The Isolation Of Death In Emily Dickinson's Poems

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Throughout Emily Dickinson’s life, she was isolated, and hardly ever left her home. While she was in isolation, she wrote several poems that she kept to herself. Her poems mainly focused on three subjects: Nature, Fame, and Death. Dickinson’s poems about Death are unusual in an interesting way due to how she has a habit of predicting the outcome of her own death. Dickinson’s thoughts on Death are she strongly believes in death, and she believes in spirituality, but she does not believe in an afterlife. The way that Dickinson’s parents raised her had a powerful impact on what her beliefs were, which had a powerful impact on what her beliefs were, which had a powerful impact on her writings.
One poem that Dickinson wrote about Death is her poem numbered “591”. This poem is almost structured as a prophecy. In this poem, Dickinson generates predictions
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This poem in particular is somewhat eerie considering how normally when a person discusses death, and what they imagine their own funeral to contemplate, people will normally think about how those who will mourn their death. Dickinson doesn’t think about any of the previous, when she would write her poems. In poem “340”, it almost seems that Dickinson is predicting everything that will happen at her funeral. In the poem, Dickinson writes, “And when they all were seated, A service, like a Drum - kept beating - beating - till I thought My mind was going numb” (4-7). In these lines, Dickinson is explaining what the funeral service will contemplate when she dies. This poem almost seems like a vision or a dream, considering that most people do not know every single detail of their funeral, such as who will be there, what sounds will be heard, and what people would be feeling within themselves, but Dickinson describes her funeral as she is watching her funeral evolve. Dickinson could also be describing her funeral from the view of the