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Loading... The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinsonby Emily Dickinson
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. She's a wonderful poet. I wish I could get a job as a Dickinson scholar. ( )How does one review Emily? One of a kind. I like the story of Emily Dickinson, writing from the smallest of emotional worlds with perfect phrasing. If I were shipwrecked on a desert island, The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson is definitely one of the books I would swim back to the scuttled ship to bring back with me to the shore. I would look for the Complete Works of Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson's poems, and of course, a book on how to survive on a desert island. Oh, Emily. She's depressing, confused, lonely and anxious. She's not particularly spirit lifting and doesn't really reaffirm anyone's faith in anything at all, but one thing she never fails to be is applicable. Years and years later, her poetry applies, maybe even more so. And despite her somber tone, given her subtle religious skepticism and awareness, she would have been damn fun to talk to.
It is a monument in American literature.
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The book was compiled from Thomas H. Johnson's hard-to-find variorum from 1955. While some explanatory notes would have been helpful, it's a prodigious collection, showcasing Dickinson's intractable obsession with nature, including death. Poem 1732, which alludes to the deaths of her father and a onetime suitor, illustrates her talent:
My life closed twice before its close;
It yet remains to see
If Immortality unveil
A third event to me,
So huge, so hopeless to conceive
As these that twice befell.
Parting is all we know of heaven,
And all we need of hell.
The musicality of her punctuation and the outright elegance of her style--akin to Christina Rossetti's hymns, although not nearly so religious--rescue the poems from their occasional abstruseness. The Complete Poems is especially refreshing because Dickinson didn't write for publication; only 11 of her verses appeared in magazines during her lifetime, and she had long-resigned herself to anonymity, or a "Barefoot-Rank," as she phrased it. This is the perfect volume for readers wishing to explore the works of one of America's first poets.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)
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