Circumference is a famous word in Emily Dickinson's poetry. This paper shows howthe shape metaphor of "Circumference" becomes is the structure of Immortality itselfin her poetry.First two poems on "Heaven, " P374 "I went to Heaven, " and P399 "A House upon the Height" are examined. Here comes an important idea, "Eclipse, " the word alsoclosely examined in her letter and poem.What is clarified by "Eclipse" is that Dickinson does not negate the existence of God, Heaven, or Immortality, but she makes us conscious of its absence. Being conscious ofits absence is not the same as its total negation. For, when the moon is eclipsed, it is notthe moon itself but the light that disappears. In the same manner, when we are consciousof the eclipsed body...
Emily Dickinson writes numerous poems of what is not there. Her use of negation (not, nor, -less, wi...
The majority of Emily Dickinson’s poems deal with love, immortality, and death. There is no doubt th...
As a romantic poet, Emily Dickinson was fascinated by nature, individualism, man\u27s relation with ...
Circumference is a famous word in Emily Dickinson's poetry. This paper shows how the shape metaphor ...
Circumference is a famous word in Emily Dickinson\u27s poetry. This paper shows howthe shape metapho...
Abstract Focusing on poems that observe her own mandate to "Deal with the soul / As with Algebra!" (...
Out of her 1775 poems Emily Dickinson published only seven in her lifetime. Besides, these few had s...
Emily Dickinson’s poetry has long been of interest to theologians due to her fascination with faith,...
Emily Dickinson’s poetry has long been of interest to theologians due to her fascination with faith,...
In the first half of the 19th century, the rapid development of science in its modern form reinforce...
Abstract: The themes of death and eternity impenetrate most of Emily Dickinson's poems. This p...
Only recently has Emily Dickinson been recognized as a major American poet. Her poems were not publi...
Emily Dickinson\u27s protagonists, when they are most moving and have the greatest complex reality, ...
Literature specifically poetry is chosen as the object of this study since we can enlarge our scope ...
Emily Dickinson lived in Amherst, Massachusetts her whole life. We possess some of the hundreds of p...
Emily Dickinson writes numerous poems of what is not there. Her use of negation (not, nor, -less, wi...
The majority of Emily Dickinson’s poems deal with love, immortality, and death. There is no doubt th...
As a romantic poet, Emily Dickinson was fascinated by nature, individualism, man\u27s relation with ...
Circumference is a famous word in Emily Dickinson's poetry. This paper shows how the shape metaphor ...
Circumference is a famous word in Emily Dickinson\u27s poetry. This paper shows howthe shape metapho...
Abstract Focusing on poems that observe her own mandate to "Deal with the soul / As with Algebra!" (...
Out of her 1775 poems Emily Dickinson published only seven in her lifetime. Besides, these few had s...
Emily Dickinson’s poetry has long been of interest to theologians due to her fascination with faith,...
Emily Dickinson’s poetry has long been of interest to theologians due to her fascination with faith,...
In the first half of the 19th century, the rapid development of science in its modern form reinforce...
Abstract: The themes of death and eternity impenetrate most of Emily Dickinson's poems. This p...
Only recently has Emily Dickinson been recognized as a major American poet. Her poems were not publi...
Emily Dickinson\u27s protagonists, when they are most moving and have the greatest complex reality, ...
Literature specifically poetry is chosen as the object of this study since we can enlarge our scope ...
Emily Dickinson lived in Amherst, Massachusetts her whole life. We possess some of the hundreds of p...
Emily Dickinson writes numerous poems of what is not there. Her use of negation (not, nor, -less, wi...
The majority of Emily Dickinson’s poems deal with love, immortality, and death. There is no doubt th...
As a romantic poet, Emily Dickinson was fascinated by nature, individualism, man\u27s relation with ...