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Death, Nature, and Love In the Writings of Emily Dickinson
Title: Death, Nature, and Love In the Writings of Emily Dickinson
Category: Literature / English
Details: Words: 4302 | Pages: 18.3 (approximately 235 words/page)
Death, Nature, and Love In the Writings of Emily Dickinson
Not one of Emily Elizabeth Dickinson’s readers has met the woman who lived and died in Amherst, Massachusetts more than a century ago, yet most of those same readers who have come to understand her through her work feel as if they know her closely. However it was her reclusive life that made understanding her quite difficult. However, taking a close look at her verses, one can learn a great deal about this remarkable
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showed last 75 words of 4302 total
Sound.” To Emily the most important things in her life were religion, individuality, nature, and death. She may not have believed in God but He did have a profound impact throughout her childhood. Dickinson felt the most important thing was to maintain ones individuality as she did. Be true to yourself and never imitate the beliefs of anyone else. She was fascinated by both nature and death and attempted to explain both in her writings.
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