Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Emily Dickinson – Theme of Love
Introduction Emily Dickinsons  numbers is classified by editors as  meters  or so nature,  extol, death, religion and others. Though some critics suggest that Dickinsons  rhyme should be read chronologic exclusively(a)y, her  rimes  earth-clo put together be read according to their themes. Since she was the  girl of a pr individu wholeyer her poems  be often about God and Christianity, and in some of her love poems it is  non certain if she is expressing her love for an actual buff or her spirituality.However, at virtuoso point of her   disembodied spiritspan the poet stopped  passing to church and started satirizing Christian beliefs. Also, Dickinson isolated herself and emphasized her isolation by  bandaging in white. Her seclusion is present as a motif in some love poems. The death of her father, and nephew, led to an absolute seclusion and these deaths were  in all probability the reason for the darker tone in her later poetry.Biographers  substantiate tried to  recollect the sou   rce of this passion and intensity that is found in Emily Dickinsons poems  further there is an enigma when it  enumerates to her love life. They  experience wondered when and how she encounterd these  devotees, was the love reciprocated and how strong the feelings were. Dickinson seemed to have several  rabid relationships but it is a fact that she remained unmarried. She did appearently always have a need for one close person who would be her confidant, who would  accompaniment her in touch with  pragmatism and be an inspiraton for her poetry .In Emily Dickinsons poetry love  sewer cause an exilirating rush of passion, or leave her with a hollow sense of deprivation, some sentences she questions love, touches various subject matters such as the  part of a  fair sex in a mans world, and, for a woman who did  non experience the world to its fullest, she wrote with surprising  acquaintance and emotion love poetry which  leftover a mark in the history of literature. I decided to analys   e some poems in which Emily Dickinson wrote about love from these  polar stranding points. My  bearing had s  as well asd  a  pissed Gun A  immemorial society, such as the one Emily Dickinson lived in, had   precise(prenominal) controlled social norms and rules.  unmatchable aspect of it Dickinson described in her poem My Life had stood  a  laden Gun. It centers around a masculine figure, a Master and the speaker, a Loaded Gun. The Master gives the weapon  great power and allows it to fulfill its   jazzment. In return, the  submarine is there to serve the Master and protect him at all times. Undoubtedly, this poem depicts a relationship  amongst an authoritative and a  compliant person.It is with a romanticized tone that it approachesthe theme of love and union, one that can very easily be described by Shakespeares  wedding of  honest minds portrayed in his sonnet 116. However, the last stanza of this poem brings this romantic  expression of it into question. Critics claim that the    whole poem is a delusion of the  lyrical I,  nevertheless a self assurance that it is through a union of power that the master and the servant can be brought to their full potential. Though I than He  may longer liveHe longer must  than I  For I have but the power to  bolt down, Withoutthe power to die However, with these lines the poet seems to realize that a life through servitude does not bring one fulfillment, but  precisely the illusion of it. More than once, Dickinson uses the expression Master to refer to  antherals in her poetry. This can be  taken as the way of her time and place, 19th  atomic number 6 America along with the rest of the world, where men were still thought of as superior and the beholders of all power.With thisin mind, it is no  impress that the object of this poem, the gun, is  obviously taken up by a hunter, and thus bound to him forever. The  fancy of love depicted in the poem, in which the sole purpose of the female  the gun is to serve her lover, seems    to be a childish fantasy of submissive love. The lyrical Is need to  harbor safe her masters head during his sleep shows a prototypical image of a woman whose  whole aim is to wrap her man in a  homely cocoon of pleasure, while she neglects her own needs to satisfy him. boostmore, the woman in this poem is objectified  fifty-fifty more than just  be rendered through an  breath fetching object. This can be seen in the third and fourth lines of the second stanza, where the poetess describes how it is to be speaking for Him. The irony is subtle here, and very  intimately  disguised, for the delightful  eyeshot that emerges throughout the whole poem, especially stanza number four, is strong enough to keep in shadow the less eminent features. What Dickinson describes as speaking for is in fact  creation spoken through. As the hunter directs the firearm and shoots at what he likes, so s the woman in a patriarchal setting controlled, in order to be of the most service to the man. In circum   stances, the very identity of a woman is to be submerged to the male requirement, and Dickinson manages to incorporate it into her lyric so exceptionally well that the criticism is masked by brilliant characterization. Some critics claim that this poem expresses Dickinsons rejection of womanhood through the hunting of the doe. The female deer stands for all that is womanly, in  dividing line with the male hunter and the gun that has discarded its gender.The question of homosexuality has been  canvas in this context, but it is perhaps the rejection of female traits for the reason that a life of submission to a dominant animalistic hunter is valued to be nobler than the embracing of ones true self. Last, but not least, this poem can also represent the idea of a woman as a poet, one that possesses k outrightledge and power which make her destructive. Critic Adrienne  easy believes that creation by a woman is aggression, and that it is both the power to kill as well as being punishable.    The union of gun with the hunter embodies the danger of identifying and taking hold of the womans forces, not least that in so doing she risks defining herself  and being defined  as aggressive, is unwomanly (and now we hunt the Doe), and is potentially lethal.  (Rich) She continues that this poem is about the female  artificer of the 19th century, especially as the poet, unlike a novelist, is much  impendent to their subject. Poetry is too much rooted in the unconscious it presses too close against the barriers of repression and the nineteenth-century woman had much to repress. (Rich) She rose to His Requirement  dropt As a writer who was not  sole(prenominal) conscious of her time, but also very active in social critique through her poetry, it is no surprise that Emily Dickinson wrote about the institution of  jointure, which practically defined a womans life. She rose to His Requirement  dropt is a poem depicting the idea of a Victorian marriage in which it is the  wifes sole pu   rpose in life to satisfy her husband, with her own needs coming last. The  for the  set-cover time two lines of the first stanza clearly set the terms on which this marriage is built. She rose to His Requirement  dropt The Playthings of Her Life The role of the man is very well represented by the capitalization on the word His. This can not  notwithstanding be interpreted as respect for the husband, but it can be related to the poem mentioned earlier My Life had stood  a Loaded Gun where the lyrical I relates to her lover as Master. This image of a husband as an omnipotent pillar of power transcends the  material abilities of men, and turns into a God of the household and it is to the needs and wishes of this Lord that a wife needs to rise.The position of women is especially shown through the phrase dropt The Playthings of Her Life. Not  except is a woman expected to spend her life in marriage through servitude, but she is to be rid of all that gives her pleasure. Perhaps this poem    can be interpreted as Dickinsons fear of commitment, her being frightened of losing her own Plaything  her poetry. In considering the  opponent of Requirement and Playthings (mature duty versus childish frivolity), we would do well to remember how  of import play was to Dickinson. For Dickinson the poet, the play of language and imagination was primary.She believed that her fathers  catastrophe was his inability to play, and she once wrote, Blessed be those who play, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.  Something in her recoiled from  great(p) womanhood and made her wish she could remain a child. In a famous letter to her friend Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson (who later married Emilys brother, William Austin), she anticipated with a mixture of fascination and dread the prospect of being consumed by the blazing sun of a husbands demands. Certainly, she had  generous opportunity to observe in her parents marriage a union in which the mans requirements dominated. (Leiter 173) In t   he second stanza of the poem Dickinson tells, ironically, what exactly the taking on of honorable work costs a wife. Not only does she sacrifice her pleasure, but also any chance of greatness   bounteousness, the sensation of fulfillment  Awe and finally, she sacrifices her Gold which represents her youth and her potential which are now spent from being used for Him. The third, final, stanza focuses on what is still left of the woman in a marriage. Her true self  her thoughts and opinions remain unmentioned, uncared for by the husband.Dickinson uses the sea to illustrate her point. The ideas and beliefs of a wife are not only hidden deep within the unexplored sea, but they are also mixed, covered with weeds. A man caching a clam must first go through the barrier, in this case societys  limit point of a womans  idledom, in order to get to the  shelter that is inside  the pearl. Finally, the last two lines of the third stanza demonstrate the lonesome position of a constrained woman. B   ut only to Himself  be known The Fathoms they  erect It is only the oyster, or the woman, who truly knows its inner self.Dickinsons poem is a way of criticizing the society for forcing such unfairness onto a woman. She, however, chose a different way of life. Foregoing the possible joys of marriage, Emily Dickinson chose to pursue the poetic calling that enabled her to set her own Requirement and to retain her Playthings as essential tools of her art.  (Leiter 174) If you were coming in the fall.  This is a love poem in which Dickinson writes about her loved one who is away from her. The distance between her and her lover is not an obstacle for her feelings, and she is  eager to meet with him.She refers to herself as a housewife in the first stanza, as a woman waiting for a man. She is  ranking that for her it is not a problem to wait for a  anneal to pass until her lover comes. She would simply chase the summer away like a fly and she would do it with a smile and a spurn (bartleby.    com) which is understood as her being proud to do so and doesnt mind waiting. A season becomes a year in the second stanza. However, even this is not a problem for she will simply wind the months in balls and put them each in  damp drawers (bartleby. om) and make it easier for her to bare the length of time and just wait until it is time for them to meet. She makes it easier for herself to wait for this moment, by diminishing a year into months. A year turns into centuries in the third stanza. Her lover is only lingering, but she believes he will certanly come. In the fourth stanza, time is not limited anymore but becomes eternity, meaning that she will wait for her lover forever. She implyes that she doesnt mind dying and casting her life away if it  way of life being with him in the end. She would toss away her life like a rind,(bartleby. com) as something that is not important.While the first four stanzas start with If which implies something hypothetical and something that is o   nly a possibility the final stanza begins with But now, which is a return to reality and the poet is not sure how long she must wait for her lover now. Furthermore, she is not sure if they will meet at all, or is he even coming. Time is annoying her like a  goblin bee (bartleby. com) representing something bad, or evil. This goblin bee is not stating its sting (bartleby. com) and this unveils her uncertainty, She acutally doesnt know what the future brings. What if I say I shall not wait? This poem is about separation as well.Lovers are here apart because of others, and not their own will. The I of this poem is very eager to see her lover and she will break free by forse if needed from those who are keeping her away from him. It seems as if she is  punishing to escape and asking her lover what will happen if she manages to escape and come to him. She writes that she will break down the gates that are confining her,  scat away from the guard and set herself free to come to her loved    one. Further she conveys that now that they are together no one can separate them anymore. The guard may call her and the guns may beg her to come back but she will not.Everything else is meaningless and unimportant now that they are together.  shutdown Dickinsons love poetry is thought of as her most passionate and emotional. From her standpoint, of a socially isolated woman in a literary predominantly mans world, we are able to read, analyse and enjoy her fascinating metaphors and views on marriage, love, longing, heartache and cripling loneliness. What I personally found  lovely in her poems is the belief and inestructible hope she expresses in some poems, and the acceptance of the  virulent reality which she manages to take in, resorting to eligion, spirituality an philosophy. Progressive thinking and ideas on marriage and the position of women in society and literature colour her poems about the dinamics of relationships between men and women. She did not refrain from conveying    her deepest thoughts and sentiments, but also her  place towards literary conventions and social norms and expectations. Considered as one of the greatest American poets of all time, Emily Dickinsons legacy and views on love will always  abide readers and writers with inspiration and enlightenment.  
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