Death in Some of Emily Dickinson's Selected Poems

Authors

  • Raia Abdul-Wahid Abdul-Aziz

Abstract

The present study aims at shedding light on death in some of
Emily Dickinson's selected poems. It is divided into three sections and
a conclusion.
The first section is an introductory one. It is devoted to the
definition of death and how it became a recurrent theme in literature.
It gives examples from the ancient works of literature which show
how many feared it and stood puzzled in front of its destructive
power. It also alludes to some aspects of Emily Dickinson's life and
views towards death as they appear through her autobiography and
letters.
The second section tackles the anxiety of death in Emily
Dickinson's selected poems. It concentrates on the staggering of the
poet between faith and faithlessness in addition to her failure in love
and the loss of her lover.
The third section talks about the images of death. It tackles some
positive images where death comes to be a lover who accompanies her
as a bridegroom or a lover-towards eternity. Other images come to be
negative where death seems to be a destructive power which cuts the
continuity of life and turns it to a limitless silence. The images of fly,
darkness, and snow also contribute in showing death as a foggy,
mysterious world.
The conclusion sums up the results which the study reaches.

Downloads

Published

2023-01-25

How to Cite

Raia Abdul-Wahid Abdul-Aziz. (2023). Death in Some of Emily Dickinson’s Selected Poems. PROSPECTIVE RESEARCHES, (40), 1–23. Retrieved from https://pr.hu.edu.iq/index.php/pr/article/view/240

Most read articles by the same author(s)