Tuesday, December 25, 2018
'Emily Dickinsonââ¬â¢s Poem Review\r'
'I applaud Emily Dickinsonââ¬â¢s choice of fine art over ââ¬Å"realââ¬Â sprightliness although I befoolââ¬â¢t think the ii are mutu eachy exclusive. While I endurenot presume to know whether she had doubts about this herself or whether she had other problems that prevented her from living ââ¬Å"realââ¬Â life, I can clearly see that her life inside her mind was very rich. By choosing art, Emily Dickinson has left us with a wealthiness of succinct meters with very pregnant themes. in particular stunning is ââ¬Å"Much Madness is Divinest Sense. ââ¬Â In that poem, she perfectly recaps the idea of majority rule.If sensation agrees with the majority, one is sane. If not, one is dangerous and wrong. This is much(prenominal) a short and simple poem that covers so many times in our lives and current events. There are so many examples of the majority doing the wrong thing, bid slavery. Another important theme is contained in ââ¬Å"If You Were Coming in the Fall. à ¢â¬Â This poem discusses the hassle or utter torture of waiting for some uncertain future. One can wait much more considerably if there is some kind of demonstration or date at the end. ââ¬Å" exclusively now, all ignorant of the lengthOf times uncertain wing, It goads me, handle the goblin bee, That will not verbalize its sting. ââ¬Å" (Dickinson) The longer one waits, the more raw it becomes. It stings as Dickinson says. However, Dickinson says that waiting without that certainty is zero but torture. This theme is universal. And yet, another important theme is contained in ââ¬Å"Hope is the subject with Feathers. ââ¬Â Dickinson gives herself and everyone else the claim that hope is always state in life. Hope is always with us; it ââ¬Å"perchesââ¬Â in our souls.It never asks anything of the reader retributory remains in our hearts to financial backing us warm. ââ¬Å"Yet, never, in extremity, It asked a dope of meââ¬Â (Dickinson). Again this is a very la borious lesson contained in a brief poem. Who knows what the strength would have been if Dickinson had chosen to have a husband and family or an active sociable life? The point is that the choice was hers, and she do it. Personally, I relish her choice as I think she gives us so many words to live by. For those who donââ¬â¢t like poetry all that much, she is simple and straightforward and yet, very profound.\r\n'
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