Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Emily Dickinson :: essays research papers
 Emily Dickinson was born on December 10,  1830 in Amherst Massachusetts. She had a  younger sister named Lavina and an older  brother named Austin. Her mother Emily  Norcross Dickinson, was largely dependent  on her family and was seen by Emily as a  poor mother. Her father was lawyer,  Congressman, and the Treasurer for Amherst  College. Unlike her mother, Emily loved and  admired her father. Since the family was not  emotional, they lived a quiet secure life. They  rarely shared their problems with one another  so Emily had plenty of privacy for writing.     During her childhood, Emily and her family  attended The First Congregational Church on  a regular basis. Emily did not like going to  church because she didn't think of herself as  being very religious. She refused to believe  that Heaven was a better place than Earth  and eventually rebelled from the church.  Emily saw herself as a woman who had her  own way of thinking, a way of thinking  shaped neither by the church or society.     By the time she was twelve, her family moved  to a house on Pleasant Street where they  lived from 1840 to 1855. Emily was already  writing letters, but composed most of her  poetry in this home. Emily only left home to  attend Mount Holyoke Female Seminary for  two semesters.     Though her stay there was brief, she  impressed her teachers with her courage and  directness. They felt her writing was  sensational.     At the age of twenty-one, Emily and her family  moved to the Dickinson Homestead on Main  Street. This move proved to be very difficult  for Emily. This was difficult for Emily because  she became very attached to her old house,  which shaped her writing and personality for  fifteen years. They now lived next door to her  brother Austin and his wife Susan and their  daughter Martha. Emily and Susan became  so close that many people believe they may  have been lovers. A rumor perpetuated by the  fact that Emily was known to have written  many love letters and poems to Susan.  Martha attempted to protect both of their  images and suppress the rumors. It became  common knowledge that Emily had some type  of very strong feelings for Susan.     At the age of thirty-one Emily sent some of  her poems to a publisher, Thomas Higginson,  from whom she got a very good response and  a strong friendship developed. He acted as  her mentor but she never seemed to have  taken any of his advice. It became evident  that she didn't like the idea of having her  works published, she made 40 packets of  about twenty poems apiece from 814 poems.  She placed these in a box along with 333  other poems.     Emily died on May 5, 1886 at the age of 56.  					    
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