The theme of death including myself is a very popular theme in Emily Dickinson's poem. Some people may think that she is concerned about the morbidity rate of death, but this is not uncommon in her era. In the 19th century, people died of disease or accident at astonishingly rapid speed, not to mention massive casualties due to civil war, lived for 15 years. A cemetery beside a young man. She actually died as she tells from the outside of her grave in her poem "I can not stop dying."
Emily Dickinson's commitment to death, Emily Dickinson became legendary from her concern for death. All her poems contain poetry that focuses on loss and loneliness, but the most amazing thing is to talk about the world, especially death, especially your own death and your own death. As she was fascinated by depression, her poem became very poor quality, and I could understand more deeply what we do not know about it. What we know is that Dickinson's father was leaving a small amount of money to her when she was young. - Emily Dickinson's two poems by Emily Dickinson, "I can not wait for death", two very different treatments - death were seen on the same subject. They all represent death, but they regard it as something other than death. Because two people have the same emotion or do not believe the same thing, death brings various emotions.
Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson's poem mainly reflects emotions about her death and expected events after her death. As a poet, she is a very inner person, writing about her deep emotions - unlike the poets of her era, their society is directly represented in their poetry (ie Walt Whitman). Of course, social values and historical values form her personality, but in her poet there is little benefit in both her life, political and social aspects.
Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886). As one of the greatest female poets in the United States, the theme of Emily Dickinson's death and immortality became very popular and influenced the development of contemporary poetry. Throughout her life she was mainly living a segregated life, and her poems were not widely read until her death. After the American Civil War, the people who reconstructed the times (1865-1877), the influential people and groups, and the driving force to rebuild the South and protect the rights of new citizens. President Johnson, President Grant, and major "Rugbaggers", "Scrawawag", and radical radical Republicans