ^ Habegger (2001), 338.
  61. ^ Sewall (1974), 444.
  62. ^ Sewall (1974), 447.
  63. ^ Habegger (2001), 330.
  64. ^ "A New Dickinson Daguerreotype?". Amherst College. March 21, 2022. Archived from the original on December 11, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  65. ^ Walsh (1971), 87.
  66. ^ a b c Habegger (2001). 342.
  67. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 353.
  68. ^ Sewall (1974), 463.
  69. ^ Sewall (1974), 473.
  70. ^ Habegger (2001), 376; McNeil (1986), 33.
  71. ^ Franklin (1998), 5
  72. ^ Ford (1966), 39.
  73. ^ Habegger (2001), 405.
  74. ^ McDermott, John F. 2000. "Emily Dickinson's 'Nervous Prostration' and Its Possible Relationship to Her Work". The Emily Dickinson Journal. 9(1). pp. 71–86.
  75. ^ Fuss, Diana. 1998. "Interior Chambers: The Emily Dickinson Homestead". A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies. 10(3). pp. 1–46
  76. ^ Gordon, Lyndall (February 12, 2010). "A bomb in her bosom: Emily Dickinson's secret life". The Guardian. from the original on March 15, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  77. ^ Johnson (1960), v.
  78. ^ Wolff (1986), 249–250.
  79. ^ Sewall (1974), 541.
  80. ^ Habegger (2001), 453.
  81. ^ Johnson (1960), vii.
  82. ^ Habegger (2001), 455.
  83. ^ Blake (1964), 45.
  84. ^ Habegger (2001), 456.
  85. ^ Sewall (1974), 554–555.
  86. ^ Wolff (1986), 254.
  87. ^ Wolff (1986), 188.
  88. ^ Wolff (1986), 188, 258.
  89. ^ Wilson (1986), 491.
  90. ^ Habegger (2001), 498; Murray (1996), 286–287; Murray (1999), 724–725.
  91. ^ Habegger (2001), 501; Murray (1996) 286–287; Murray (2010) 81–83.
  92. ^ Habegger (2001), 502; Murray (1996) 287; Murray (1999) 724–725.
  93. ^ 86. Murray (1999), 723.
  94. ^ Johnson (1960), 123–124.
  95. ^ Habegger (2001), 517.
  96. ^ Habegger (2001), 516.
  97. ^ Habegger (2001), 540.
  98. ^ Habegger (2001), 548.
  99. ^ Habegger (2001), 541.
  100. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 547.
  101. ^ Habegger (2001), 521.
  102. ^ Habegger (2001), 523.
  103. ^ Habegger (2001), 524.
  104. ^ a b c Farr (2005), 3–6.
  105. ^ Habegger (2001), 154.
  106. ^ "The Lost Gardens of Emily Dickinson". The New York Times. May 17, 2016.
  107. ^ a b c Parker, G9.
  108. ^ Habegger (2001), 562.
  109. ^ Habegger (2001), 566.
  110. ^ Habegger (2001), 569.
  111. ^ Johnson (1960), 661.
  112. ^ Habegger (2001: 587); Sewall (1974), 642.
  113. ^ Sewall (1974), 651.
  114. ^ Sewall (1974), 652.
  115. ^ Habegger (2001), 592; Sewall (1974), 653.
  116. ^ Habegger (2001), 591.
  117. ^ Habegger (2001), 597.
  118. ^ Habegger (2001), 604.
  119. ^ Walsh (1971), 26.
  120. ^ Habegger (2001), 612.
  121. ^ Habegger (2001), 607.
  122. ^ Habegger (2001), 615.
  123. ^ Habegger (2001), 623.
  124. ^ Habegger (2001), 625.
  125. ^ Wolff (1986), 534.
  126. ^ a b Habegger (2001), 627.
  127. ^ Habegger (2001), 622.
  128. ^ Nell Smith (1998), 265.
  129. ^ a b Wolff (1986), 535.
  130. ^ Ford (1966), 122
  131. ^ McNeil (1986), 33.
  132. ^ Habegger (2001), 389.
  133. ^ a b c d Ford (1966), 32.
  134. ^ Wolff (1986), 245.
  135. ^ Habegger (2001), 402–403.
  136. ^ Habegger (2001), 403.
  137. ^ a b Sewall (1974), 580–583.
  138. ^ a b c d Farr (1996), 3.
  139. ^ Pickard (1967), xv.
  140. ^ Wolff (1986), 6
  141. ^ a b Wolff (1986), 537.
  142. ^ McNeil (1986), 34; Blake (1964), 42.
  143. ^ Buckingham (1989), 194.
  144. ^ Grabher (1988), p. 243
  145. ^ Mitchell (2009), p. 75
  146. ^ Grabher (1988), p. 122
  147. ^ a b c Martin (2002), 17.
  148. ^ McNeil (1986), 35.
  149. ^ Habegger (2001), 628.
  150. ^ Ford (1966), 68.
  151. ^ a b Pickard (1967), 20.
  152. ^ a b Johnson (1960), viii.
  153. ^ a b Hecht (1996), 153–155.
  154. ^ Ford (1966), 63.
  155. ^ Wolff (1986), 186.
  156. ^ Crumbley (1997), 14.
  157. ^ Bloom (1998), 18.
  158. ^ Farr (1996), 13.
  159. ^ Wolff (1986), 171.
  160. ^ a b c d Farr (2005), 1–7.
  161. ^ a b c Farr (1996), 7–8.
  162. ^ a b c d Pollak (1996), 62–65.
  163. ^ Folsom, Edwin (1975). ""The Souls That Snow": Winter in the Poetry of Emily Dickinson". American Literature. 47 (3): 361–376. doi:10.2307/2925338. JSTOR 2925338.
  164. ^ a b c d Oberhaus (1996), 105–119
  165. ^ a b c Juhasz (1996), 130–140.
  166. ^ Blake (1964), 12.
  167. ^ Wolff (1986), 175.
  168. ^ Blake (1964), 28.
  169. ^ Blake (1964), 37.
  170. ^ Blake (1964), 55.
  171. ^ Blake (1964), vi.
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Editions of poetry and letters

  • Cristanne Miller (ed.). 2016. Emily Dickinson's Poems: As She Preserved Them. Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
  • Franklin, R. W. (ed.). 1998. The Poems of Emily Dickinson. Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-67624-6.
  • Johnson, Thomas H. and Theodora Ward (eds.). 1958. The Letters of Emily Dickinson. Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
  • Johnson, Thomas H. (ed.). 1955. The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.

Secondary sources

  • Bianchi, Martha Dickinson. 1970. Emily Dickinson Face to Face: Unpublished Letters with Notes and Reminiscences. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books.
  • Blake, Caesar R. (ed). 1964. The Recognition of Emily Dickinson: Selected Criticism Since 1890. Ed. Caesar R. Blake. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Bloom, Harold. 1999. Emily Dickinson. Broomall, PA: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 0-7910-5106-4.
  • Bloom, Harold. 1994. The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages. New York: Harcourt Brace.
  • Buckingham, Willis J. (ed). 1989. Emily Dickinson's Reception in the 1890s: A Documentary History. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0-8229-3604-6.
  • Comment, Kristin M. 2001. "Dickinson's Bawdy: Shakespeare and Sexual Symbolism in Emily Dickinson's Writing to Susan Dickinson". Legacy. 18(2). pp. 167–181.
  • Crumbley, Paul. 1997. Inflections of the Pen: Dash and Voice in Emily Dickinson. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1988-X.
  • D'Arienzo, Daria. 2006. , Amherst Magazine. Winter 2006. Retrieved June 23, 2009.
  • Farr, Judith (ed). 1996. Emily Dickinson: A Collection of Critical Essays. Prentice Hall International Paperback Editions. ISBN 978-0-13-033524-1.
  • Farr, Judith. 2005. The Gardens of Emily Dickinson. Cambridge, Massachusetts & London, England: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01829-7.
  • Ford, Thomas W. 1966. Heaven Beguiles the Tired: Death in the Poetry of Emily Dickinson. University of Alabama Press.
  • Franklin, R. W. 1998. The Master Letters of Emily Dickinson. University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 1-55849-155-4.
  • Gordon, Lyndall. 2010. Lives Like Loaded Guns: Emily Dickinson and Her Family's Feuds. Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-02193-2.
  • Grabher, Gudrun, Roland Hagenbüchle and Cristanne Miller. 1998. The Emily Dickinson Handbook. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
  • Habegger, Alfred. 2001. My Wars Are Laid Away in Books: The Life of Emily Dickinson. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-0-679-44986-7.
  • Roland Hagenbüchle: , Emerson Society Quarterly, 1974
  • Hecht, Anthony. 1996. "The Riddles of Emily Dickinson" in Farr (1996) 149–162.
  • Juhasz, Suzanne (ed). 1983. Feminist Critics Read Emily Dickinson. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-32170-0.
  • Juhasz, Suzanne. 1996. "The Landscape of the Spirit" in Farr (1996) 130–140.
  • Knapp, Bettina L. 1989. Emily Dickinson. New York: Continuum Publishing.
  • Martin, Wendy (ed). 2002. The Cambridge Companion to Emily Dickinson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-00118-8.
  • McNeil, Helen. 1986. Emily Dickinson. London: Virago Press. ISBN 0-394-74766-6.
  • Mitchell, Domhnall Mitchell and Maria Stuart. 2009. The International Reception of Emily Dickinson. New York: Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-9715-2.
  • Murray, Aífe. 2010. Maid as Muse: How Domestic Servants Changed Emily Dickinson's Life and Language. University Press of New England. ISBN 978-1-58465-674-6.
  • Murray, Aífe. 1996. "Kitchen Table Poetics: Maid Margaret Maher and Her Poet Emily Dickinson," The Emily Dickinson Journal. 5(2). pp. 285–296.
  • Paglia, Camille. 1990. Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300043969.
  • Oberhaus, Dorothy Huff. 1996. " 'Tender pioneer': Emily Dickinson's Poems on the Life of Christ" in Farr (1996) 105–119.
  • Parker, Peter. 2007. , The Daily Telegraph, June 29, 2007. Retrieved January 18, 2008.
  • Pickard, John B. 1967. Emily Dickinson: An Introduction and Interpretation. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
  • Pollak, Vivian R. 1996. "Thirst and Starvation in Emily Dickinson's Poetry" in Farr (1996) 62–75.
  • Sewall, Richard B. 1974. The Life of Emily Dickinson. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. ISBN 0-674-53080-2.
  • Smith, Martha Nell. 1992. Rowing in Eden: Rereading Emily Dickinson. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-77666-7.
  • Stocks, Kenneth. 1988. Emily Dickinson and the Modern Consciousness: A Poet of Our Time. New York: St. Martin's Press.
  • Walsh, John Evangelist. 1971. The Hidden Life of Emily Dickinson. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  • Wells, Anna Mary. 1929. "Early Criticism of Emily Dickinson", American Literature, Vol. 1, No. 3. (November 1929).
  • Wilson, Edmund. 1962. Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-393-31256-9.
  • Wolff, Cynthia Griffin. 1986. Emily Dickinson. New York. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-54418-8.

Further reading

  • Emily Dickinson Papers, 1844–1891 (3 microfilm reels) are housed at the Sterling Memorial Library at Yale University.
  • Sánchez-Eppler, Karen; Miller, Cristanne, eds. (2022). The Oxford Handbook of Emily Dickinson. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198833932.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-187227-3.
  • Visiting Emily: Poems Inspired by the Life and Works of Emily Dickinson (University of Iowa Press, 2001) by Thomas Tammaro and Sheila Coghill (2001 Minnesota Book Awards winner)
  • Bledsoe, Robin, ed. (1995) [1980 New York Graphic Society, Boston]. Acts of Light: Emily Dickinson. Illustrated by Nancy Ekholm Burkert; Introduction by Jane Langton. Boston: Bullfinch Press, Little Brown. ISBN 978-0-8212-2175-4. (Available here at Internet Archive)

External links

  • Emily Dickinson at Curlie
  • Works by Emily Dickinson at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Emily Dickinson at Internet Archive
  • Works by Emily Dickinson at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Dickinson Electronic Archives
  • Emily Dickinson Archive
  • Emily Dickinson poems and texts at the Academy of American Poets
  • Profile and poems of Emily Dickinson, including audio files, at the Poetry Foundation.
  • Emily Dickinson Lexicon
  • Emily Dickinson at Modern American Poetry
  • Emily Dickinson International Society
  • The Homestead and the Evergreens, Amherst, Massachusetts
  • Emily Dickinson Collection at the Amherst College Archives & Special Collections
  • at Houghton Library, Harvard University
  • Emily Dickinson Papers, Galatea Collection, Boston Public Library
  • Interview with Them Tammaro and Sheila Coghill about their book Visiting Emily: Poems Inspired by the Life and Work of Emily Dickinson, NORTHERN LIGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series #465 (2001)

emily, dickinson, emily, elizabeth, dickinson, december, 1830, 1886, american, poet, little, known, during, life, since, been, regarded, most, important, figures, american, poetry, dickinson, born, amherst, massachusetts, into, prominent, family, with, strong,. Emily Elizabeth Dickinson December 10 1830 May 15 1886 was an American poet Little known during her life she has since been regarded as one of the most important figures in American poetry 2 Dickinson was born in Amherst Massachusetts into a prominent family with strong ties to its community After studying at the Amherst Academy for seven years in her youth she briefly attended the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary before returning to her family s home in Amherst Evidence suggests that Dickinson lived much of her life in isolation Considered an eccentric by locals she developed a penchant for white clothing and was known for her reluctance to greet guests or later in life even to leave her bedroom Dickinson never married and most friendships between her and others depended entirely upon correspondence 3 Emily DickinsonDaguerreotype taken at Mount Holyoke December 1846 or early 1847 the only authenticated portrait of Dickinson after early childhood 1 Born 1830 12 10 December 10 1830Amherst Massachusetts U S DiedMay 15 1886 1886 05 15 aged 55 Amherst Massachusetts U S Resting placeAmherst West CemeteryOccupationPoetAlma materMount Holyoke Female SeminaryNotable worksList of poemsParentsEdward DickinsonEmily Norcross DickinsonRelativesWilliam Austin Dickinson brother Lavinia Norcross Dickinson sister While Dickinson was a prolific writer her only publications during her lifetime were 10 of her nearly 1 800 poems and one letter 4 The poems published then were usually edited significantly to fit conventional poetic rules Her poems were unique for her era they contain short lines typically lack titles and often use slant rhyme as well as unconventional capitalization and punctuation 5 Many of her poems deal with themes of death and immortality two recurring topics in letters to her friends and also explore aesthetics society nature and spirituality 6 Although Dickinson s acquaintances were most likely aware of her writing it was not until after her death in 1886 when Lavinia Dickinson s younger sister discovered her cache of poems that her work became public Her first collection of poetry was published in 1890 by personal acquaintances Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Mabel Loomis Todd though both heavily edited the content A complete collection of her poetry became available for the first time when scholar Thomas H Johnson published The Poems of Emily Dickinson in 1955 7 In 1998 The New York Times reported on an infrared technology study revealing that much of Dickinson s work had been deliberately censored to exclude the name Susan 8 At least eleven of Dickinson s poems were dedicated to her sister in law Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson though all the dedications were obliterated presumably by Todd 8 These edits work to censor the nature of Emily and Susan s relationship which many scholars have interpreted as romantic 9 10 11 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Family and early childhood 1 2 Teenage years 1 3 Early influences and writing 1 4 Adulthood and seclusion 1 5 Is my Verse alive 1 6 The woman in white 1 7 Posies and poesies 1 8 Later life 1 9 Decline and death 2 Publication 2 1 Contemporary 2 2 Posthumous 3 Poetry 3 1 Structure and syntax 3 2 Major themes 3 3 Reception 3 4 Legacy 4 Modern influence and inspiration 5 Translation 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Editions of poetry and letters 7 3 Secondary sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife EditFamily and early childhood Edit The Dickinson Children Emily on the left c 1840 From the Dickinson Room at Houghton Library Harvard University Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born at the family s homestead in Amherst Massachusetts on December 10 1830 into a prominent but not wealthy family 12 Her father Edward Dickinson was a lawyer in Amherst and a trustee of Amherst College 13 Two hundred years earlier her patrilineal ancestors had arrived in the New World in the Puritan Great Migration where they prospered 14 Emily Dickinson s paternal grandfather Samuel Dickinson was one of the founders of Amherst College 15 In 1813 he built the Homestead a large mansion on the town s Main Street that became the focus of Dickinson family life for the better part of a century 16 Samuel Dickinson s eldest son Edward was treasurer of Amherst College from 1835 to 1873 served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1838 1839 1873 and the Massachusetts Senate 1842 1843 and represented Massachusetts s 10th congressional district in the 33rd U S Congress 1853 1855 17 On May 6 1828 he married Emily Norcross from Monson Massachusetts They had three children William Austin 1829 1895 known as Austin Aust or Awe Emily Elizabeth Lavinia Norcross 1833 1899 known as Lavinia or Vinnie 18 She was also a distant cousin to Baxter Dickinson and his family including his grandson the organist and composer Clarence Dickinson 19 By all accounts young Dickinson was a well behaved girl On an extended visit to Monson when she was two Dickinson s Aunt Lavinia described her as perfectly well and contented She is a very good child and but little trouble 20 Dickinson s aunt also noted the girl s affinity for music and her particular talent for the piano which she called the moosic 21 Dickinson attended primary school in a two story building on Pleasant Street 22 Her education was ambitiously classical for a Victorian girl 23 Wanting his children well educated her father followed their progress even while away on business When Dickinson was seven he wrote home reminding his children to keep school and learn so as to tell me when I come home how many new things you have learned 24 While Dickinson consistently described her father in a warm manner her correspondence suggests that her mother was regularly cold and aloof In a letter to a confidante Dickinson wrote she always ran Home to Awe Austin when a child if anything befell me She was an awful Mother but I liked her better than none 25 On September 7 1840 Dickinson and her sister Lavinia started together at Amherst Academy a former boys school that had opened to female students just two years earlier 22 At about the same time her father purchased a house on North Pleasant Street 26 Dickinson s brother Austin later described this large new home as the mansion over which he and Dickinson presided as lord and lady while their parents were absent 27 The house overlooked Amherst s burial ground described by one local minister as treeless and forbidding 26 Teenage years Edit They shut me up in Prose As when a little Girl They put me in the Closet Because they liked me still Still Could themself have peeped And seen my Brain go round They might as wise have lodged a Bird For Treason in the Pound Emily Dickinson c 1862 28 Dickinson spent seven years at the academy taking classes in English and classical literature Latin botany geology history mental philosophy and arithmetic 29 Daniel Taggart Fiske the school s principal at the time would later recall that Dickinson was very bright and an excellent scholar of exemplary deportment faithful in all school duties 30 Although she had a few terms off due to illness the longest of which was in 1845 1846 when she was enrolled for only eleven weeks 31 she enjoyed her strenuous studies writing to a friend that the academy was a very fine school 32 Dickinson was troubled from a young age by the deepening menace of death especially the deaths of those who were close to her When Sophia Holland her second cousin and a close friend grew ill from typhus and died in April 1844 Dickinson was traumatized 33 Recalling the incident two years later she wrote that it seemed to me I should die too if I could not be permitted to watch over her or even look at her face 34 She became so melancholic that her parents sent her to stay with family in Boston to recover 32 With her health and spirits restored she soon returned to Amherst Academy to continue her studies 35 During this period she met people who were to become lifelong friends and correspondents such as Abiah Root Abby Wood Jane Humphrey and Susan Huntington Gilbert who later married Dickinson s brother Austin In 1845 a religious revival took place in Amherst resulting in 46 confessions of faith among Dickinson s peers 36 Dickinson wrote to a friend the following year I never enjoyed such perfect peace and happiness as the short time in which I felt I had found my Savior 37 She went on to say it was her greatest pleasure to commune alone with the great God amp to feel that he would listen to my prayers 37 The experience did not last Dickinson never made a formal declaration of faith and attended services regularly for only a few years 38 After her church going ended about 1852 she wrote a poem opening Some keep the Sabbath going to Church I keep it staying at Home 39 During the last year of her stay at the academy Dickinson became friendly with Leonard Humphrey its popular new young principal After finishing her final term at the Academy on August 10 1847 Dickinson began attending Mary Lyon s Mount Holyoke Female Seminary which later became Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley about ten miles 16 km from Amherst 40 She stayed at the seminary for only ten months Although she liked the girls at Holyoke Dickinson made no lasting friendships there 41 The explanations for her brief stay at Holyoke differ considerably either she was in poor health her father wanted to have her at home she rebelled against the evangelical fervor present at the school she disliked the discipline minded teachers or she was simply homesick 42 Whatever the reasons for leaving Holyoke her brother Austin appeared on March 25 1848 to bring her home at all events 43 Back in Amherst Dickinson occupied her time with household activities 44 She took up baking for the family and enjoyed attending local events and activities in the budding college town 45 Early influences and writing Edit When she was eighteen Dickinson s family befriended a young attorney by the name of Benjamin Franklin Newton According to a letter written by Dickinson after Newton s death he had been with my Father two years before going to Worcester in pursuing his studies and was much in our family 46 Although their relationship was probably not romantic Newton was a formative influence and would become the second in a series of older men after Humphrey that Dickinson referred to variously as her tutor preceptor or master 47 Newton likely introduced her to the writings of William Wordsworth and his gift to her of Ralph Waldo Emerson s first book of collected poems had a liberating effect She wrote later that he whose name my Father s Law Student taught me has touched the secret Spring 48 Newton held her in high regard believing in and recognizing her as a poet When he was dying of tuberculosis he wrote to her saying he would like to live until she achieved the greatness he foresaw 48 Biographers believe that Dickinson s statement of 1862 When a little Girl I had a friend who taught me Immortality but venturing too near himself he never returned refers to Newton 49 Dickinson was familiar with not only the Bible but also contemporary popular literature 50 She was probably influenced by Lydia Maria Child s Letters from New York another gift from Newton 33 after reading it she gushed This then is a book And there are more of them 33 Her brother smuggled a copy of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow s Kavanagh into the house for her because her father might disapprove 51 and a friend lent her Charlotte Bronte s Jane Eyre in late 1849 52 Jane Eyre s influence cannot be measured but when Dickinson acquired her first and only dog a Newfoundland she named him Carlo after the character St John Rivers dog 52 William Shakespeare was also a potent influence in her life Referring to his plays she wrote to one friend Why clasp any hand but this and to another Why is any other book needed 53 Adulthood and seclusion EditIn early 1850 Dickinson wrote that Amherst is alive with fun this winter Oh a very great town this is 44 Her high spirits soon turned to melancholy after another death The Amherst Academy principal Leonard Humphrey died suddenly of brain congestion at age 25 54 Two years after his death she revealed to her friend Abiah Root the extent of her sadness some of my friends are gone and some of my friends are sleeping sleeping the churchyard sleep the hour of evening is sad it was once my study hour my master has gone to rest and the open leaf of the book and the scholar at school alone make the tears come and I cannot brush them away I would not if I could for they are the only tribute I can pay the departed Humphrey 55 The Evergreens built by Edward Dickinson was the home of Austin and Susan s family During the 1850s Dickinson s strongest and most affectionate relationship was with her sister in law Susan Gilbert Dickinson eventually sent her over three hundred letters more than to any other correspondent over the course of their relationship Susan was supportive of the poet playing the role of most beloved friend influence muse and adviser whose editorial suggestions Dickinson sometimes followed 56 In an 1882 letter to Susan Dickinson said With the exception of Shakespeare you have told me of more knowledge than any one living 57 The importance of Dickinson s relationship with Susan has widely been overlooked due to a point of view first promoted by Mabel Loomis Todd who was involved for many years in a relationship with Austin Dickinson and who diminished Susan s role in Dickinson s life due to her own poor relationship with her lover s wife 58 However the notion of a cruel Susan as promoted by her romantic rival has been questioned most especially by Susan and Austin s surviving children with whom Dickinson was close 59 Many scholars interpret the relationship between Emily and Susan as a romantic one In The Emily Dickinson Journal Lena Koski wrote Dickinson s letters to Gilbert express strong homoerotic feelings 10 She quotes from many of their letters including one from 1852 in which Dickinson proclaims Susie will you indeed come home next Saturday and be my own again and kiss me I hope for you so much and feel so eager for you feel that I cannot wait feel that now I must have you that the expectation once more to see your face again makes me feel hot and feverish and my heart beats so fast my darling so near I seem to you that I disdain this pen and wait for a warmer language The relationship between Emily and Susan is portrayed in the film Wild Nights with Emily and explored in the TV series Dickinson Sue married Austin in 1856 after a four year courtship though their marriage was not a happy one Edward Dickinson built a house for Austin and Sue naming it the Evergreens a stand of which was located on the west side of the Homestead 60 Until 1855 Dickinson had not strayed far from Amherst That spring accompanied by her mother and sister she took one of her longest and farthest trips away from home 61 First they spent three weeks in Washington where her father was representing Massachusetts in Congress Then they went to Philadelphia for two weeks to visit family In Philadelphia she met Charles Wadsworth a famous minister of the Arch Street Presbyterian Church with whom she forged a strong friendship which lasted until his death in 1882 62 Despite seeing him only twice after 1855 he moved to San Francisco in 1862 she variously referred to him as my Philadelphia my Clergyman my dearest earthly friend and my Shepherd from Little Girl hood 63 In September 2012 the Amherst College Archives and Special Collections unveiled this daguerreotype proposing it to be Dickinson left and her friend Kate Scott Turner c 1859 it has not been authenticated 64 From the mid 1850s Dickinson s mother became effectively bedridden with various chronic illnesses until her death in 1882 65 Writing to a friend in summer 1858 Dickinson said she would visit if she could leave home or mother I do not go out at all lest father will come and miss me or miss some little act which I might forget should I run away Mother is much as usual I Know not what to hope of her 66 As her mother continued to decline Dickinson s domestic responsibilities weighed more heavily upon her and she confined herself within the Homestead Forty years later Lavinia said that because their mother was chronically ill one of the daughters had to remain always with her 66 Dickinson took this role as her own and finding the life with her books and nature so congenial continued to live it 66 Withdrawing more and more from the outside world Dickinson began in the summer of 1858 what would be her lasting legacy Reviewing poems she had written previously she began making clean copies of her work assembling carefully pieced together manuscript books 67 The forty fascicles she created from 1858 through 1865 eventually held nearly eight hundred poems 67 No one was aware of the existence of these books until after her death In the late 1850s the Dickinsons befriended Samuel Bowles the owner and editor in chief of the Springfield Republican and his wife Mary 68 They visited the Dickinsons regularly for years to come During this time Dickinson sent him over three dozen letters and nearly fifty poems 69 Their friendship brought out some of her most intense writing and Bowles published a few of her poems in his journal 70 It was from 1858 to 1861 that Dickinson is believed to have written a trio of letters that have been called The Master Letters These three letters drafted to an unknown man simply referred to as Master continue to be the subject of speculation and contention amongst scholars 71 The first half of the 1860s after she had largely withdrawn from social life 72 proved to be Dickinson s most productive writing period 73 Modern scholars and researchers are divided as to the cause for Dickinson s withdrawal and extreme seclusion While she was diagnosed as having nervous prostration by a physician during her lifetime 74 some today believe she may have suffered from illnesses as various as agoraphobia 75 and epilepsy 76 Is my Verse alive Edit In April 1862 Thomas Wentworth Higginson a literary critic radical abolitionist and ex minister wrote a lead piece for The Atlantic Monthly titled Letter to a Young Contributor Higginson s essay in which he urged aspiring writers to charge your style with life contained practical advice for those wishing to break into print 77 Dickinson s decision to contact Higginson suggests that by 1862 she was contemplating publication and that it may have become increasingly difficult to write poetry without an audience 78 Seeking literary guidance that no one close to her could provide Dickinson sent him a letter which read in full 79 Thomas Wentworth Higginson in uniform he was colonel of the First South Carolina Volunteers from 1862 to 1864 Mr Higginson Are you too deeply occupied to say if my Verse is alive The Mind is so near itself it cannot see distinctly and I have none to ask Should you think it breathed and had you the leisure to tell me I should feel quick gratitude If I make the mistake that you dared to tell me would give me sincerer honor toward you I enclose my name asking you if you please Sir to tell me what is true That you will not betray me it is needless to ask since Honor is it s own pawn This highly nuanced and largely theatrical letter was unsigned but she had included her name on a card and enclosed it in an envelope along with four of her poems 80 He praised her work but suggested that she delay publishing until she had written longer being unaware she had already appeared in print She assured him that publishing was as foreign to her as Firmament to Fin but also proposed that If fame belonged to me I could not escape her 81 Dickinson delighted in dramatic self characterization and mystery in her letters to Higginson 82 She said of herself I am small like the wren and my hair is bold like the chestnut bur and my eyes like the sherry in the glass that the guest leaves 83 She stressed her solitary nature saying her only real companions were the hills the sundown and her dog Carlo She also mentioned that whereas her mother did not care for Thought her father bought her books but begged her not to read them because he fears they joggle the Mind 84 Dickinson valued his advice going from calling him Mr Higginson to Dear friend as well as signing her letters Your Gnome and Your Scholar 85 His interest in her work certainly provided great moral support many years later Dickinson told Higginson that he had saved her life in 1862 86 They corresponded until her death but her difficulty in expressing her literary needs and a reluctance to enter into a cooperative exchange left Higginson nonplussed he did not press her to publish in subsequent correspondence 87 Dickinson s own ambivalence on the matter militated against the likelihood of publication 88 Literary critic Edmund Wilson in his review of Civil War literature surmised that with encouragement she would certainly have published 89 The woman in white Edit In direct opposition to the immense productivity that she displayed in the early 1860s Dickinson wrote fewer poems in 1866 90 Beset with personal loss as well as loss of domestic help Dickinson may have been too overcome to keep up her previous level of writing 91 Carlo died during this time after having provided sixteen years of companionship Dickinson never owned another dog Although the household servant of nine years Margaret O Brien had married and left the Homestead that same year it was not until 1869 that the Dickinsons brought in a permanent household servant Margaret Maher to replace their former maid of all work 92 Emily once again was responsible for the kitchen including cooking and cleaning up as well as the baking at which she excelled 93 A solemn thing it was I said A Woman White to be And wear if God should count me fit Her blameless mystery Emily Dickinson c 1861 94 Around this time Dickinson s behavior began to change She did not leave the Homestead unless it was absolutely necessary and as early as 1867 she began to talk to visitors from the other side of a door rather than speaking to them face to face 95 She acquired local notoriety she was rarely seen and when she was she was usually clothed in white Dickinson s one surviving article of clothing is a white cotton dress possibly sewn circa 1878 1882 96 Few of the locals who exchanged messages with Dickinson during her last fifteen years ever saw her in person 97 Austin and his family began to protect Dickinson s privacy deciding that she was not to be a subject of discussion with outsiders 98 Despite her physical seclusion Dickinson was socially active and expressive through what makes up two thirds of her surviving notes and letters When visitors came to either the Homestead or the Evergreens she would often leave or send over small gifts of poems or flowers 99 Dickinson also had a good rapport with the children in her life Mattie Dickinson the second child of Austin and Sue later said that Aunt Emily stood for indulgence 100 MacGregor Mac Jenkins the son of family friends who later wrote a short article in 1891 called A Child s Recollection of Emily Dickinson thought of her as always offering support clarification needed to the neighborhood children 100 When Higginson urged her to come to Boston in 1868 so they could formally meet for the first time she declined writing Could it please your convenience to come so far as Amherst I should be very glad but I do not cross my Father s ground to any House or town 101 It was not until he came to Amherst in 1870 that they met Later he referred to her in the most detailed and vivid physical account of her on record as a little plain woman with two smooth bands of reddish hair in a very plain amp exquisitely clean white pique amp a blue net worsted shawl 102 He also felt that he never was with any one who drained my nerve power so much Without touching her she drew from me I am glad not to live near her 103 Posies and poesies Edit Scholar Judith Farr notes that Dickinson during her lifetime was known more widely as a gardener perhaps than as a poet 104 Dickinson studied botany from the age of nine and along with her sister tended the garden at Homestead 104 During her lifetime she assembled a collection of pressed plants in a sixty six page leather bound herbarium It contained 424 pressed flower specimens that she collected classified and labeled using the Linnaean system 105 The Homestead garden was well known and admired locally in its time It has not survived but efforts to revive it have begun 106 Dickinson kept no garden notebooks or plant lists but a clear impression can be formed from the letters and recollections of friends and family Her niece Martha Dickinson Bianchi remembered carpets of lily of the valley and pansies platoons of sweetpeas hyacinths enough in May to give all the bees of summer dyspepsia There were ribbons of peony hedges and drifts of daffodils in season marigolds to distraction a butterfly utopia 107 In particular Dickinson cultivated scented exotic flowers writing that she could inhabit the Spice Isles merely by crossing the dining room to the conservatory where the plants hang in baskets Dickinson would often send her friends bunches of flowers with verses attached but they valued the posy more than the poetry 107 Later life Edit On June 16 1874 while in Boston Edward Dickinson suffered a stroke and died When the simple funeral was held in the Homestead s entrance hall Dickinson stayed in her room with the door cracked open Neither did she attend the memorial service on June 28 108 She wrote to Higginson that her father s Heart was pure and terrible and I think no other like it exists 109 A year later on June 15 1875 Dickinson s mother also suffered a stroke which produced a partial lateral paralysis and impaired memory Lamenting her mother s increasing physical as well as mental demands Dickinson wrote that Home is so far from Home 110 Though the great Waters sleep That they are still the Deep We cannot doubt No vacillating God Ignited this Abode To put it out Emily Dickinson c 1884 111 Otis Phillips Lord an elderly judge on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court from Salem in 1872 or 1873 became an acquaintance of Dickinson s After the death of Lord s wife in 1877 his friendship with Dickinson probably became a late life romance though as their letters were destroyed this is surmised 112 Dickinson found a kindred soul in Lord especially in terms of shared literary interests the few letters which survived contain multiple quotations of Shakespeare s work including the plays Othello Antony and Cleopatra Hamlet and King Lear In 1880 he gave her Cowden Clarke s Complete Concordance to Shakespeare 1877 113 Dickinson wrote that While others go to Church I go to mine for are you not my Church and have we not a Hymn that no one knows but us 114 She referred to him as My lovely Salem 115 and they wrote to each other religiously every Sunday Dickinson looked forward to this day greatly a surviving fragment of a letter written by her states that Tuesday is a deeply depressed Day 116 After being critically ill for several years Judge Lord died in March 1884 Dickinson referred to him as our latest Lost 117 Two years before this on April 1 1882 Dickinson s Shepherd from Little Girl hood Charles Wadsworth also had died after a long illness Decline and death Edit Although she continued to write in her last years Dickinson stopped editing and organizing her poems She also exacted a promise from her sister Lavinia to burn her papers 118 Lavinia who never married remained at the Homestead until her own death in 1899 Emily Dickinson s tombstone in the family plot The 1880s were a difficult time for the remaining Dickinsons Irreconcilably alienated from his wife Austin fell in love in 1882 with Mabel Loomis Todd an Amherst College faculty wife who had recently moved to the area Todd never met Dickinson but was intrigued by her referring to her as a lady whom the people call the Myth 119 Austin distanced himself from his family as his affair continued and his wife became sick with grief 120 Dickinson s mother died on November 14 1882 Five weeks later Dickinson wrote We were never intimate while she was our Mother but Mines in the same Ground meet by tunneling and when she became our Child the Affection came 121 The next year Austin and Sue s third and youngest child Gilbert Emily s favorite died of typhoid fever 122 As death succeeded death Dickinson found her world upended In the fall of 1884 she wrote The Dyings have been too deep for me and before I could raise my Heart from one another has come 123 That summer she had seen a great darkness coming and fainted while baking in the kitchen She remained unconscious late into the night and weeks of ill health followed On November 30 1885 her feebleness and other symptoms were so worrying that Austin canceled a trip to Boston 124 She was confined to her bed for a few months but managed to send a final burst of letters in the spring What is thought to be her last letter was sent to her cousins Louise and Frances Norcross and simply read Little Cousins Called Back Emily 125 On May 15 1886 after several days of worsening symptoms Emily Dickinson died at the age of 55 Austin wrote in his diary that the day was awful she ceased to breathe that terrible breathing just before the afternoon whistle sounded for six 126 Dickinson s chief physician gave the cause of death as Bright s disease and its duration as two and a half years 127 Lavinia and Austin asked Susan to wash Dickinson s body upon her death Susan also wrote Dickinson s obituary for the Springfield Republican ending it with four lines from one of Dickinson s poems Morns like these we parted Noons like these she rose Fluttering first then firmer To her fair repose Lavinia was perfectly satisfied that Sue should arrange everything knowing it would be done lovingly 128 Dickinson was buried laid in a white coffin with vanilla scented heliotrope a lady s slipper orchid and a knot of blue field violets placed about it 107 129 The funeral service held in the Homestead s library was simple and short Higginson who had met her only twice read No Coward Soul Is Mine a poem by Emily Bronte that had been a favorite of Dickinson s 126 At Dickinson s request her coffin was not driven but carried through fields of buttercups for burial in the family plot at West Cemetery on Triangle Street 104 Publication EditDespite Dickinson s prolific writing only ten poems and a letter were published during her lifetime After her younger sister Lavinia discovered the collection of nearly 1800 poems Dickinson s first volume was published four years after her death Until Thomas H Johnson published Dickinson s Complete Poems in 1955 130 Dickinson s poems were considerably edited and altered from their manuscript versions Since 1890 Dickinson has remained continuously in print Contemporary Edit Safe in their Alabaster Chambers titled The Sleeping as it was published in the Springfield Republican in 1862 A few of Dickinson s poems appeared in Samuel Bowles Springfield Republican between 1858 and 1868 They were published anonymously and heavily edited with conventionalized punctuation and formal titles 131 The first poem Nobody knows this little rose may have been published without Dickinson s permission 132 The Republican also published A Narrow Fellow in the Grass as The Snake Safe in their Alabaster Chambers as The Sleeping and Blazing in the Gold and quenching in Purple as Sunset 133 134 The poem I taste a liquor never brewed is an example of the edited versions the last two lines in the first stanza were completely rewritten 133 Original wording I taste a liquor never brewed From Tankards scooped in Pearl Not all the Frankfort BerriesYield such an Alcohol Republican version I taste a liquor never brewed From Tankards scooped in Pearl Not Frankfort Berries yield the senseSuch a delirious whirl In 1864 several poems were altered and published in Drum Beat to raise funds for medical care for Union soldiers in the war 135 Another appeared in April 1864 in the Brooklyn Daily Union 136 In the 1870s Higginson showed Dickinson s poems to Helen Hunt Jackson who had coincidentally been at the academy with Dickinson when they were girls 137 Jackson was deeply involved in the publishing world and managed to convince Dickinson to publish her poem Success is counted sweetest anonymously in a volume called A Masque of Poets 137 The poem however was altered to agree with contemporary taste It was the last poem published during Dickinson s lifetime Posthumous Edit After Dickinson s death Lavinia Dickinson kept her promise and burned most of the poet s correspondence Significantly though Dickinson had left no instructions about the 40 notebooks and loose sheets gathered in a locked chest 138 Lavinia recognized the poems worth and became obsessed with seeing them published 139 She turned first to her brother s wife and then to Mabel Loomis Todd his lover for assistance 129 A feud ensued with the manuscripts divided between the Todd and Dickinson houses preventing complete publication of Dickinson s poetry for more than half a century 140 Cover of the first edition of Poems published in 1890 The first volume of Dickinson s Poems edited jointly by Mabel Loomis Todd and T W Higginson appeared in November 1890 141 Although Todd claimed that only essential changes were made the poems were extensively edited to match punctuation and capitalization to late 19th century standards with occasional rewordings to reduce Dickinson s obliquity 142 The first 115 poem volume was a critical and financial success going through eleven printings in two years 141 Poems Second Series followed in 1891 running to five editions by 1893 a third series appeared in 1896 One reviewer in 1892 wrote The world will not rest satisfied till every scrap of her writings letters as well as literature has been published 143 Nearly a dozen new editions of Dickinson s poetry whether containing previously unpublished or newly edited poems were published between 1914 and 1945 144 Martha Dickinson Bianchi the daughter of Susan and Austin Dickinson published collections of her aunt s poetry based on the manuscripts held by her family whereas Mabel Loomis Todd s daughter Millicent Todd Bingham published collections based on the manuscripts held by her mother These competing editions of Dickinson s poetry often differing in order and structure ensured that the poet s work was in the public s eye 145 The first scholarly publication came in 1955 with a complete new three volume set edited by Thomas H Johnson Forming the basis of later Dickinson scholarship Johnson s variorum brought all of Dickinson s known poems together for the first time 146 Johnson s goal was to present the poems very nearly as Dickinson had left them in her manuscripts 147 They were untitled only numbered in an approximate chronological sequence strewn with dashes and irregularly capitalized and often extremely elliptical in their language 148 Three years later Johnson edited and published along with Theodora Ward a complete collection of Dickinson s letters also presented in three volumes In 1981 The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson was published Using the physical evidence of the original papers the poems were intended to be published in their original order for the first time Editor Ralph W Franklin relied on smudge marks needle punctures and other clues to reassemble the poet s packets 147 Since then many critics have argued for thematic unity in these small collections believing the ordering of the poems to be more than chronological or convenient Dickinson biographer Alfred Habegger wrote in My Wars Are Laid Away in Books The Life of Emily Dickinson 2001 that The consequences of the poet s failure to disseminate her work in a faithful and orderly manner are still very much with us 149 Poetry EditMain article List of Emily Dickinson poems Dickinson s poems generally fall into three distinct periods the works in each period having certain general characters in common Pre 1861 In the period before 1858 the poems are most often conventional and sentimental in nature 150 Thomas H Johnson who later published The Poems of Emily Dickinson was able to date only five of Dickinson s poems as written before 1858 151 Two of these are mock valentines done in an ornate and humorous style two others are conventional lyrics one of which is about missing her brother Austin and the fifth poem which begins I have a Bird in spring conveys her grief over the feared loss of friendship and was sent to her friend Sue Gilbert 151 In 1858 Dickinson began to collect her poems in the small hand sewn books she called fascicles 1861 1865 This was her most creative period and these poems represent her most vigorous and creative work Her poetic production also increased dramatically during this period Johnson estimated that she composed 35 poems in 1860 86 poems in 1861 366 in 1862 141 in 1863 and 174 in 1864 It was during this period that Dickinson fully developed her themes concerning nature life and mortality 152 Post 1866 Only a third of Dickinson s poems were written in the last twenty years of her life when her poetic production slowed considerably During this period she no longer collected her poems in fascicles 152 Structure and syntax Edit Dickinson s handwritten manuscript of her poem Wild Nights Wild Nights The extensive use of dashes and unconventional capitalization in Dickinson s manuscripts and the idiosyncratic vocabulary and imagery combine to create a body of work that is far more various in its styles and forms than is commonly supposed 5 153 Dickinson avoids pentameter opting more generally for trimeter tetrameter and less often dimeter Sometimes her use of these meters is regular but oftentimes it is irregular The regular form that she most often employs is the ballad stanza a traditional form that is divided into quatrains using tetrameter for the first and third lines and trimeter for the second and fourth while rhyming the second and fourth lines ABCB Though Dickinson often uses perfect rhymes for lines two and four she also makes frequent use of slant rhyme 154 In some of her poems she varies the meter from the traditional ballad stanza by using trimeter for lines one two and four while using tetrameter for only line three Since many of her poems were written in traditional ballad stanzas with ABCB rhyme schemes some of these poems can be sung to fit the melodies of popular folk songs and hymns that also use the common meter employing alternating lines of iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter 155 Dickinson scholar and poet Anthony Hecht finds resonances in Dickinson s poetry not only with hymns and song forms but also with psalms and riddles citing the following example Who is the East The Yellow Man Who may be Purple if he can That carries in the Sun Who is the West The Purple Man Who may be Yellow if He can That lets Him out again 153 Late 20th century scholars are deeply interested by Dickinson s highly individual use of punctuation and lineation line lengths and line breaks 138 Following the publication of one of the few poems that appeared in her lifetime A Narrow Fellow in the Grass published as The Snake in the Republican Dickinson complained that the edited punctuation an added comma and a full stop substitution for the original dash altered the meaning of the entire poem 133 Original wording A narrow Fellow in the Grass Occasionally rides You may have met Him did you not His notice sudden is Republican version 133 A narrow Fellow in the Grass Occasionally rides You may have met Him did you not His notice sudden is As Farr points out snakes instantly notice you Dickinson s version captures the breathless immediacy of the encounter and The Republican s punctuation renders her lines more commonplace 138 With the increasingly close focus on Dickinson s structures and syntax has come a growing appreciation that they are aesthetically based 138 Although Johnson s landmark 1955 edition of poems was relatively unaltered from the original later scholars critiqued it for deviating from the style and layout of Dickinson s manuscripts Meaningful distinctions these scholars assert can be drawn from varying lengths and angles of dash and differing arrangements of text on the page 156 Several volumes have attempted to render Dickinson s handwritten dashes using many typographic symbols of varying length and angle R W Franklin s 1998 variorum edition of the poems provided alternate wordings to those chosen by Johnson in a more limited editorial intervention Franklin also used typeset dashes of varying length to approximate the manuscripts dashes more closely 147 Major themes Edit Dickinson left no formal statement of her aesthetic intentions and because of the variety of her themes her work does not fit conveniently into any one genre She has been regarded alongside Emerson whose poems Dickinson admired as a Transcendentalist 157 However Farr disagrees with this analysis saying that Dickinson s relentlessly measuring mind deflates the airy elevation of the Transcendental 158 Apart from the major themes discussed below Dickinson s poetry frequently uses humor puns irony and satire 159 Flowers and gardens Farr notes that Dickinson s poems and letters almost wholly concern flowers and that allusions to gardens often refer to an imaginative realm wherein flowers are often emblems for actions and emotions 160 She associates some flowers like gentians and anemones with youth and humility others with prudence and insight 160 Her poems were often sent to friends with accompanying letters and nosegays 160 Farr notes that one of Dickinson s earlier poems written about 1859 appears to conflate her poetry itself with the posies My nosegays are for Captives Dim long expectant eyes Fingers denied the plucking Patient till Paradise To such if they sh d whisper Of morning and the moor They bear no other errand And I no other prayer 160 The Master poems Dickinson left a large number of poems addressed to Signor Sir and Master who is characterized as Dickinson s lover for all eternity 161 These confessional poems are often searing in their self inquiry and harrowing to the reader and typically take their metaphors from texts and paintings of Dickinson s day 161 The Dickinson family themselves believed these poems were addressed to actual individuals but this view is frequently rejected by scholars Farr for example contends that the Master is an unattainable composite figure human with specific characteristics but godlike and speculates that Master may be a kind of Christian muse 161 Morbidity Dickinson s poems reflect her early and lifelong fascination with illness dying and death 162 Perhaps surprisingly for a New England spinster her poems allude to death by many methods crucifixion drowning hanging suffocation freezing premature burial shooting stabbing and guillotinage 162 She reserved her sharpest insights into the death blow aimed by God and the funeral in the brain often reinforced by images of thirst and starvation Dickinson scholar Vivian Pollak considers these references an autobiographical reflection of Dickinson s thirsting starving persona an outward expression of her needy self image as small thin and frail 162 Dickinson s most psychologically complex poems explore the theme that the loss of hunger for life causes the death of self and place this at the interface of murder and suicide 162 Death and morbidity in Dickinson s poetry is also heavily connected to winter themes Critic Edwin Folsom analyzes how winter for Dickinson is the season that forces reality that strips all hope of transcendence It is a season of death and a metaphor for death 163 Gospel poems Throughout her life Dickinson wrote poems reflecting a preoccupation with the teachings of Jesus Christ and indeed many are addressed to him 164 She stresses the Gospels contemporary pertinence and recreates them often with wit and American colloquial language 164 Scholar Dorothy Oberhaus finds that the salient feature uniting Christian poets is their reverential attention to the life of Jesus Christ and contends that Dickinson s deep structures place her in the poetic tradition of Christian devotion alongside Hopkins Eliot and Auden 164 In a Nativity poem Dickinson combines lightness and wit to revisit an ancient theme The Savior must have been A docile Gentleman To come so far so cold a Day For little Fellowmen The Road to Bethlehem Since He and I were Boys Was leveled but for that twould be A rugged billion Miles 164 The Undiscovered Continent Academic Suzanne Juhasz considers that Dickinson saw the mind and spirit as tangible visitable places and that for much of her life she lived within them 165 Often this intensely private place is referred to as the undiscovered continent and the landscape of the spirit and embellished with nature imagery At other times the imagery is darker and forbidding castles or prisons complete with corridors and rooms to create a dwelling place of oneself where one resides with one s other selves 165 An example that brings together many of these ideas is Me from Myself to banish Had I Art Impregnable my Fortress Unto All Heart But since myself assault Me How have I peace Except by subjugating Consciousness And since We re mutual Monarch How this be Except by Abdication Me of Me 165 Reception Edit Dickinson wrote and sent this poem A Route of Evanescence to Thomas Higginson in 1880 The surge of posthumous publication gave Dickinson s poetry its first public exposure Backed by Higginson and with a favorable notice from William Dean Howells an editor of Harper s Magazine the poetry received mixed reviews after it was first published in 1890 Higginson himself stated in his preface to the first edition of Dickinson s published work that the poetry s quality is that of extraordinary grasp and insight 166 albeit without the proper control and chastening that the experience of publishing during her lifetime might have conferred 167 His judgment that her opus was incomplete and unsatisfactory would be echoed in the essays of the New Critics in the 1930s Maurice Thompson who was literary editor of The Independent for twelve years noted in 1891 that her poetry had a strange mixture of rare individuality and originality 168 Some critics hailed Dickinson s effort but disapproved of her unusual non traditional style Andrew Lang a British writer dismissed Dickinson s work stating that if poetry is to exist at all it really must have form and grammar and must rhyme when it professes to rhyme The wisdom of the ages and the nature of man insist on so much 169 Thomas Bailey Aldrich a poet and novelist equally dismissed Dickinson s poetic technique in The Atlantic Monthly in January 1892 It is plain that Miss Dickinson possessed an extremely unconventional and grotesque fancy She was deeply tinged by the mysticism of Blake and strongly influenced by the mannerism of Emerson But the incoherence and formlessness of her versicles are fatal an eccentric dreamy half educated recluse in an out of the way New England village or anywhere else cannot with impunity set at defiance the laws of gravitation and grammar 170 Critical attention to Dickinson s poetry was meager from 1897 to the early 1920s 171 By the start of the 20th century interest in her poetry became broader in scope and some critics began to consider Dickinson as essentially modern Rather than seeing Dickinson s poetic styling as a result of lack of knowledge or skill modern critics believed the irregularities were consciously artistic 172 In a 1915 essay Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant called the poet s inspiration daring and named her one of the rarest flowers the sterner New England land ever bore 173 With the growing popularity of modernist poetry in the 1920s Dickinson s failure to conform to 19th century poetic form was no longer surprising nor distasteful to new generations of readers Dickinson was suddenly referred to by various critics as a great woman poet and a cult following began to form 174 In the 1930s a number of the New Critics among them R P Blackmur Allen Tate Cleanth Brooks and Yvor Winters appraised the significance of Dickinson s poetry As critic Roland Hagenbuchle pointed out their affirmative and prohibitive tenets turned out to be of special relevance to Dickinson scholarship 175 Blackmur in an attempt to focus and clarify the major claims for and against the poet s greatness wrote in a landmark 1937 critical essay she was a private poet who wrote as indefatigably as some women cook or knit Her gift for words and the cultural predicament of her time drove her to poetry instead of antimacassars She came at the right time for one kind of poetry the poetry of sophisticated eccentric vision 176 The second wave of feminism created greater cultural sympathy for her as a female poet In the first collection of critical essays on Dickinson from a feminist perspective she is heralded as the greatest woman poet in the English language 177 Biographers and theorists of the past tended to separate Dickinson s roles as a woman and a poet For example George Whicher wrote in his 1952 book This Was a Poet A Critical Biography of Emily Dickinson Perhaps as a poet Dickinson could find the fulfillment she had missed as a woman Feminist criticism on the other hand declares that there is a necessary and powerful conjunction between Dickinson being a woman and a poet 178 Adrienne Rich theorized in Vesuvius at Home The Power of Emily Dickinson 1976 that Dickinson s identity as a woman poet brought her power she chose her seclusion knowing she was exceptional and knowing what she needed She carefully selected her society and controlled the disposal of her time neither eccentric nor quaint she was determined to survive to use her powers to practice necessary economics 179 Some scholars question the poet s sexuality theorizing that the numerous letters and poems that were dedicated to Susan Gilbert Dickinson indicate a lesbian romance and speculating about how this may have influenced her poetry 180 Critics such as John Cody Lillian Faderman Vivian R Pollak Paula Bennett Judith Farr Ellen Louise Hart and Martha Nell Smith have argued that Susan was the central erotic relationship in Dickinson s life 9 Legacy Edit In the early 20th century Martha Dickinson Bianchi and Millicent Todd Bingham kept the achievement of Emily Dickinson alive Bianchi promoted Dickinson s poetic achievement Bianchi inherited The Evergreens as well as the copyright for her aunt s poetry from her parents publishing works such as Emily Dickinson Face to Face and Letters of Emily Dickinson which stoked public curiosity about her aunt Bianchi s books perpetrated legends about her aunt in the context of family tradition personal recollection and correspondence In contrast Millicent Todd Bingham s took a more objective and realistic approach to the poet 181 Emily Dickinson is now considered a powerful and persistent figure in American culture 182 Although much of the early reception concentrated on Dickinson s eccentric and secluded nature she has become widely acknowledged as an innovative proto modernist poet 183 As early as 1891 William Dean Howells wrote that If nothing else had come out of our life but this strange poetry we should feel that in the work of Emily Dickinson America or New England rather had made a distinctive addition to the literature of the world and could not be left out of any record of it 184 Critic Harold Bloom has placed her alongside Walt Whitman Wallace Stevens Robert Frost T S Eliot and Hart Crane as a major American poet 185 and in 1994 listed her among the 26 central writers of Western civilization 186 Dickinson is taught in American literature and poetry classes in the United States from middle school to college Her poetry is frequently anthologized and has been used as text for art songs by composers such as Aaron Copland Nick Peros John Adams and Michael Tilson Thomas 187 Several schools have been established in her name for example Emily Dickinson Elementary Schools exist in Bozeman Montana 188 Redmond Washington 189 and New York City 190 A few literary journals including The Emily Dickinson Journal the official publication of the Emily Dickinson International Society have been founded to examine her work 191 An 8 cent commemorative stamp in honor of Dickinson was issued by the United States Postal Service on August 28 1971 as the second stamp in the American Poet series 192 Dickinson was inducted into the National Women s Hall of Fame in 1973 193 A one woman play titled The Belle of Amherst appeared on Broadway in 1976 winning several awards it was later adapted for television 194 Dickinson s herbarium which is now held in the Houghton Library at Harvard University was published in 2006 as Emily Dickinson s Herbarium by Harvard University Press 195 The original work was compiled by Dickinson during her years at Amherst Academy and consists of 424 pressed specimens of plants arranged on 66 pages of a bound album A digital facsimile of the herbarium is available online 196 The town of Amherst Jones Library s Special Collections department has an Emily Dickinson Collection consisting of approximately seven thousand items including original manuscript poems and letters family correspondence scholarly articles and books newspaper clippings theses plays photographs and contemporary artwork and prints 197 The Archives and Special Collections at Amherst College has substantial holdings of Dickinson s manuscripts and letters as well as a lock of Dickinson s hair and the original of the only positively identified image of the poet In 1965 in recognition of Dickinson s growing stature as a poet the Homestead was purchased by Amherst College It opened to the public for tours and also served as a faculty residence for many years The Emily Dickinson Museum was created in 2003 when ownership of the Evergreens which had been occupied by Dickinson family heirs until 1988 was transferred to the college 198 The Dickinson Homestead today now the Emily Dickinson Museum Emily Dickinson commemorative stamp 1971Modern influence and inspiration Edit Yesterday is History as a wall poem in The Hague 2016 Emily Dickinson s life and works have been the source of inspiration to artists particularly to feminist oriented artists of a variety of mediums A few notable examples are as follows The feminist artwork The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago first exhibited in 1979 features a place setting for Dickinson 199 200 Jane Campion s film The Piano and its novelization co authored by Kate Pullinger were inspired by the poetry of Emily Dickinson as well as the novels by the Bronte sisters 201 A character who is a literary scholar at a fictional New England college in the comic campus novel by Pamela Hansford Johnson Night and Silence Who Is Here 202 is intent on proving that Emily Dickinson was a secret dipsomaniac His obsession costs him his job The 2012 book The Emily Dickinson Reader by Paul Legault is an English to English translation of her complete poems published by McSweeney s 203 Dickinson s work has been set by numerous composers including Aaron Copland 204 Samuel Barber Chester Biscardi Elliot Carter John Adams John Clement Adams 205 Libby Larsen Peter Seabourne Michael Tilson Thomas and Judith Weir 206 207 Her composer cousin Clarence Dickinson set his first songs to six of her poems in 1898 208 A public garden is named in her honor in Paris square Emily Dickinson in the 20th arrondissement 209 Jazz saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom released the 2017 double album Wild Lines Improvising Emily Dickinson inspired by the poet s works 210 English director Terence Davies directed and wrote A Quiet Passion a 2016 biographical film about the life of Emily Dickinson The film stars Cynthia Nixon as the reclusive poet The film premiered at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2016 and was released in the United Kingdom on April 7 2017 Wild Nights with Emily a 2018 American romantic comedy film written and directed by Madeleine Olnek The film is based on actual events from Dickinson s life Dickinson is a TV series starring Academy Award nominee Hailee Steinfeld as Emily Dickinson and premiered in 2019 on Apple TV The series focused on Dickinson s life American hardcore punk band Show Me the Body s debut album Body War was heavily influenced by Dickinson 211 Translation EditEmily Dickinson s poetry has been translated into languages including French Spanish Mandarin Chinese Persian Kurdish Turkish Georgian Swedish and Russian A few examples of these translations are the following The Queen of Bashful Violets a Kurdish translation by Madeh Piryonesi published in 2016 212 213 214 French translation by Charlotte Melancon which includes 40 poems 215 Mandarin Chinese translation by Professor Jianxin Zhou 216 Swedish translation by Ann Jaderlund 217 Persian translations Three Persian translations of Emily Dickinson are available from Saeed Saeedpoor Madeh Piryonesi and Okhovat 212 218 Turkish translation Selected Poems translated by Selahattin Ozpalabiyiklar in 2006 is available from Turkiye Is Bankasi Kultur Yayinlari through its special Hasan Ali Yucel classics series 219 Translation to Polish Wiersze translation by Teresa Pelka public domain Internet ArchiveSee also Edit Biography portal Poetry portalList of Emily Dickinson poemsReferences EditNotes Edit D Arienzo 2006 the original is held by Amherst College Archives and Special Collections Emily Dickinson Poetry Foundation September 5 2020 Retrieved September 5 2020 Emily Dickinson Biography com February 27 2018 Archived from the original on March 21 2022 Retrieved August 25 2018 The Emily Dickinson Museum indicates only one letter and ten poems were published before her death Emilydickinson useum org Archived from the original on August 7 2018 Retrieved August 25 2018 a b McNeil 1986 2 About Emily Dickinson s Poems Death Immortality and Religion www cliffsnotes com July 4 2020 Archived from the original on May 12 2021 Retrieved July 4 2020 The Poems of Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Thomas H Johnson Harvard University Press Archived from the original on November 6 2022 Retrieved March 21 2022 a b Weiss Philip November 29 1998 Beethoven s Hair Tells All The New York Times Archived from the original on March 26 2020 Retrieved March 21 2022 a b Comment 2001 167 a b Koski 1996 26 31 Dickinson Emily 1998 Ellen Louise Hart Martha Nell Smith eds Open me carefully Emily Dickinson s intimate letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson Ashfield MA ISBN 0 9638183 6 8 OCLC 39746998 Sewall 1974 321 Wolphart Jim December 1996 Emily Dickinson I dwell in Possibility Johnson 657 Itech fgcu edu Archived from the original on October 4 2016 Retrieved September 12 2016 Sewall 1974 17 18 Sewall 1974 337 Wolff 1986 19 21 Wolff 1986 14 DICKINSON Edward Biographical Information Biographical Directory of the United States Congress October 4 2019 Archived from the original on March 21 2022 Retrieved October 4 2019 Wolff 1986 36 Collection Daniel and Tammy Dickinson Family Papers Amherst College ArchivesSpace archivesspace amherst edu Retrieved December 14 2022 Sewall 1974 324 Habegger 2001 85 a b Sewall 1974 337 Farr 2005 1 Sewall 1974 335 Wolff 1986 45 a b Habegger 2001 129 Sewall 1974 322 Johnson 1960 302 Habegger 2001 142 Sewall 1974 342 Habegger 2001 148 a b Wolff 1986 77 a b c Ford 1966 18 Habegger 2001 172 Ford 1966 55 Ford 1966 47 48 a b Habegger 2001 168 Ford 1966 37 Johnson 1960 153 Ford 1966 46 Sewall 1974 368 Sewall 1974 358 Habegger 2001 211 a b Pickard 1967 19 Habegger 2001 213 Habegger 2001 216 Sewall 1974 401 a b Habegger 2001 221 Habegger 2001 218 Knapp 1989 59 Sewall 1974 683 a b Habegger 2001 226 Sewall 1974 700 701 Sewall 1974 340 Sewall 1974 341 Martin 2002 53 Novy Marianne 1990 Women s Re visions of Shakespeare On the Responses of Dickinson Woolf Rich H D George Eliot and Others University of Illinois Press p 117 Pickard 1967 21 Longenbach James June 16 2010 Ardor and the Abyss The Nation Retrieved June 29 2010 Habegger 2001 338 Sewall 1974 444 Sewall 1974 447 Habegger 2001 330 A New Dickinson Daguerreotype Amherst College March 21 2022 Archived from the original on December 11 2012 Retrieved March 21 2022 Walsh 1971 87 a b c Habegger 2001 342 a b Habegger 2001 353 Sewall 1974 463 Sewall 1974 473 Habegger 2001 376 McNeil 1986 33 Franklin 1998 5 Ford 1966 39 Habegger 2001 405 McDermott John F 2000 Emily Dickinson s Nervous Prostration and Its Possible Relationship to Her Work The Emily Dickinson Journal 9 1 pp 71 86 Fuss Diana 1998 Interior Chambers The Emily Dickinson Homestead A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies 10 3 pp 1 46 Gordon Lyndall February 12 2010 A bomb in her bosom Emily Dickinson s secret life The Guardian Archived from the original on March 15 2022 Retrieved March 21 2022 Johnson 1960 v Wolff 1986 249 250 Sewall 1974 541 Habegger 2001 453 Johnson 1960 vii Habegger 2001 455 Blake 1964 45 Habegger 2001 456 Sewall 1974 554 555 Wolff 1986 254 Wolff 1986 188 Wolff 1986 188 258 Wilson 1986 491 Habegger 2001 498 Murray 1996 286 287 Murray 1999 724 725 Habegger 2001 501 Murray 1996 286 287 Murray 2010 81 83 Habegger 2001 502 Murray 1996 287 Murray 1999 724 725 86 Murray 1999 723 Johnson 1960 123 124 Habegger 2001 517 Habegger 2001 516 Habegger 2001 540 Habegger 2001 548 Habegger 2001 541 a b Habegger 2001 547 Habegger 2001 521 Habegger 2001 523 Habegger 2001 524 a b c Farr 2005 3 6 Habegger 2001 154 The Lost Gardens of Emily Dickinson The New York Times May 17 2016 a b c Parker G9 Habegger 2001 562 Habegger 2001 566 Habegger 2001 569 Johnson 1960 661 Habegger 2001 587 Sewall 1974 642 Sewall 1974 651 Sewall 1974 652 Habegger 2001 592 Sewall 1974 653 Habegger 2001 591 Habegger 2001 597 Habegger 2001 604 Walsh 1971 26 Habegger 2001 612 Habegger 2001 607 Habegger 2001 615 Habegger 2001 623 Habegger 2001 625 Wolff 1986 534 a b Habegger 2001 627 Habegger 2001 622 Nell Smith 1998 265 a b Wolff 1986 535 Ford 1966 122 McNeil 1986 33 Habegger 2001 389 a b c d Ford 1966 32 Wolff 1986 245 Habegger 2001 402 403 Habegger 2001 403 a b Sewall 1974 580 583 a b c d Farr 1996 3 Pickard 1967 xv Wolff 1986 6 a b Wolff 1986 537 McNeil 1986 34 Blake 1964 42 Buckingham 1989 194 Grabher 1988 p 243 Mitchell 2009 p 75 Grabher 1988 p 122 a b c Martin 2002 17 McNeil 1986 35 Habegger 2001 628 Ford 1966 68 a b Pickard 1967 20 a b Johnson 1960 viii a b Hecht 1996 153 155 Ford 1966 63 Wolff 1986 186 Crumbley 1997 14 Bloom 1998 18 Farr 1996 13 Wolff 1986 171 a b c d Farr 2005 1 7 a b c Farr 1996 7 8 a b c d Pollak 1996 62 65 Folsom Edwin 1975 The Souls That Snow Winter in the Poetry of Emily Dickinson American Literature 47 3 361 376 doi 10 2307 2925338 JSTOR 2925338 a b c d Oberhaus 1996 105 119 a b c Juhasz 1996 130 140 Blake 1964 12 Wolff 1986 175 Blake 1964 28 Blake 1964 37 Blake 1964 55 Blake 1964 vi Wells 1929 243 259 Blake 1964 89 Blake 1964 202 Grabher 1998 358 359 Blake 1964 223 Juhasz 1983 1 Juhasz 1983 9 Juhasz 1983 10 Martin 2002 58 Grabher 1998 p 31 Martin 2002 1 Martin 2002 2 Blake 1964 24 Bloom 1999 9 Bloom 1994 226 Vocal music set to texts by Emily Dickinson The LiederNet Archive Retrieved March 8 2017 Mission Statement Emily Dickinson School website Bozeman Montana Archived from the original on October 2 2007 Retrieved January 16 2008 The Real Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Elementary School website Redmond Washington Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Retrieved July 24 2008 Find a School Schools nyc gov Retrieved August 25 2018 The Emily Dickinson Journal The Johns Hopkins University Press website Baltimore Retrieved December 18 2007 Emily Dickinson commemorative stamps and ephemera Harvard University Library Archived from the original on July 12 2010 Retrieved June 22 2009 Dickinson Emily National Women s Hall of Fame Belle of Amherst Emily Dickinson Museum Archived from the original on November 24 2010 Retrieved September 23 2010 Emily Dickinson s Herbarium Harvard University Press Retrieved August 4 2011 Dickinson Emily 1830 1886 Herbarium circa 1839 1846 1 volume 66 pages in green cloth case 37 cm MS Am 1118 11 Houghton Library Harvard University Library Retrieved August 4 2011 Emily Dickinson Collection Jones Library Inc website Amherst Massachusetts Archived from the original on December 25 2007 Retrieved December 18 2007 History of the Museum Emily Dickinson Museum website Amherst Massachusetts Archived from the original on October 23 2007 Retrieved December 13 2007 Brooklyn Museum Place Settings Brooklynmuseum org Retrieved August 25 2018 Tour and Home Brooklyn Museum March 14 1979 Retrieved August 12 2015 Davis Langdell Cheri 1996 Pain of Silence The Emily Dickinson Journal 5 2 197 201 doi 10 1353 edj 0 0145 S2CID 170194843 Retrieved August 21 2013 Books Midsummer Night s Waking Time July 26 1963 Socarides Alexandra October 23 2012 For Emily Wherever I May Find Her On Paul Legault s Emily Dickinson Retrieved January 14 2019 Dickinson Peter 1994 Emily Dickinson and Music Music amp Letters 75 2 241 245 doi 10 1093 ml 75 2 241 JSTOR 737679 New life for some neglected works The Boston Globe August 31 1991 p 13 Retrieved October 19 2022 Cunningham Valentine October 19 2002 The Sound of Startled Grass The Guardian TheGuardian com Retrieved July 15 2019 Strickland Georgiana 2019 Emily Dickinson in Song A Discography 1925 2019 hcommons org Retrieved October 23 2022 Dickinson Clarence June 9 2008 From the Dickinson Collection Reminiscences by Clarence Dickinson Part 1 1873 1898 The Diapason Square Emily Dickinson Equipements www paris fr Retrieved January 16 2019 Farbey Roger August 27 2017 Jane Ira Bloom Wild Lines Improvising Emily Dickinson album review All About Jazz All About Jazz Retrieved July 27 2020 Meet Show Me The Body Young Punks Who Won t Let New York Die The FADER Retrieved April 27 2022 a b CBC Why a civil engineer is translating Emily Dickinson into Kurdish Cbc ca MiddleEastEye Student translates literature into Kurdish to celebrate native language Middleeasteye net Signature Reads Inside an Engineering Student s Quest to Translate Emily Dickinson Into Kurdish Signature reads com Dickinson Emily Melancon Charlotte 1986 Eurodit Emily Dickinson 40 poemes by Charlotte Melancon Liberte 28 2 21 50 Zhou J X 2013 The poems of Emily Dickinson 1 300 Guangzhou China South China University of Technology Press Ann Jaderlund trans Emma Warg Poetry amp Translation Interim Poetry amp Poetics Retrieved October 23 2020 The Taste of Forbidden Fruit under Publication Mehrnews com in Persian November 11 2016 Secme Siirler in Turkish Turkiye Is Bankasi Kultur Yayinlari July 5 2006 Retrieved February 1 2022 Editions of poetry and letters Edit Cristanne Miller ed 2016 Emily Dickinson s Poems As She Preserved Them Cambridge The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Franklin R W ed 1998 The Poems of Emily Dickinson Cambridge The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 67624 6 Johnson Thomas H and Theodora Ward eds 1958 The Letters of Emily Dickinson Cambridge The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Johnson Thomas H ed 1955 The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson Boston Little Brown amp Co Secondary sources Edit Bianchi Martha Dickinson 1970 Emily Dickinson Face to Face Unpublished Letters with Notes and Reminiscences Hamden Conn Archon Books Blake Caesar R ed 1964 The Recognition of Emily Dickinson Selected Criticism Since 1890 Ed Caesar R Blake Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press Bloom Harold 1999 Emily Dickinson Broomall PA Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 0 7910 5106 4 Bloom Harold 1994 The Western Canon The Books and School of the Ages New York Harcourt Brace Buckingham Willis J ed 1989 Emily Dickinson s Reception in the 1890s A Documentary History Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 3604 6 Comment Kristin M 2001 Dickinson s Bawdy Shakespeare and Sexual Symbolism in Emily Dickinson s Writing to Susan Dickinson Legacy 18 2 pp 167 181 Crumbley Paul 1997 Inflections of the Pen Dash and Voice in Emily Dickinson Lexington The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 1988 X D Arienzo Daria 2006 Looking at Emily Amherst Magazine Winter 2006 Retrieved June 23 2009 Farr Judith ed 1996 Emily Dickinson A Collection of Critical Essays Prentice Hall International Paperback Editions ISBN 978 0 13 033524 1 Farr Judith 2005 The Gardens of Emily Dickinson Cambridge Massachusetts amp London England Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01829 7 Ford Thomas W 1966 Heaven Beguiles the Tired Death in the Poetry of Emily Dickinson University of Alabama Press Franklin R W 1998 The Master Letters of Emily Dickinson University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 1 55849 155 4 Gordon Lyndall 2010 Lives Like Loaded Guns Emily Dickinson and Her Family s Feuds Viking ISBN 978 0 670 02193 2 Grabher Gudrun Roland Hagenbuchle and Cristanne Miller 1998 The Emily Dickinson Handbook Amherst University of Massachusetts Press Habegger Alfred 2001 My Wars Are Laid Away in Books The Life of Emily Dickinson New York Random House ISBN 978 0 679 44986 7 Roland Hagenbuchle Precision and Indeterminacy in the Poetry of Emily Dickinson Emerson Society Quarterly 1974 Hecht Anthony 1996 The Riddles of Emily Dickinson in Farr 1996 149 162 Juhasz Suzanne ed 1983 Feminist Critics Read Emily Dickinson Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 32170 0 Juhasz Suzanne 1996 The Landscape of the Spirit in Farr 1996 130 140 Knapp Bettina L 1989 Emily Dickinson New York Continuum Publishing Martin Wendy ed 2002 The Cambridge Companion to Emily Dickinson Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 00118 8 McNeil Helen 1986 Emily Dickinson London Virago Press ISBN 0 394 74766 6 Mitchell Domhnall Mitchell and Maria Stuart 2009 The International Reception of Emily Dickinson New York Continuum ISBN 0 8264 9715 2 Murray Aife 2010 Maid as Muse How Domestic Servants Changed Emily Dickinson s Life and Language University Press of New England ISBN 978 1 58465 674 6 Murray Aife 1996 Kitchen Table Poetics Maid Margaret Maher and Her Poet Emily Dickinson The Emily Dickinson Journal 5 2 pp 285 296 Paglia Camille 1990 Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson Yale University Press ISBN 9780300043969 Oberhaus Dorothy Huff 1996 Tender pioneer Emily Dickinson s Poems on the Life of Christ in Farr 1996 105 119 Parker Peter 2007 New Feet Within My Garden Go Emily Dickinson s Herbarium The Daily Telegraph June 29 2007 Retrieved January 18 2008 Pickard John B 1967 Emily Dickinson An Introduction and Interpretation New York Holt Rinehart and Winston Pollak Vivian R 1996 Thirst and Starvation in Emily Dickinson s Poetry in Farr 1996 62 75 Sewall Richard B 1974 The Life of Emily Dickinson New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0 674 53080 2 Smith Martha Nell 1992 Rowing in Eden Rereading Emily Dickinson Austin Texas University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 77666 7 Stocks Kenneth 1988 Emily Dickinson and the Modern Consciousness A Poet of Our Time New York St Martin s Press Walsh John Evangelist 1971 The Hidden Life of Emily Dickinson New York Simon and Schuster Wells Anna Mary 1929 Early Criticism of Emily Dickinson American Literature Vol 1 No 3 November 1929 Wilson Edmund 1962 Patriotic Gore Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0 393 31256 9 Wolff Cynthia Griffin 1986 Emily Dickinson New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 394 54418 8 Further reading EditEmily Dickinson Papers 1844 1891 3 microfilm reels are housed at the Sterling Memorial Library at Yale University Sanchez Eppler Karen Miller Cristanne eds 2022 The Oxford Handbook of Emily Dickinson Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780198833932 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 187227 3 Visiting Emily Poems Inspired by the Life and Works of Emily Dickinson University of Iowa Press 2001 by Thomas Tammaro and Sheila Coghill 2001 Minnesota Book Awards winner Bledsoe Robin ed 1995 1980 New York Graphic Society Boston Acts of Light Emily Dickinson Illustrated by Nancy Ekholm Burkert Introduction by Jane Langton Boston Bullfinch Press Little Brown ISBN 978 0 8212 2175 4 Available here at Internet Archive External links EditEmily Dickinson at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Emily Dickinson at Curlie Works by Emily Dickinson at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Emily Dickinson at Internet Archive Works by Emily Dickinson at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Dickinson Electronic Archives Emily Dickinson Archive Emily Dickinson poems and texts at the Academy of American Poets Profile and poems of Emily Dickinson including audio files at the Poetry Foundation Emily Dickinson Lexicon Emily Dickinson at Modern American Poetry Emily Dickinson International Society Emily Dickinson Museum The Homestead and the Evergreens Amherst Massachusetts Emily Dickinson Collection at the Amherst College Archives amp Special Collections Emily Dickinson Collection at Houghton Library Harvard University Emily Dickinson Papers Galatea Collection Boston Public Library Interview with Them Tammaro and Sheila Coghill about their book Visiting Emily Poems Inspired by the Life and Work of Emily Dickinson NORTHERN LIGHTS Minnesota Author Interview TV Series 465 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emily Dickinson amp oldid 1154879929, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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