One American nineteenth century poet, Emily Elizabeth Dickinson, lived
her entire obscure life believing she was a 'nobody'. Ironically, death gave her a second chance
and the exposure she well deserved, in order to become, a “Somebody! / the
livelong June- /To an admiring Bog!” (Dickinson, 1861, p.1669) of the twentieth
century. With this in mind, this paper
will and provide some enlightenment in why Emily Elizabeth Dickinson deserves
the recognition of being one of the
greatest American poets to this day.
This paper will also include an analyzed the poem called “A narrow
Fellow in the Grass” ( Dickinson, 1865, p. 107-108) which will expose
Dickinson's writing style through her
own poem's advice: “Tell all the Truth
but tell it slant - / Success is Circuit lies”. (Dickinson, 1872, p. 108)
In order to find the truth about Dickinson's life, more than a hundred
years later, scholars are still putting the pieces together about her life as a
poet. Emily kept her private life private.
According to Richard Sewall, author of “The life of Emily”: “She (Emily) told the truth, [. . . ] nearly
a hundred years after her death, and after much painstaking research, scholars
still grope with certainties.” (Sewell, 1998, p.3)
Born December
10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts, Emily Elisabeth (named after her mother)
was the second of three children ( Austin-1829, Lavinia-1933) of Edward and
Emily Norcross Dickinson. She spent her
entire life, as well as her ancestors did since 1630, in the small town of
Amherst. ( Sewall, 2003, p. 17) The
prominent and prosperous Dickinson family lived strictly under the
Congregational / Calvinistic doctrine.
Emily's paternal grandfather, was one of the founders of Amherst College;
her father Edward and older brother Austin were both lawyers with political
ambitions. Her father served in the General
Court of Massachusetts, the State senate, and the United States House of
Representatives. Much of Emily's
formative years were exposed to a household that was the centered with the culture,
academia, and social activity. (illinois.edu. 2013)
Regardless
of the glamour and influence the Dickinson's family had on the community, Emily
developed into a normal intelligent, vibrant,
independent, hopeful young woman.
For an example, Emily writes positively about herself in a letter to a
friend on May 7, 1845: “I am growing handsome very fast indeed! I expect I shall be the belle of Amherst when
I reach my 17th birthday. I
don't doubt that I shall have perfect crowds of admirers at that age. Then how I shall delight to make them waiting
my bidding, and with what delight shall I witness their suspense while I make
my final decision.” ( Todd,
M.L., 1894, p.6)
At
sixteen, Emily already knew, poetry was her calling. Another example of her poetic prose is the
following letter she writes to her friend describing her visit to Mount Auburn,
written September 8, 1846: “Have you
ever been to Mount Auburn? If not, you
can form but slight conception of this 'City of the Dead.' It seems as if nature has formed this spot
with distinct idea in view of its being a resting-place for her children,
where, wearied and disappointed, they might stretch themselves beneath the
spreading cypress, and close their eyes 'calmly as to a night's response, or
flowers at set of sun.'” (Todd, M.L., 1894, p. 20)
Dickinson
only ventured outside her family circle from 1847 to 1848 in order to attend
Mount Holyork Female Seminary. Because
of recurrent illness ( Bright's disease), she returned home and seldom
left. She became more and more
reclusive, associating with only her family members, an occasional visitor, or
through letters to her friends and acquaintances. Her simplified life dealt with doing without,
also meant doing within her creative mind.
Over 1775 poems were written and bounded in hand-sewed volumes and
hidden in her room for her eyes only.
The volumes were later discovered after her death in 1886 by her younger
sister Lavinia. Many of her poems were
initially edited into the traditional nineteenth century style of writing. In 1955, a publication of Thomas Johnson's
editions of Emily Dickinson's poems finally gave the reader's a complete and
accurate text. (vcu.edu. 2013)
As for modern
poetry, Emily Dickinson made her mark in American literature. Her artistic poetry was very radical for her
era. However, her frequent use of
dashes, characteristic capitalization of nouns, slant rhymes, broken meter,
bold imagery, and copious usage of metaphors have contributed to her reputation
as one of the most innovative American poets of the nineteenth century
literature. Many modern critics have come to appreciate the accomplishment of
Dickinson's language and poetic structure.
Though Dickinson was inspired by poets, such as, William Wordsworth,
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and
Shakespeare, she distinguish herself with her characteristics style of form and
structured verse.
The most common characteristic of
Modernist writing was an unpredictable writing style which Emily Dickinson
had. Because modernism basically
rebelled against traditional style of writing, experimentation and
individualism became virtues. Women during the nineteen hundreds were mostly
marginalized. Dickinson had those makings of modernist, because she had a
voice; that voice of rebellion was expressed through her unconventional methods
of writing. Her themes were original and
provided a variety of subject matters, such as love, nature, doubt and faith,
suffering, death, and morality.
Dickinson essentially saw the world internally in her safe haven of her
ingenious mind and expressed it through her elliptical style and contracting
metaphors. As Marbel Loonis Todd states
in the “Letters of Emily Dickinson”:
“The whims and pretences of society, its forms and realities, seemed to
her thin and unworthy.
Unconventionalities, while they amused, exasperated her also.” (Todd,
M.L., 1894, p. X)
(uncp.edu, 2013)
In the poem, “A narrow Fellow in the
Grass”(Dickinson, 1865, p.107-108),
Dickinson used her canny wit to call attention to every element in the
poem. If read aloud, the visualization
and sound of the poem becomes more intriguing.
The dashes, the capitalization, the question mark, and usage of syntax
in the condensed fleeting phrases are all used elements that has created the
surprise image of realization that the narrow fellow in the grass is (in this
reader's choice) is just a snake.
The
interpretation of “A narrow Fellow in the Grass” (Dickinson, 1865, p.
107-108), is the following: The speaker ( notice the gender) is
apparently a 'young' “boy”(line 1), who is “barefoot”(line 11) or perhaps it is
a man who is looking back in time when he was a boy. The “I”(lines 12, 18, 19) in the poem is the speaker and not the poet
herself (Dickinson's trade-mark). The
setting is open and grassy, conceivably a lower area in the landscape, “[like]
a Boggy Acre” (line 9). Another
trade-mark in Dickinson's writing is her slant rhymes usage. In this poem we hear a 'near-to', 'not an
exact' rhyming pattern in the second and fourth lines in each stanza, such as
“rides” and “is” (first stanza), “seen” and “on” (second stanza), “Corn” and
“Noon” (third stanza), and “Sun” and “gone” (forth stanza) a ABCB pattern. However, rhymes exist in the second and forth
lines in the last two stanzas, such as, “me” and “Cordiality” (fifth stanza)
and “alone” and “Bone” (sixth stanza) a ABC pattern.
As mentioned earlier, Emily spent her
entire life in a Calvinistic community.
She is very familiar with hymns sang in church; however, in this poem,
like many others, has a meter rhythm of a hymn, but a rhyme sequence of a
ballad. A hymn rhymes in a ABAB
fashion. Ballads rhyme only in the even
lines ABCB. When reading the poem aloud,
you can hear a pair syllables where the unstressed syllable followed by a
stressed (like a heart beat- daDum) called iamb, such as nar/row'. You should be able to hear eight syllables or
four (tetrameter) daDums in the odd lines and six syllables or three (trimeter)
daDums in the even lines; however, Dickinson likes to keep the reader on their
toes, by slipping in seven syllables instead of eight, in the odd lines in
stanzas three to six. ( Muller, G.H., Williams, J.A., 2003,
p. 57 )(Booth,
A, J.P. Hunter, Mays, K.J., 2006, p.506-507)
Finally, the
key to Dickinson's poems are her metaphors.
In the poem, “narrow Fellow” (metaphor)(line 1), “Whip Lash”(metaphor)
(line13) and “Nature's People”(personification for the natural world) (line 17)
all could be symbolism for the snake who “divides [the grass] as a comb (a
simile) ( line 5) and “closes at your
(the boy's bare) Feet” (line 7).
Dickinson also likes to open her poems with interest and close with a
complex surprise. In the last stanza, a
theme presents itself which might be
'fear'. “But never met this
Fellow / Attended or alone / Without a
tighter Breathing / And Zero at the Bone.” (line 21-24) This can be visualized as if the young boy
was a little shaken, holding his breath and feels disturb by Emily's “narrow
Fellow” (line 1) the snake that he almost step on or perhaps the snake gave
Dickinson a chill. “Birds, songs,
crickets, frost, and winter winds, even the toad and snake, mushroom and bats,
have an indescribable charm for her, which she (Emily) in turn brings to us.” (Todd,
M.L., 1894, p. XI)
This paper has only brushed the surface
of the truth in Emily's life. Ironically, death did give her a second chance.
If it wasn't for her memorable poems, and letters, the rest of the world would
never have known her. Her writing has
inspired not only the reader, but attributed of modernistic style of poetry. One can understand from the works of Emily
Dickinson, that she has likely influenced poets from her death to the present.
Reference
anonymous.
(2013) Final Analyst: Emily Dickinson (1858-1955)
Retrieved
February 27, 2013 from Idaho.gov website
Baym, N., Levine R.S. (2012) I'm a Nobody, are you a nobody? (1864)
p. 1669
Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume B, 8th
Edition. Norton,
United States of America
Baym, N., Levine R.S. (2012) A Narrow Fellow in the Grass (1866)
p. 108
Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume C, 8th Edition.
Norton,
United States of America
Sewell, R.B. PhD. (1998) Preface
p. 3
The Life of Emily Dickinson, Harvard University Press,
United States of America
Todd, M.L. (1894) Letters of Emily
Dickinson (p. x, xi, 6, 20)
Retrieved February 28, 2013 from
Archive.org website
anonymous.
(2013) Literature
Retrieved February 27, 2013 from
uncp website
Muller, G.H., Williams, J.A. (2003) Meter and Rhythm
p. 57
Ways In – Approaches to Reading and Writing about Literature and Film, 2nd
Edition.
McGraw Hill, United States of America
Booth, A, J.P. Hunter, Mays,
K.J. (2006) Chapter 12 – Sounds of
Poetry
p. 506-507 Norton Introduction to Literature,
Portable.
Norton, United States of America
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