
Her father, Edward Dickinson, was a pillar of the community in Amherst,
Massachusetts. A prominent lawyer and treasurer of Amherst College, this
rigorous and austere man exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily.
She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance
to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to
tread a lonely path. Emily returned from Mount Holyoke to her father's house and
remained there.
Busy about the house and garden, she began to write verse. The narrow boundaries
of "woman's sphere" were deadly limitations for many women. Somehow Emily
Dickinson found within herself the imaginative resources to exceed and shatter
such boundaries. Although untaught and virtually unpublished during her
lifetime, she became one of the greatest poets in the English language.
Sometimes Emily Dickinson sought encouragement and friendship -- from author and
reformer Thomas Wentworth Higginson among others. But more and more she
withdrew. Alone with her thoughts and her pen, she crafted poetry in
experimental form that anticipated modern style. She knew what she had achieved:
"I have a horror of death; the dead are so soon forgotten. But when I die,
they'll have to remember me."
Additional Resources:
Doriani, Beth Maclay. Emily Dickinson daughter of prophecy. Amherst,
Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts press, c1996. NOTES: Includes
bibliographical references (p. 205-224) and indexes. Electronic reporduction
available at:
http://www/netlibrary.com/
McNeil, Helen. Emily Dickinson New York: Pantheon Books, c1986. NOTES:
"Virago Pantheon pioneers" series. Includes index. Bibliography: p. 595-605.
Edited by Thomas H. Johnson. The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson.
Little, Brown & Company, 1997, c1960.
Edited by: Ralph W. Franklin. The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson.
Harvard University Press, 1981. 2 volumes.
edited by: Theadora Ward Johnson. The Letters of Emily Dickinson Harvard
University Press, 1996, c1958.
Edited by: Martha Neil Smith and Ellen L. Hart. Open me Carefully: Emily
Dickinson's Intimate Letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson. Ashfield,
Massachusetts: Paris Press, 1998.
Papers 1844-ca. 1955, 27ft. Amhert College, Robert Frost Library, Archives and
Special Collections. Amherst, Massachusetts. Papers ca. 1850-1911, ca. 500
items, 12 boxes, 40 packets. Houghton Library, Harvard College Library.
Cambridge, Massachusetts.