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'Because I could not stop for

'Because I could not stop for Death-,' A Poem of Both Marriage and Death

When thinking of both marriage and death, the word "eternity" comes to mind. Marriage is looked at as a symbol of eternal love, and death is looked at as a state of eternal rest. Also, Christians consider life after death as an eternal state. In "Because I could not stop for Death-," Emily Dickinson portrays death by describing an eternal marriage.

On the literal level, the speaker remembers a time where she was carried off and eloped with a man called Death and his partner in crime, Immortality. Not realizing that going with Death meant that she would have to leave this world and live with him in his house forever, she shows herself as being immature at that time. As she leaves to go with Death the speaker states, "We slowly drove-He knew no haste/And I had put away/My labor and my leisure too, /For his Civility--"(5-8). In these lines, she shows how she must leave her household to work for her new husband. On the way to Death's house they "passed the school, where Children strove/At Recess-in the Ring-"(9-10). The fact that she mentions the kids fighting and playing at recess also shows how she must leave her life of leisure for a life of work


This poem clearly functions as an allegory. On a symbolic level, it was easy to grasp that this poem was a recollection of the speaker's death. Dickinson describes this death so well it is almost as if she is writing about her own death. The main clue that this was a poem of death was that she got in a carriage with two guys whose names just happened to be Death and Immortality. Death symbolizes the passing away of the body, and Immortality represents the Christian belief that the body dies but the soul is immortal.

This poem was a good example of what marrying Death would feel like. Since no one has really died and came back to tell us how it feels, Dickinson does a good job of showing death from the perspective of a dead person or immortal soul.

. She must go work for her husband Death at his household.

When the speaker states, "Because I could not stop for Death-/He kindly stopped for me-," she implies that most people do not stop to think about their death (1-2). People go on with their busy lives and do not talk or think about death because they are afraid of it. So Death must stop and "kindly" ask people into his carriage. After she went into his carriage, Dickinson goes on to portray what the speaker sees as she is dying. Contrary to the speaker's busy and fast life, line five shows the carriage is slow and knows no haste. This is because as she is dying she thinks of all the things that she is leaving behind. She is relieved of all her duties at work, but she is also relieved of the activities she enjoys to do in her leisure time with her friends. In a sense, it is good that she is leaving all her responsibilities and work behind, but it is sad that she has to leave all her friends and good times behind a

Some common words found in the essay are:
Cornice-in Ground, Immortality Death, Setting Sun-/Or, Emily Dickinson, Heads/Were Eternity-21-24, Gazing Grains, Recess-in Ring-9-10, Marriage Death, Tippet-only Tulle-14-16, Swelling Ground--, fields gazing, gazing grain-/we passed, fields gazing grain-/we, school children strove/at, school children, children strove/at, leaving world, passed fields, strove/at recess-in, grain-/we passed, passed fields gazing, setting sun-/or, sun-/or rather-he, children strove/at recess-in, rather-he passed,
Approximate Word count = 1177
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)


  

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