Emily Dickinson
Essay title: Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson made a large influence on poetry, she is known as one of
Americas most famous poets. She was also considered to be an obsessively private writer. With close to two thousand different poems and one thousand of her letters to her friends that survived her death Emily Dickinson showed that she was a truly dedicated writer. Out of her two thousand poems only seven were published during her lifetime. (1)
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born in the quiet community of Amherst, Massachusetts on December 10, 1830 to a prominent family, her father Edward Dickinson, an orthodox Calvinist, was both a lawyer and the Treasurer of Amherst College. He also served in Congress. Emilys mother was Emily Norcross Dickinson. Throughout Emilys life, her mother was not “emotionally accessible,” the absence of which might have caused some of Emilys eccentricity. Her family was known for educational and political activity. The family included three children, an older brother, William Austin and a little sister, Lavinia. Being rooted in the puritanical Massachusetts of the 1800s, the Dickinson children were raised in the Christian tradition, and they were expected to take up their fathers religious beliefs and values without argument. Emily was born in, and died in, a house called the Homestead, built by her grandfather Samuel Fowler Dickinson in 1813. This house was sold out of the family, however, in 1833, and not re-purchased by Edward Dickinson till 1855; so most of the poets younger years were lived in other houses. (5)
Emily was educated at the Amherst Academy, the institute that her grandfather helped found. She continued education there from 1834-1847. She also spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley, but had left because she did not like the religious environment. During the 1847-1848 year at the Seminary she studied under Mary Lyons. Dickinson acquired limited notoriety as the one student unwilling to publicly confess faith in Christ. Designated a person with “no hope” of salvation, she keenly felt her isolation, writing her friend Abiah Root in 1848, “I am not happy, and I regret that last term, when that golden opportunity was mine, that I did not give up and become a Christian.”For a woman of this time, this much education was very rare. (4)
Around 1850 Dickinson started to write poems, first in fairly conventional style, but after ten years of practice she began to give room for experiments. Her poetry reflects her loneliness and the speakers of her poems generally live in a state of want; but her poems are also marked by the intimate recollection of inspirational moments which are decidedly life-giving and suggest the possibility of future happiness. Her work was heavily influenced by the Metaphysical poets of seventeenth-century England, as well as by her Puritan upbringing and the Book of Revelation. (1)
Emily Dickinson was a very mysterious person. As she got older she became more and more reclusive too the point that by her thirties, she would not leave her house and would withdraw from visitors. Emily was known to give fruit and treats to children by lowering them out her window in a basket with a rope to avoid actually seeing them face to face. She developed a reputation as a myth, because she was almost never seen and when people did catch a glimpse of her she was always wearing white. Although she lived a secluded life, her letters reveal knowledge of the writings of John Keats, John Ruskin, and Sir Thomas Browne. Dickinsons emotional life remains mysterious, despite much speculation about a possible disappointed love affair. Emily never got married but is thought to have had a relationship with Reverend Charles Wadsworth who she met in the spring of 1854 in Philadelphia. He was a famous preacher and was married. Many scholars believe that he was the subject of her love poems. Emily probably only saw Wadsworth an additional three times after their first encounter which was only done by him going to Amherst, where she lived. In 1861 Wadsworth moved to San Francisco. It is after this time that Emily really started to produce hundreds of poems. Emily Dickinson submitted very few poems to publishers. She felt that her poetry was not good enough to be read by everyone. Seven of her poems were published during her life time either by her friends who submitted them to a publisher without her consent or Emily Anonymously. (7)
In 1862 she told a friend “If fame belonged to me I could not escape
herMy Barefoot-Rank is better.” It is also thought that Emily Dickinson had a passionate relationship with Susan Gilbert. Emily wrote three times more poems to Susan then to any one else. They became very close friends;