13- ] American Literature
Emily Dickinson 1830 – 1886
Emily
Dickinson is now regarded by many as one of the most powerful voices of
American culture. Her poetry has inspired many other writers, including the
Brontes . In 1994 the critic, Harold Bloom, listed her among the twenty-six
central writers of Western civilization. After she died her sister found the
almost two thousand poems the poet had written… Read Emily Dickinson quotes.
Emily
Dickinson, in full Emily Elizabeth Dickinson, (born December 10, 1830, Amherst,
Massachusetts, U.S.—died May 15, 1886, Amherst), American lyric poet who lived
in seclusion and commanded a singular brilliance of style and integrity of
vision. With Walt Whitman, Dickinson is widely considered to be one of the two
leading 19th-century American poets.
At
home as well as at school and church, the religious faith that ruled the poet’s
early years was evangelical Calvinism, a faith centred on the belief that
humans are born totally depraved and can be saved only if they undergo a
life-altering conversion in which they accept the vicarious sacrifice of Jesus
Christ. Questioning this tradition soon after leaving Mount Holyoke, Dickinson
was to be the only member of her family who did not experience conversion or
join Amherst’s First Congregational Church. Yet she seems to have retained a
belief in the soul’s immortality or at least to have transmuted it into a
Romantic quest for the transcendent and absolute. One reason her mature
religious views elude specification is that she took no interest in creedal or
doctrinal definition. In this she was influenced by both the Transcendentalism
of Ralph Waldo Emerson and the mid-century tendencies of liberal Protestant
orthodoxy. These influences pushed her toward a more symbolic understanding of
religious truth and helped shape her vocation as poet.
Development
as a poet
Although
Dickinson had begun composing verse by her late teens, few of her early poems
are extant. Among them are two of the burlesque “Valentines”—the exuberantly
inventive expressions of affection and esteem she sent to friends of her youth.
Two other poems dating from the first half of the 1850s draw a contrast between
the world as it is and a more peaceful alternative, variously eternity or a
serene imaginative order. All her known juvenilia were sent to friends and
engage in a striking play of visionary fancies, a direction in which she was
encouraged by the popular, sentimental book of essays Reveries of a Bachelor:
Or a Book of the Heart by Ik. Marvel (the pseudonym of Donald Grant Mitchell).
Dickinson’s acts of fancy and reverie, however, were more intricately social
than those of Marvel’s bachelor, uniting the pleasures of solitary mental play,
performance for an audience, and intimate communion with another. It may be
because her writing began with a strong social impetus that her later solitude
did not lead to a meaningless hermeticism.
Until
Dickinson was in her mid-20s, her writing mostly took the form of letters, and
a surprising number of those that she wrote from age 11 onward have been preserved.
Sent to her brother, Austin, or to friends of her own sex, especially Abiah
Root, Jane Humphrey, and Susan Gilbert (who would marry Austin), these generous
communications overflow with humour, anecdote, invention, and sombre
reflection. In general, Dickinson seems to have given and demanded more from
her correspondents than she received. On occasion she interpreted her
correspondents’ laxity in replying as evidence of neglect or even betrayal.
Indeed, the loss of friends, whether through death or cooling interest, became
a basic pattern for Dickinson. Much of her writing, both poetic and epistolary,
seems premised on a feeling of abandonment and a matching effort to deny,
overcome, or reflect on a sense of solitude.
Dickinson’s
closest friendships usually had a literary flavour. She was introduced to the
poetry of Ralph Waldo Emerson by one of her father’s law students, Benjamin F.
Newton, and to that of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Susan Gilbert and Henry
Vaughan Emmons, a gifted college student. Two of Barrett Browning’s works, “A
Vision of Poets,” describing the pantheon of poets, and Aurora Leigh, on the
development of a female poet, seem to have played a formative role for
Dickinson, validating the idea of female greatness and stimulating her ambition.
Though she also corresponded with Josiah G. Holland, a popular writer of the
time, he counted for less with her than his appealing wife, Elizabeth, a
lifelong friend and the recipient of many affectionate letters.
Mature
career of Emily Dickinson
In
summer 1858, at the height of this period of obscure tension, Dickinson began
assembling her manuscript-books. She made clean copies of her poems on fine
quality stationery and then sewed small bundles of these sheets together at the
fold. Over the next seven years she created 40 such booklets and several unsewn
sheaves, and altogether they contained about 800 poems. No doubt she intended
to arrange her work in a convenient form, perhaps for her own use in sending
poems to friends. Perhaps the assemblage was meant to remain private, like her
earlier herbarium. Or perhaps, as implied in a poem of 1863, “This is my letter
to the world,” she anticipated posthumous publication. Because she left no
instructions regarding the disposition of her manuscript-books, her ultimate
purpose in assembling them can only be conjectured.
Dickinson
sent more poems to her sister-in-law, Susan Gilbert Dickinson, a cultivated
reader, than to any other known correspondent. Repeatedly professing eternal
allegiance, these poems often imply that there was a certain distance between
the two—that the sister-in-law was felt to be haughty, remote, or even
incomprehensible. Yet Susan admired the poetry’s wit and verve and offered the
kind of personally attentive audience Dickinson craved. On one occasion,
Susan’s dissatisfaction with a poem, “Safe in their alabaster chambers,”
resulted in the drafting of alternative stanzas. Susan was an active hostess,
and her home was the venue at which Dickinson met a few friends, most
importantly Samuel Bowles, publisher and editor of the influential Springfield
Republican. Gregarious, captivating, and unusually liberal on the question of
women’s careers, Bowles had a high regard for Dickinson’s poems, publishing
(without her consent) seven of them during her lifetime—more than appeared in
any other outlet. From 1859 to 1862 she sent him some of her most intense and
confidential communications, including the daring poem “Title divine is mine,”
whose speaker proclaims that she is now a “Wife,” but of a highly
unconventional type.
In
those years Dickinson experienced a painful and obscure personal crisis, partly
of a romantic nature. The abject and pleading drafts of her second and third
letters to the unidentified person she called “Master” are probably related to
her many poems about a loved but distant person, usually male. There has been
much speculation about the identity of this individual. One of the first
candidates was George Henry Gould, the recipient in 1850 of a prose Valentine
from Dickinson. Some have contended that Master was a woman, possibly Kate
Scott Anthon or Susan Dickinson. Richard Sewall’s 1974 biography makes the case
for Samuel Bowles. All such claims have rested on a partial examination of
surviving documents and collateral evidence. Since it is now believed that the
earliest draft to Master predates her friendship with Bowles, he cannot have
been the person. On balance, Charles Wadsworth and possibly Gould remain the
most likely candidates. Whoever the person was, Master’s failure to return
Dickinson’s affection—together with Susan’s absorption in her first childbirth
and Bowles’s growing invalidism—contributed to a piercing and ultimate sense of
distress. In a letter, Dickinson described her lonely suffering as a
“terror—since September—[that] I could tell to none.” Instead of succumbing to
anguish, however, she came to view it as the sign of a special vocation, and it
became the basis of an unprecedented creativity. A poem that seems to register
this life-restoring act of resistance begins “The zeroes taught us phosphorus,”
meaning that it is in absolute cold and nothingness that true brilliance
originates.
Though
Dickinson wrote little about the American Civil War, which was then raging, her
awareness of its multiplied tragedies seems to have empowered her poetic drive.
As she confided to her cousins in Boston, apropos of wartime bereavements,
“Every day life feels mightier, and what we have the power to be, more
stupendous.” In the hundreds of poems Dickinson composed during the war, a
movement can be discerned from the expression of immediate pain or exultation
to the celebration of achievement and self-command. Building on her earlier
quest for human intimacy and obsession with heaven, she explored the tragic
ironies of human desire, such as fulfillment denied, the frustrated search for
the absolute within the mundane, and the terrors of internal dissolution. She
also articulated a profound sense of female subjectivity, expressing what it
means to be subordinate, secondary, or not in control. Yet as the war
proceeded, she also wrote with growing frequency about self-reliance,
imperviousness, personal triumph, and hard-won liberty. The perfect
transcendence she had formerly associated with heaven was now attached to a
vision of supreme artistry.
In
April 1862, about the time Wadsworth left the East Coast for a pastorate in San
Francisco, Dickinson sought the critical advice of Thomas Wentworth Higginson,
whose witty article of advice to writers, “A Letter to a Young Contributor,”
had just appeared in The Atlantic Monthly. Higginson was known as a writer of
delicate nature essays and a crusader for women’s rights. Enclosing four poems,
Dickinson asked for his opinion of her verse—whether or not it was “alive.” The
ensuing correspondence lasted for years, with the poet sending her “preceptor,”
as she called him, many more samples of her work. In addition to seeking an
informed critique from a professional but not unsympathetic man of letters, she
was reaching out at a time of accentuated loneliness. “You were not aware that
you saved my Life,” she confided years later.
In
her last 15 years Dickinson averaged 35 poems a year and conducted her social
life mainly through her chiselled and often sibylline written messages. Her
father’s sudden death in 1874 caused a profound and persisting emotional
upheaval yet eventually led to a greater openness, self-possession, and
serenity. She repaired an 11-year breach with Samuel Bowles and made friends
with Maria Whitney, a teacher of modern languages at Smith College, and Helen
Hunt Jackson, poet and author of the novel Ramona (1884). Dickinson resumed
contact with Wadsworth, and from about age 50 she conducted a passionate
romance with Otis Phillips Lord, an elderly judge on the supreme court of Massachusetts.
The letters she apparently sent Lord reveal her at her most playful,
alternately teasing and confiding. In declining an erotic advance or his
proposal of marriage, she asked, “Dont you know you are happiest while I
withhold and not confer—dont you know that ‘No’ is the wildest word we consign
to Language?”
The
poet died in 1886, when she was 55 years old. The immediate cause of death was
a stroke. The attending physician attributed this to Bright’s disease, but a
modern posthumous diagnosis points to severe primary hypertension as the
underlying condition.
Legacy
of Emily Dickinson
Dickinson’s
exact wishes regarding the publication of her poetry are in dispute. When
Lavinia found the manuscript-books, she decided the poems should be made public
and asked Susan to prepare an edition. Susan failed to move the project
forward, however, and after two years Lavinia turned the manuscript-books over
to Mabel Loomis Todd, a local family friend, who energetically transcribed and
selected the poems and also enlisted the aid of Thomas Wentworth Higginson in
editing. A complicating circumstance was that Todd was conducting an affair
with Susan’s husband, Austin. When Poems by Emily Dickinson appeared in 1890,
it drew widespread interest and a warm welcome from the eminent American
novelist and critic William Dean Howells, who saw the verse as a signal
expression of a distinctively American sensibility. But Susan, who was well
aware of her husband’s ongoing affair with Todd, was outraged at what she
perceived as Lavinia’s betrayal and Todd’s effrontery. The enmity between Susan
and Todd, and later between their daughters, Martha Dickinson Bianchi and
Millicent Todd Bingham (each of whom edited selections of Dickinson’s work),
had a pernicious effect on the presentation of Emily Dickinson’s work. Her
poetic manuscripts are divided between two primary collections: the poems in
Bingham’s possession went to Amherst College Library, and those in Bianchi’s
hands to Harvard University’s Houghton Library. The acrimonious relationship
between the two families has affected scholarly interpretation of Dickinson’s
work into the 21st century.
In
editing Dickinson’s poems in the 1890s, Todd and Higginson invented titles and
regularized diction, grammar, metre, and rhyme. The first scholarly editions of
Dickinson’s poems and letters, by Thomas H. Johnson, did not appear until the
1950s. A much improved edition of the complete poems was brought out in 1998 by
R.W. Franklin.
In
spite of her “modernism,” Dickinson’s verse drew little interest from the first
generation of “High Modernists.” Hart Crane and Allen Tate were among the first
leading writers to register her greatness, followed in the 1950s by Elizabeth
Bishop and others. The New Critics also played an important role in establishing
her place in the modern canon. From the beginning, however, Dickinson has
strongly appealed to many ordinary or unschooled readers. Her unmistakable
voice, private yet forthright—“I’m Nobody! Who are you? / Are
you—Nobody—too?”—establishes an immediate connection. Readers respond, too, to
the impression her poems convey of a haunting private life, one marked by
extremes of deprivation and refined ecstasies. At the same time, her rich
abundance—her great range of feeling, her supple expressiveness—testifies to an
intrinsic poetic genius. Widely translated into Japanese, Italian, French,
German, and many other languages, Dickinson has begun to strike readers as the
one American lyric poet who belongs in the pantheon with Sappho, Catullus,
Saʿdī, the Shakespeare of the sonnets, Rainer Maria Rilke, and Arthur Rimbaud.
Editions
The
standard edition of the poems is the three-volume variorum edition, The Poems
of Emily Dickinson: Variorum Edition (1998), edited by R.W. Franklin. He also
edited a two-volume work, The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson (1981), which
provides facsimiles of the poems in their original groupings. The Gorgeous
Nothings (2013), edited by Marta L. Werner and Jen Bervin, presents facsimiles
of Dickinson’s so-called envelope poems, written on irregularly shaped scraps
of paper. The Letters of Emily Dickinson, in three volumes edited by Thomas H.
Johnson and Theodora Ward (1958), was reissued in one volume in 1986, and it is
still the standard source for the poet’s letters. Open Me Carefully: Emily
Dickinson’s Intimate Letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson (1998), edited by
Ellen Louise Hart and Martha Nell Smith, is a selection of the poet’s
correspondence with her sister-in-law. Facsimiles of the letters to “Master”
and Otis Phillips Lord are presented in The Master Letters of Emily Dickinson
(1986), edited by R.W. Franklin, and Emily Dickinson’s Open Folios: Scenes of
Reading, Surfaces of Writing (1995), edited by Marta L. Werner. Emily
Dickinson’s Reception in the 1890s: A Documentary History (1989), edited by
Willis J. Buckingham, reprints all known reviews from the first decade of
publication. Amherst College and Harvard University make their Dickinson
manuscripts available online.
Only
10 of Emily Dickinson’s nearly 1,800 poems are known to have been published in
her lifetime. Devoted to private pursuits, she sent hundreds of poems to
friends and correspondents while apparently keeping the greater number to
herself. She habitually worked in verse forms suggestive of hymns and ballads,
with lines of three or four stresses. Her unusual off-rhymes have been seen as
both experimental and influenced by the 18th-century hymnist Isaac Watts. She
freely ignored the usual rules of versification and even of grammar, and in the
intellectual content of her work she likewise proved exceptionally bold and
original. Her verse is distinguished by its epigrammatic compression, haunting
personal voice, enigmatic brilliance, and lack of high polish.
Dickinson’s
poetry was heavily influenced by the Metaphysical poets of seventeenth-century
England, as well as her reading of the Book of Revelation and her upbringing in
a Puritan New England town, which encouraged a Calvinist, orthodox, and
conservative approach to Christianity. She admired the poetry of Robert and
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, as well as John Keats. Though she was dissuaded
from reading the verse of her contemporary Walt Whitman by rumors of its
disgracefulness, the two poets are now connected by the distinguished place
they hold as the founders of a uniquely American poetic voice. While Dickinson
was extremely prolific and regularly enclosed poems in letters to friends, she
was not publicly recognized during her lifetime. The first volume of her work
was published posthumously in 1890 and the last in 1955. She died in Amherst in
1886.
Upon
her death, Dickinson’s family discovered forty handbound volumes of nearly
1,800 poems, or “fascicles,” as they are sometimes called. Dickinson assembled
these booklets by folding and sewing five or six sheets of stationery paper and
copying what seem to be final versions of poems. The handwritten poems show a
variety of dash-like marks of various sizes and directions (some are even
vertical). The poems were initially unbound and published according to the
aesthetics of her many early editors, who removed her annotations. The current
standard version of her poems replaces her dashes with an en-dash, which is a
closer typographical approximation to her intention. The original order of the
poems was not restored until 1981, when Ralph W. Franklin used the physical
evidence of the paper itself to restore her intended order, relying on smudge
marks, needle punctures, and other clues to reassemble the packets. Since then,
many critics have argued that there is a thematic unity in these small
collections, rather than their order being simply chronological or convenient.
The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson (Belknap Press, 1981) is the only
volume that keeps the order intact.
No comments:
Post a Comment