Emily Dickinson
1830 - 1886
Emily Dickinson stands as one of the most original and enigmatic figures in American literature, operating far outside the literary conventions of her mid-19th-century contemporaries. Her role was that of a solitary observer who used the confines of her Amherst home to map the infinite geography of the human soul. Rather than seeking public acclaim, she focused on an intense, private project of linguistic distillation, crafting poems that often feel like compressed philosophical or psychological explosions. Her work is defined by a radical defiance of traditional grammar, employing idiosyncratic capitalization, unconventional dashes, and slant rhymes to create a sense of lingering, unresolved tension.
Poems
- I taste a liquor never brewed
- After a hundred years
- How happy is the little Stone
- I reckon—when I count it all
- I Never Saw a Moor
- My Faith is larger than the Hills —
- For each ecstatic instant
- Unable are the Loved to die
- There is no frigate like a book
- We talked as Girls do —
- Before you thought of spring,
- One need not be a chamber to be haunted,