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Emily Dickinson: The Gothic perspective
Emily Dickinson: The Gothic perspective Emily Dickinson's majority of her pomes that I found they were mainly focused on death and the progression to death and much of what was described by many as "Gothic". In "Because I Could Not Stop for Death" (Franklin 219), Emily Dickinson uses remembered images of the past to clarify infinite conceptions through the establishment of a dialectical relationship between reality and imagination, the known and the unknown. From the viewpoint
too cool for Corn - But when a Boy and Barefoot - I more than once at Noon Have passed I thought a Whip lash Unbraiding in the Sun When stooping to secure it It wrinkled And was gone - Several of Nature's People I know, and they know me I feel for them a transport Of cordiality But never met this Fellow Attended or alone Without a tighter Breathing And Zero at the Bone.
