Young Emily was depressed enough that her family sent her to Boston to recover before returning to Amherst Academy. "I told no one the cause of my grief," she wrote, "though it was gnawing at my very heart strings. I was not well & I went to Boston & stayed a month & my health improved so that my spirits were better."
The death which hit so close to home has been credited (by some) as one of the sources for Dickinson's ongoing fascination with morbid topics. Others have suggested that the early death of such a close friend turned her away from formal religion (though her poetry is riddled with a fair mix of both religious and morbid themes). "She was too lovely for earth," Dickinson had written, "& she was transplanted from earth to heaven." The following poem is not necessarily written for Sophia Holland (this is a 1901 version, labeled XXII):
The bustle in a house
The morning after death
Is solemnest of industries
Enacted upon earth, —
The sweeping up the heart,
And putting love away
We shall not want to use again
Until eternity.
*The above portrait of Dickinson dates to about 1846 or 1847. For a time, it was the only authenticated photo of the reclusive poet. One other exists, though its authenticity is disputed.
This is lovely. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteOne of my favourite Dickinson poems. Thanks for another great post.
ReplyDelete