Saturday, October 26, 2019
Emily Dickinson: Life And Her Works :: essays research papers
 Emily Dickinson: Life and Her Works      Emily Dickinson made a large influence on poetry, she is known as one of  America's most famous poets. 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.  Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts on December 10,1830  to a prominent family, her father Edward Dickinson was both a lawyer and the  Treasurer of Amherst College. Emily's mother was Emily Norcross Dickinson.  Emily had one older brother, William Austin and a little sister, Lavinia. She  was educated at the Amerherst Academy, the institute that her grandfather helped  found. She also spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley,  but had left because she did not like the religious environment. For a woman of  this time, this much education was very rare.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. Emily Dickinson 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. Eight 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. (Emily  Dickinson 1996,1)    In 1862 she told a friend "If fame belonged to me I could not escape  her...My 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    					    
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