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THE BELLE OF AMHERST
Dickinson lived the majority of her life in seclusion in the family home of Amherst. In 1976 William Luce published a one-woman play about her life titled The Belle of Amherst. The play draws on Dickinson’s poetry and extensive correspondence with her select circle of friends. Dickinson remains closely associated with the nickname “The Belle of Amherst” to this day.
BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP FOR DEATH…
Death was a common theme in Dickinson’s verses. In “Because I Could Not Stop for Death”, Dickinson’s speaker meets Death and likens him to a man riding a carriage. Dickinson’s speaker, Death, and Immortality drive slowly to the afterlife. The speaker dispassionately describes the scenes of life they pass on their ride, mentioning the Fields of Gazing Grain as well as the Setting Sun. It is uncertain that they reach their destination, but they pause before “A House that seemed / A Swelling of the Ground.” The poem ends by stating that whether or not eternity was reached, the heads of the horses pulling the carriage face in that direction.
I HEARD A FLY BUZZ–WHEN I DIED
Dickinson also addressed the transition between life and death in her poem informally known as “I Heard a Fly Buzz–When I Died.” The speaker, now dead, relates how mourners were preparing themselves for “that last Onset – when the King / Be witnessed.” However, the still solemnity of death is interrupted by the noise of a fly. Dickinson’s speaker attributes a “Blue – uncertain – stumbling Buzz” to the insect. This is the last thing the speaker perceives, for they relate how “the Windows failed – and then / I could not see to see.”
A NARROW FELLOW IN THE GRASS
“A Narrow Fellow in the Grass” was one of the few poems published during Dickinson’s lifetime. The titular narrow fellow is a snake, and Dickinson’s speaker describes him with a certain dread, relating how as he moves “The Grass divides as with a Comb.” Dickinson’s speaker holds no love for the snake, contrasting it with others among “Nature’s People,” for whom she feels “a transport / of Cordiality.” The snake awakens fear and anxiety in the speaker, who claims that upon seeing the animal she experiences “a tighter Breathing / And Zero at the Bone.”
“HOPE” IS THE THING WITH FEATHERS
Dickinson takes a brighter view of the natural world in her poem “‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers”. This poem utilizes an extended metaphor to liken hope to a bird. Dickinson’s speaker relates how hope “perches in the soul” where it ceaselessly “sings the tune without words.” Hope is always with us. Dickinson’s speaker describes how she has “heard” it “in the chillest land – And on the strangest Sea.” Like the song of birds, this hope is given to us freely: “Yet – never – in Extremity,” Dickinson’s speaker states, “It asked a crumb – of me.”