Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems Summary
Emily Dickinson wrote almost 1800 poems during her life. Her poetry was stunningly original, ignoring or working against many of the traditions and conventions of the time. Her poems are almost all short, using the traditional hymnal stanza of quatrains of lines alternating between four and three beats long, rhymed abab.
Dickinson’s poems use largely simple language, many off-rhymes, and unconventional punctuation to deal with a small set of themes that she returned to again and again. Death, grief, passion, faith, truth, and fame and success are the most prominent of these themes. Each time she revisits one of these threads, she comes at it differently, never allowing her interpretation of truth to become entrenched or oversimplified.
Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems Essays and Related Content
- Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems: Major Themes
- Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems: Essays
- Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems: E-Text
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- Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems: Purchase the Novel and Related Material
- Emily Dickinson: Biography
- Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems Summary
- About Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems
- Character List
- Glossary of Terms
- Major Themes
- Quotes and Analysis
- Summary and Analysis of "Because I could not stop for Death --"
- Summary and Analysis of "There's a certain Slant of light"
- Summary and Analysis of "I heard a Fly buzz -- when I died --"
- Summary and Analysis of "Success is counted sweetest"
- Summary and Analysis of "The first Day's Night had come --"
- Summary and Analysis of "I'm Nobody! Who are you?"
- Summary and Analysis of "My Life had stood -- a Loaded Gun --"
- Summary and Analysis of "I can wade Grief --"
- Summary and Analysis of "Behind Me -- dips Eternity --"
- Summary and Analysis of "Much Madness is divinest Sense --"
- Summary and Analysis of "I measure every Grief I meet"
- Summary and Analysis of "Dare you see a Soul at the White Heat?"
- Summary and Analysis of "Tell all the Truth but tell it slant --"
- Summary and Analysis of "They shut me up in Prose --"
- Summary and Analysis of "Some -- Work for Immortality --"
- Summary and Analysis of "There came a Day at Summer's full"
- Summary and Analysis of "I like a look of Agony"
- Summary and Analysis of "A Light exists in Spring"
- Summary and Analysis of "To fill a Gap"
- Summary and Analysis of "The Bat is dun, with wrinkled Wings --"
- Summary and Analysis of "I had no time to Hate --"
- Summary and Analysis of "I like to see it lap the Miles --"
- Summary and Analysis of "I dwell in Possibility --"
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- Suggested Essay Questions
- Test Yourself! - Quiz 1
- Test Yourself! - Quiz 2
- Test Yourself! - Quiz 3
- Test Yourself! - Quiz 4
- Test Yourself! - Quiz 5
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