Zusammenfassung der Ressource
As Imperceptibly as Grief
- context and poet's intentions
- american poet
- alot of her
friends died
young and her
bedroom
overlooked the
cemitary.
- these deaths made her
question religeon even more
- they had a large impact
upon her writing
- many of her poems deal with the theme of death.
- was influenced by
romantic poets.
- started writing
as a teenager
- 1830 - 1886
- father was
lawyer, family well
off.
- her brother and sister
encouraged her to read and
write.
- her sister published the
poems after Emily died.
- mid 1850's she stayed
home to look after
her mother
- she found it difficult
to fit in with the
community
- she couldn't commit
herself to religeon.
- this poem laments the
passing of summer
- it suggests summer slips
away almost unnoticed
leaving us mourning.
- images of 'dusk' and 'twilight'
link darkness to isolation
- however, at the end
hope is conveyed as
summer is described
as 'escaping into the
beautiful'.
- subjects and themes
- passing of time.
- passing of time is shown by day drawing
to a close and the change of seasons
- passing of summer linked to grief
- she suggests time is
gradual and smooth, and
that we don't notice the
summer lapsing away
until it is gone.
- death
- she became preoccupied with death
when some of her friends died. she
knew it was inevitable. her religeous
doubts left her unsure of heaven
- changing seasons represent human lives.
- summer linked to
fullness of life.
- autumn is old age
- winter is death
- depression.
- warmth of summer =
lost happiness.
- dusk = darkness
of depression
- 'even keel' = mental wellbeing
- a boat without a keel is reffered to
- this implies the boat could tip over
or loose balance at any moment.
- the boat is also a symbol of the church so an alternative
interpretation would be this meant a loss of faith
- lack of balance and direction
- key images
- summer slipping away
almost unnoticed.
- linked to easing of grief over time,
human emotion and loss.
- twilight represents decline.
- afternoon also represents
decay and time passing
- darkness of dusk
represents sadness
or dying.
- nature depicted as a person who
spends the afternoon alone, she's
lost the company of sun. company of
sun could represent the lost relative.
- structure and form
- the form of Dickenson's poems was often changed
as her form didn't follow common conventions
- this makes it difficult for us to know
if they're exactly how she intended
- she experimented
with punctuation
- alot of dashes and
explanation marks.
- dashes show changes in
thought? or maybe links and
connections between ideas.
- maybe dashes note where
readers should pause
- often uses half rhymes. - full rhymes imply harmony
so half rhymes could imply a lack of harmony
- time passing reflected by steady rhythmn.
- 8 syllables, then 6 syllables. mirrors the
way time moves endlessly onwards.
- tone flicks between
positive and negative
- summer is linked to grief in
beginning then towards the end it
is liked to 'into the beautiful'
- this implies life
has the ability to
bring us positivity
and hapiness, as
well as negativity
and sadness.
- literacy techniques
- personification
- nature and summer
- both presented as female
- mataphoric?
- nature =
herself?
- summer =
death of a
loved one?
- alliteration
- 'dusk drew in'
- combined 'd' sounds
draw our attention
to the dusk.
- draws upon themes of finality and death
- enjembment
- 'or nature spending with
herself suquested afternoon'
- supports rhythmn and
is extremely smooth
- representative of
passing of time.
- drawn out across two
lines, reflecting long
lonely afternoons