Tuesday, June 9, 2020
An Analysis of My life had stood- - Literature Essay Samples
Emily Dickinson uses the power of metaphor and symbolism in her poem My Life had stood- to express the way she felt about herself as a poet in a time when women were allowed far less independent thought and freedom of expression; she gives her readers a painfully honest confession of the sacrifices she believed she had to make to be the artist she was. The structure, word choice, and symbolism in the poem work elegantly to translate her internal conflict to paper and to speak to her readers of how she sacrificed her identity as a woman in order to effectively unleash the creativity within her. The artistic authority denied her by society, because she was a woman, is somehow granted to her in the act of submitting to her inner male, her ââ¬Å"ownerâ⬠and ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠. The poem consists of six quatrains and follows a rhythmic pattern quite common in her writing. The first and last stanzas are the only ones that have a solid rhyming pattern, ABCB, and the third and fourth contain slant rhymes, also ABCB. She is precise in making her points and does not use anymore words than she feels necessary; she is on-target and to the point, yet powerful and effective in her execution. She speaks to the reader directly; in a concise and matter-of-fact manner she gives the reader an account of how her life as a ââ¬Å"loaded gunâ⬠had ââ¬Å"sat in cornersâ⬠, until one day her master ââ¬Å"identified- and carried [her] away.â⬠The rest of the poem describes different ways her life found meaning through the hands of this ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠. The last stanza, rather than concluding the poem, leaves the reader uncertain as to the nature of her relationship with the ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠.The verb tenses vary somewhat throughout the poem. The first stanza takes place in the past, using the past perfect verb ââ¬Å"had stoodâ⬠to imply that the condition that was real for her then is no longer real. The rest of the poem carries on mostly in the act ive present tense. She speaks of her current reality, of what is actively happening in her world at that moment. She opens the last stanza in the indefinite future tense, giving the reader a sense of unknown regarding what lies ahead, and then she closes the poem with the last two lines in the present tense, their meaning hanging on the uncertainty set up in the preceding two lines. Emily guides the reader, briefly, through her past, spends most of the poem concerned with the present, and closes the poem with an explanation of what she hopes will happen, what she thinks ââ¬Å"mustâ⬠happen, when the time comes for she and her ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠to die. Emily uses nature and a theme of hunting to express her ideas. Her life is a ââ¬Å"loaded gunâ⬠, her owner is a hunter. The fact that she chose nature as the realm within which to express these ideas is quite typical of her writing, and it serves an important purpose. Nature, ââ¬Å"sovereignâ⬠, represents a place where a man is in control of his life. These images evoke the atypical American pioneer spirit, the freedom to live independently within oneââ¬â¢s surroundings, something sheââ¬â¢d not known in her ââ¬Å"cornersâ⬠. The reader also senses her energetic rage through the words she uses. They ââ¬Å"hunt the doeâ⬠, causing the mountains to ring with the sound of bullets. Her smile fires down ââ¬Å"cordial lightâ⬠upon the valley, as if a ââ¬Å"Vesuvian face had let its pleasure throughâ⬠. The power and force of their activity within nature is like an erupting volcano, a powerful release of pent up energy.Regarding the symbolism in the poem, there is much to be said; the entire poem is a metaphor. The poem begins with Emily speaking of her life as a loaded gun, in corners; ââ¬Å"not just a corner, the first lines of the poem tell us, but corners, as though wherever she stood was thereby a constricted place.â⬠(Gelpi) Carl Jung put forth that every huma n possesses the intrinsic qualities of both genders; he calls them the anima (feminine) and animus (masculine). One interpretation of this poem is that Emily gives full control of her anima to her animus, in order for the artistic power of the anima to be fully released. It is the animus, the ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠, who gives her identity, who gives her the hands to do the work she desperately desires to do. Furthermore, the fact they are hunting doe, female deer, should not be overlooked. The words ââ¬Å"doeâ⬠and ââ¬Å"foeâ⬠are connected in that they rhyme. It is clear that the target in the poem is fundamentally feminine. It is as if Emily is attacking womanhood, killing it, and finding purpose in doing so. She unapologetically, almost proudly, refuses to acquiesce to societyââ¬â¢s expectations of her as a woman, to rest her head in the ââ¬Å"eider duckââ¬â¢s deep pillowâ⬠, next to her husband, as it were, to fulfill the duties of wife and mother. The last stanza presents somewhat of a mystery. Why must he live longer than she? By making this connection with death, she brings an element of immortality to the poem. Her art will live on eternally, though her temporal role as an artist may end; her poemsââ¬â¢ powerful blows will be felt far past her time on Earth. She also suggests that a crucial dependency exists between her and him: if it were not for him, through whom her art is birthed into space and time, the art would not be, and would therefore not be able to exist into eternity. So we see that in the death of her womanhood, and consequently in her submission to the ââ¬Å"masterâ⬠, her art is born, which will live on past the death of that which brought the art into existence. Beautifully, her death to womanhood has done great service in bringing equality to women after her. Emily Dickinson may have struggled with her identity as a woman, however, the previous interpretations are debatable, as there is a tone of ambivale nce in her writing, and appropriately so. Adrienne Rich says of this poem, ââ¬Å"poetry is too much rooted in the unconscious; it presses too close against the barriers of repression; and the nineteenth-century woman had much to repress.â⬠(Rich)Gelpi, Albert. On 754 (My Life had stood a loaded gun). Modern American Poetry. University of Illinois. 14 Sep. 2013.http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/a_f/dickenson/754.htmRich, Adrienne. On 754 (My Life had stood a loaded gun). Modern American Poetry. University of Illinois. 14 Sep. 2013.http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/a_f/dickenson/754.htm
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