Title: Emily Dickinson
1Emily Dickinson
2Emily Dickinson Biography
- Born the second of three children in Amherst,
Massachusetts - Father was a lawyer and one of the wealthiest and
most respected citizens in the town, as well as a
conservative leader of the church - Dickinson grew up regularly attending services at
the Congregational First Church of Christ
(Congregational churches essentially followed the
New England Puritan tradition) - She attended Amherst Academy, where she studied a
modern curriculum of English and the sciences, as
well as Latin, botany and mathematics
3Emily Dickinson Biography
- Except for one year at Mount Holyoke Female
Seminary (1847-48) and a visit to Washington,
D.C., to visit her father, she spent her entire
life in Amherst - In her family library, she had access to many
religious works as well as books by Emerson,
other transcendentalists and current magazines - Around 1850, she begins to write verse, which she
circulates among a circle of friends - Her poem Sic transit gloria mundi was published
in the Springfield Daily Republican in 1852
4Emily Dickinson Biography
- She spent sociable evenings with guests such as
Samuel Bowles, editor of the Springfield Daily
Republican - She also enjoyed dancing, buggy rides, parlor
games, and other forms of entertainment until she
began to seclude herself - Around 1860, she stopped visiting with other
people and became a recluse - In 1862, her poem Safe in their alabaster
chambers appeared in the Springfield Daily
Republican
5Emily Dickinson Biography
- Around that time, she began her correspondence
with Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a local
intellectual, journalist, and anti-slavery
activist - She asked Higginson for advice with her poetry
- Higginson had published an article entitled
Letter to a Young Contributor, in the Atlantic
Monthly, in which he advised budding young
writers - Dickinson sent him four poems, along with a
letter asking "Are you too deeply occupied to
say if my Verse is alive?" - Higginson responded with much praise and gentle
criticism (surgery), but he advised her against
publishing her poetry because of its raw form and
subject matter
6Emily Dickinson Biography
- Higginson became Dickinsons intellectual mentor,
even though he admitted feeling out of her league
in poetical talent - After Dickinsons death, Higginson collaborated
with Mabel Loomis Todd in publishing volumes of
her poetry - His edition was heavily edited for conventional
punctuation and form, as well as content - But, his edition helped Dickinsons poetry gain
quick national prominence
7Emily Dickinson Biography
- While becoming more reclusive, Dickinson
intensified correspondence with friends and
output of poetry - She suffered from eye-trouble in 1864 and 1865
- The last 12 years she spent in self-imposed
isolation in her parents home - Allegedly, Dickinson dressed entirely in white
and communicated only indirectly with visitors
and friends, from behind a folding screen or via
notes and gifts in a basket she let down from her
window into the garden
8Emily Dickinson Biography
- She spent most of these years reading and writing
poetry - Her most productive period coincided with the
civil war, during which she wrote about 800 poems - She called writing poetry her business, My
Business is Circumference (after Emersons term
for poetry) - She copied many of her poems into hand-sewn small
booklets or fascicles and sent them as poetic
gifts to family and friends
9Emily Dickinson Biography
- Dickinson never married, although several men
played an important role in her life - Lively correspondence with Benjamin Franklin
Newton on literary topics of the day - Long correspondence with Higginson, although he
ultimately did not recognize the worth of her
poetry - Close emotional bond to Charles Wadsworth, whom
she had met on her journey home from Washington
10Emily Dickinson Biography
- Strained relationship to her sister-in-law, Susan
Gilbert, who was apparently the object of her
desire in such homoerotic poems as Her face was
in a bed of hair - When Dickinson died in 1886 of Brights disease,
her family and friends were surprised at the
amount of work she left behind - Her sister Lavinia found 40 notebooks and loose
poems in a locked box in her bedroom - The poems were unarranged and only 24 were titled
11Emily Dickinson, Daguerreotype by Josiah Gilbert
Holland , circa February-April 1848.
12The Dickinson Homestead in Amherst, Massachusetts
13The Dickinson Homestead in Amherst,
Massachusetts(garden)
14The Dickinson Homestead in Amherst,
Massachusetts(bedroom)
15The Dickinson Homestead in Amherst,
Massachusetts(Dress)