Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
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Emily Dickinson on Death
RUTH FLANDERS MCNAUGHTON
But always, whichever won or lost the battle for the time being, death
remained for Emily the great dictator, the ever-present imperator, a
force to be reckoned with and treated with respect. Of her approxi-
mately fifteen hundred surviving poems, at least one-sixth deal directly
with Death (a word which she almost always capitalized as she seldom
did faith), and many more bow to him in passing. Likewise, many of
Emily Dickinson's letters, a number of which were messages of con-
dolence, speak of death. Naturally those written to friends who had
lost members of their immediate family usually spoke of immortality
with fervor and mentioned faith with reassurance. These expressions
of orthodox belief in a reunion with loved ones are the most conventional
statements in all of her writing.
Numerous letters of great interest are those addressed to friends
and relatives at the times that Emily herself was grieving over a loss
at the hands of implacable death. Her father died when she was
forty-three years old; she wrote at once to her mentor Colonel Higgin-
son, begging him to assure her that "the arm of the Lord is [not] short-
ened, [so] that it cannot save." Eight years later her mother, who had
been an invalid for seven years following a paralytic stroke, died. Emily
wrote more calmly of death then: "She slipped from our fingers like
a flake gathered by the wind, and is now part of the drift called 'the
infinite.'" But she continues, skeptically: "We don't know where she
is, though so many tell us." Wavering back and forth between dis-
belief and faith, she adds immediately following the above statement:
Here her idea of the infinite as a "drift" and then again a "sea" seems
analagous to Whitman's conception of the "float." Strange that two
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PRAIRIE SCHOONER
Thank you, dears, for the sympathy. I hardly dare to know that I have
lost another friend, but anguish finds it out. ... I work to drive the awe
away, yet awe impels the work. . . . Till the first friend dies, we think ecstasy
impersonal, but then discover that he .was the cup from which we drank it,
itself as yet unknown.
Is she here making death synonymous with ecstasy, the beatific union
with the God of the mystic transfigured? The passage is certainly
ambiguous. Is death the antecedent of he, and ecstasy the antecedent
of it? And are the two one and the same? What is "unknown" -
death or ecstasy or both? The answer is a riddle; but at least it is
certain that the thought unknown echoes as a refrain through all the
three hundred or more poems on death, as well as through the letters.
When Frazer A. Stearns, an Amherst boy, was killed at Newbern during
the Civil War, Emily wrote to her cousins of how he died, "his big
heart shot away by a 'minie ball!' " She described in detail his funeral
and how his family and friends took his death, and as a postscript added:
Sorrow seems more general than it did, and not the estate of a few
persons, since the war began; and if the anguish of others helped one with
one's own, now would be many medicines.
'Tis dangerous to value, for only the precious can alarm. I noticed Robert
Browning had made another poem, and was astonished - till I remembered
that I, myself, in my smaller way, sang off charnel steps. Every day life feels
mightier, and what we have the power to be, more stupendous.
How often, alone and introspective, Emily the recluse "sang off charnel
steps," marvelling at life's and death's stupendousness, marvelling that
death makes life feel mightier! I think it was the miracle of death,
more than any other aspect of it, that captured her imagination. Cer-
tainly her attitude toward it was not that of the orthodox Calvinist of
the New England which likes to claim her exclusively as "seeing New
Englandly." Her niece Martha Dickinson Bianchi, in her Life and
Letters of Emily Dickinson, wrote of Emily's religion:
The incident of her dear friend and parson, Dr. Dwight, attempting to
convert her, remains as a cherished family annal, for she could not be brought
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EMILY DICKINSON ON DEATH
When she was only eighteen and attending the Mt. Holyoke Fe
Seminary, Emily wrote in a letter to a schoolgirl friend:
I tremble when I think how soon the weeks and days of this term w
all have been spent, and my fate will be sealed, perhaps. I have neglect
the one thing needful [italics are Emily's] when all were obtaining it, a
I may never, never again pass through such a season as was granted us l
winter. Abiah, you may be surprised to hear me speak as I do, knowin
that I express no interest in the all-important subject, but I am not happ
and T regret that last term, when that golden opportunity was mine, tha
did not give up and become a Christian. It is not now too late, so my frien
tell me, so my offended conscience whispers, but it is hard for me to giv
up the world. . . . / am one of the lingering bad ones, and so do I slink aw
and pause and ponder, and ponder and pause, and do work without knowin
why, not surely, for this brief world, and more sure it is not for heaven, an
I ask what this message means that they ask for so very eagerly. You kno
of this depth and fulness, will you try to tell me about it?
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PRAIRIE SCHOONER
Clark, a close friend of this man whom she had loved and worshipped
from afar for twenty-eight years. "In an intimacy of many years with
the beloved clergyman, I have never spoken with one who knew him,"
she wrote to Mr. Clark. "He was my shepherd from 'little girl' hood
[she had met him in 1854 when she was twenty-four and he was forty-
three], and I cannot imagine a world without him, so noble was he
always- so fathomless- so gentle." She asked news of the minister's
favorite son "Willie," saying, "How irreparable should there be no per-
petuation of a nature so treasured!" This exclamation of grief seems
to imply that Emily believed that the father would survive only through
his children. This greatest loss suffered at the hands of "the postponeless
Creature" broke down her usual reticence in writing of the man she
loved. She continued the correspondence with Mr. Clark and wrote
to him after the death of his brother: "Are you certain there is another
life? When overwhelmed to know, I fear that few are sure."
But in April, 1886, in the last letter that Emily Dickinson wrote, so
far as is known, she said, speaking of "Mr. Wadsworth," as she called
him: " 'Going home,' was he not an aborigine of the sky?" Also, shortly
before May 15, 1886, the day of her death, she sent a cryptic message
consisting of two words. "Little Cousins, - Called back. Emily.'*
Did she believe in immortality in the sense of a life after deatn in
which we meet again our friends of earth? Did she, at the last, look
forward to reunion with the man she had loved so long in secret? Or
was it of herself as the mystic bride of Christ that she wrote in the
impassioned "A wife a daybreak I shall be"? There are as many dif-
ferent answers to these questions as there are critics and readers of Emily
Dickinson. It is true that she wrote one poem visioning herself as
"Bride of the Father and the Son, Bride of the Holy Ghost." On the
other hand, the evidence of the letters reveals clearly that, like many a
twentieth-century agnostic, Emily Dickinson wavered between faith and
doubt, hope and fear, and that, like many an avowed humanist, she
longed more for her lover than for Christ, both in this world and the
next, if there be the latter.
Having a keen mind, Emily Dickinson read widely. Plato, Shake-
speare, Sir Thomas Browne, the Brownings, the Bronte sisters, D
Quincey, Keats, George Eliot, George Sand, Hawthorne, and Emerson
were among her favorites. She also read history, geography, and astron
omy, and, through her reading and from the talk of her brother and
her father, who were lawyers, she had some acquaintance with Disraeli
and Gladstone. She certainly read the Bible, too, but not as a revela-
tion of God, for she wrote of it in a poem that it is "an antique volum
Written by faded men."
She also followed the news and read the Springfield Republican more
religiously than she ever did the Bible; and many of her poems, especially
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EMILY DICKINSON ON DEATH
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PRAIRIE SCHOONER
the gruesome death's-head, the skeleton, the four horsemen of the Apoca
lypse, death the avenger. Emily never seemed to associate death wi
hell, certainly a common practice in her day, although she often referre
to her own private hell as "Empress of Calvary," meaning her renunc
tion of earthly love, and in one poem she spoke of the Crucifixion
only one of many crucifixions. On the other hand, she often mentio
Heaven, Paradise, and Eden as possibilities of "the white exploit," dea
In fact, in her metaphysic all the following terms are practically synony
mous: death, love, eternity, immortality, time, now, then. Disrega
of distinctions of time and space places Emily Dickinson in the compa
of the mystics, but in the tradition of the intellectual mystic, such as Si
Thomas Browne, not that of Blake, the emotional seer of visions; a
in the tradition of the lover of nature's minutiae, "our little kinsme
such as* St. Francis of Assisi, not that of St. Teresa, the bride of Chr
The mystic who loses himself in ecstatic union with God is anestheti
to the concrete details of life and death; he is too concerned with hea
to observe and love the minutiae of earth - the robin, the bee, the dande
lion, the sunset, a dead child too soon "called back." He is too worr
about the salvation of the soul to notice the changes wrought in the aspe
of the body by death's visitation, as Emily so carefully did.
Emily Dickinson's curiosity about death began when as a child sh
noticed that "people went away and never came back." She tells of th
in one of her earlier poems. This interest in the phenomenon of dea
continued throughout her life, as is evident in her poems as well as h
letters.
The poems on death fall into four classes: first, those dealing with
the physical fact of death, often describing in minute detail the act of
dying and the appearance of the corpse, among these appearing several
in which the poet imagines herself as dying or dead; second, those dram-
atizing the pageantry of death - "the bustle after death," - the funeral,
the funeral procession, the burial; third, imaginative descriptions of the
grave, "the apartment deep" where dwell the dead, often including
pictures of the tomb and the coffin; and last, the poems visioning immor-
tality, the life after the resurrection which Emily so longed to believe in,
yet could never be completely sure of.
The images Emily Dickinson conceived to describe the physical fact
of death show close observation coupled with a seemingly insatiable
curiosity about death. This curiosity may seem morbid to some, but to
me it is simply another indication of her intense awareness of the detail
of any phenomenon in which she was vitally interested. Here are some
of the vivid and startling images - a few abstract, but most concrete -
that she uses to describe the body after life is gone: the eyes glaze once;
the soldered mouth; granite lip; fastened lips; adamantine fingers; quiet
nonchalance of death; the Spirit laying off an overcoat of clay; resigned
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EMILY DICKINSON ON DEATH
the Loom; this latest leisure; a fly buzzed twice; just an Asterisk; q
Dust; the final inch; repealed from observation; concluded lives; c
in miracle; death annuls the power to communicate; an unclaimed
and jacket indicate a drowning; suspend the breath; death-warrants
sign to crucifix or block; cool forehead; indolent housewife; too co
warm with sun; too stiff to bended be; this agate; beyond the ho
touch; this silver reticence; this horizontal one that will not lift it
the solid calm; this meek apparelled thing.
One of Emily Dickinson's most arresting descriptions of the ac
dying appears in a letter: "Her dying feels to me like many kind
cold- at times electric, at times benumbing- then a trackless waste
has never told." Comparable to this passage in vividness is the po
beginning "I felt a funeral in my brain"; or more nearly similar
imagery is "It Was Not Death, for I Stood Up," a poem which descr
minutely alternate sensations of fever and chill.
It was not frost, for on my flesh
I felt siroccos crawl, -
Nor fire, for just my marble feet
Could keep a chancel cool.
And the final stanza:
But most like chaos, - stopless, cool, -
Without a chance or spar,
Or even a report of land
To justify despair.
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PRAIRIE SCHOONER
She depicts the slow drive to the graveyard, the passing of a school where
children were wrestling, the fields of "gazing grain" (as though even
the grain stopped to gape), the setting sun. Then came the pause before
a "swelling of the ground," and the denouement:
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EMILY DICKINSON ON DEATH
From here, Emily goes on to praise "lids of steel on lids of marble," the
"brooks of plush in banks of satin" where neither "bald death" nor "bold
sickness" may enter in. Elsewhere she speaks of going to thank a friend,
but "she slept." Her bed was a "funnelled stone," and it had "nosegays
at the head and foot." In another poem, she calls graves "alabaster
chambers"; the coffin has "rafter of satin, and roof of stone."
In still another poem, puzzling in its implications, Emily admonishes
us, apparently advocating suicide if life proves too nerve-wracking:
The way in which the thought of the grave constantly haunted her
until sometimes she longed to be free of it for a while is described in
the following poem:
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PRAIRIE SCHOONER
In Bolts of Melody we find less certitude. These are "the poems she
wrote in her fullest maturity," according to Millicent Todd Bingham's
statement in the Introduction. This fact is ascertained by a comparison
of the handwriting with that of the letters. In the later poetry, life is
an "ablative estate," an existence to and from - but to and from where ?
There lies the mystery. Emily states in one of these poems that life
is so sweet because "it will not come again." And in the same poem
she goes on to add:
We apologize to Thee
For Thine own Duplicity.
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EMILY DICKINSON ON DEATH
In the final analysis, Emily Dickinson found that love does more
than Milton can to justify God's ways to man. "Love makes us 'heavenly'
without our trying in the least. 'Tis easier than our Saviour," she wrote
to Mrs. Samuel Bowles after the death of Mr. Bowles. And in one of
her later quatrains she speaks of death as something which disembodies
as absence does; then she concludes, saying just the opposite of what she
had said in an earlier poem, "Superstition helps, as well as love." But
note that she calls it superstition, not religion, or faith, or God. She also
writes that even "the wise cannot conjecture" about death, for
The poems expressing greatest hope for immortality are the love
poems. When Emily Dickinson does speculate on death and resurrec-
tion as conjoined, she almost always likens the great metamorphosis to
dawn rather than to sunset as so many poets have done* She once wrote
that " Till Death' is narrow loving." And again that Life is Love and
"Love hath Immortality." "A Wife at Daybreak," often likened to
Browning's "Prospice," expresses her highest conviction of spiritual re-
union with the lover she renounced in this world because he was married,
a minister, and a father. But more than counter-balancing the poems
expressing unquestioning belief in a life after death are many tinged
with doubt, such as
Eternity is ample,
And quick enough, if true.
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PRAIRIE SCHOONER
of us could bear?" And again: "These thoughts disquiet me, and the
great friend is gone who could solace them." To her cousins she wrote,
as early at 1863:
What does the poet mean by describing life as a slow death and death
as the hinge to life? Isn't her meaning simply that all during our life
we are in a sense dying, that death is the hinge òn which life turns
because only through death do we learn the true significance of this
life by passing through the door to the after-life? "Eternity is now,"
she once wrote. Death is just an incident along the way, an opening
leading from a small room to a larger room, to "Escape from Circum-
stance." Death for Emily meant daybreak, sunrise in the "Ether Acre"
to which she rode to "meet the Earl!" It is not to be feared for our-
selves, but only because of its power to take from us those whom we
love. When they have all gone on before, then we can rejoice at being
"called back" by death to that Paradise we possibly have known before.
The reader of Emily Dickinson's poems and letters will interpret
those on death and immortality in accordance with his own predilections,
but if he reads carefully and with an open mind, he can but admit that
for Emily death remained the greatest of all paradoxes and an insoluble
enigma to those this side of the door. And the brave and the wise, and
those without the consolation of religious dogma, will learn, from the
"vital light" she left behind, that death may be experienced as life's
greatest adventure:
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