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One of Dickinson’s most quoted poems, ‘Because I could not stop for Death’ is based on
the speaker’s journey from the earth to the grave; and the Death has appeared in the
poem as a trusted friend and fellow sojourner of the speaker from the earth to the grave.
Here follows the summary and analysis of the poem:
The speaker visualizes Death as a person whom she knew and trusted or believed that
she could trust. He might be a gentleman, who at one time or another has acted as her
escort. She cannot stop Death when she wants to. So, she has to abide by the call of
Death. As soon as the Death arrives, she gets into the carriage, which holds both the
speaker and Death and Immortality.
The speaker and Death drive in a leisurely manner, and she feels completely at ease. The
speaker walks away from her busy schedule, such as work and even her leisure time for
death. Since she understands it to be a last ride, she of course expects it to be
unhurried.
Civility- politeness, courtes
Uses alliteration of the letters “h” and “l”
The speaker notes the daily routine of the life she is leaving behind. Dickinson is talking
about the different stages of her life or seeing her own life flash before her eyes. The
children at recess symbolize the beginning of her life. The fields of grazing grain
symbolize adolescence/adulthood and the setting sun symbolizes the writer’s final years.
The tone gets changed. Now, the sense of motion is quickened or perhaps, more exactly,
the sense of time comes to an end as they pass the cycles of the day and the seasons of
the year.
The speaker corrects herself and says that the Sun has passed them, as it of course does
all who are in the grave. She conveys her feeling of being outside time and change. She is
aware of dampness and cold, and becomes suddenly conscious of the sheerness and the
dress and scarf which as she now discovers that she has not taken any winter clothes, as
she had to start the journey unprepared.
Sun is personified as “He
Describing being inside the ground; being cold
Also talks about what she is wearing gossamer- material for a wedding dress, tippet
(scarf) & Tulle (netting)
Slant rhyme “chill/ tulle”
Finally, the speaker and Death have stopped their carriage and they have reached their
destination- a house. It is the slightly rounded surface ‘of the ground’, with a scarcely
visible roof and a cornice ‘ in the ground.’
Cessation of all activity and creativeness is absolute. At the end, in a final instantaneous
flash of memory, she recalls the last objects before her eyes during the journey: the
heads of the horses that carried her, as she had surmised they were going from the
beginning, toward ‘eternity.’
She realizes she is dead; that this “ride” is for all eternity
This is typical Dickinson poem, in which each stanza is a quatrain- four lines. In each
stanza the first line has 8 syllables, the second has 6 syllables, the third has 8 syllables,
and the fourth has 6 syllables. The overall theme of the poem seems to be that death is
not to be feared because it is part of the endless cycle of nature. Her tone is optimistic
because she sees death as a friend.
This poem is a good example of her style, with punctuation dominated by dashes and
words intermittently given initial capital letters. The poem is slightly disconcerting,
presenting the arrival of death as a friend, or even a bridegroom, to escort the narrator
in a leisurely manner towards her tomb.
The personified Death’s actions are ‘kindly’, he shows ‘Civility’ and the journey has
‘no haste’. The central stanza poignantly contrasts children at play with death and the
children are the first of three references to the passing of time towards the end of life.
They are followed by the ripening grain, ready for harvest, and the setting sun, a
frequent metaphor for the end of life.
Describing the tomb as a ‘House’ suggests comfort and the final stanza confirms this,
compressing the ‘Centuries’ since the journey into less ‘than the Day’.