Monday, April 18, 2011

"The Way I Read a Letter's This"

Emily Dickinson was a unique poet that does not fit well into any
specific literary category. She wrote many, many poems, that all
became incredibly popular after her death. She wrote about any number
of things, and her poems are very diverse. Some of them are incredibly
literal and have nothing hidden in their meaning, but there are also
some that are completely loaded with hidden meaning and other
interpretations, so it is often hard to figure out what one will be
getting in any given poem. I read a poem by Emily Dickinson that was
called "The way I read a letter's this:". This poem basically talks
about the speaker reading a letter from their lover. It talks about
how the person wants to hide in the very back of their room and open
the letter very secretively, so no one else can see the beauty of it
or can feel how intimate it is. She is trying to show how meaningful
and heartfelt that kind of thing can be, and how important they are to
the person that receives them. Emily Dickinson talks all about how she
checks every step of the way that no one is following her or sneaking
in to see the letter. She talks about how she constantly feels for the
letter, and makes sure that there is no way that she could drop it
anywhere along the way. She talks about hiding in the corner so that
she will be the only one to see how sacred and pure and amazing it is.
She wants to make sure that she feels the full effect of the letter
and all of the emotions that go along with it, so she makes sure to go
into a private room that may well be a sanctuary for her. She talks
about how she feels after reading the letter and soaking up all of the
goodness that it can give to her. She talks about how much she wants
her lover and how being with her lover would be heaven to her. Not the
conventional heaven, but her heaven. This poem is very literal and it
would be hard to take it different ways. It does not relate to
Christianity, because this letter is more between lovers than it would
be between a father and a son. It might be mildly awkward for people
in those positions to have those feelings for each other, so it is
difficult to think about. There is no hidden meaning that Christ wrote
letters or received letters from lovers, so Christianity does not fit.
There is not a hidden meaning, because only lovers should have these
feelings for each other, because it would be awkward for family
members to feel this way about each other. Friends might be able to
feel this way about each other, but they might want something more
with the other person if they feel this way. This poem is pretty
simplistic, but it is still very meaningful and shows a lot of depth
and emotion.

Dickinson, Emily. "24. “The Way I Read a Letter’s This.” Part Three:
Love. Dickinson, Emily. 1924. Complete Poems." Bartleby.com: Great
Books Online -- Quotes, Poems, Novels, Classics and Hundreds More.
Web. 25 April. 2011.

"Érudit | Romanticism on the Net N38-39 2005 : Mayer | Finding Herself
Alone: Emily Dickinson, Victorian Women Novelists, and the Female
Subject." Érudit. Web. 25 April. 2011.

No comments:

Post a Comment