Monday, January 20, 2020
Poem #640: Interpretation :: essays research papers
I cannot live with Youââ¬â It would be Lifeââ¬â And Life is over there__ Behind the Shelf The Sexton keeps the Key toââ¬â Putting up Our lifeââ¬âHis Porcelainââ¬â Like a Cupââ¬â Discarded of the Housewifeââ¬â Quaintââ¬âor Brokeââ¬â A newer Sevres pleasesââ¬â Old Ones crackââ¬â I could not dieââ¬âwith Youââ¬â For One must wait To shut the Otherââ¬â¢s Gaze downââ¬â Youââ¬âcould notââ¬â And Iââ¬âCould I stand by And see Youââ¬âfreezeââ¬â Without my Right of Frostââ¬â Deathââ¬â¢s privilege? Nor could I riseââ¬âwith Youââ¬â Because Your Face Would put out Jesusââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â That New Grace Glow plainââ¬âand foreign On my homesick Eyeââ¬â Except that You than He Shone closer byââ¬â Theyââ¬â¢d judge Usââ¬âHowââ¬â For Youââ¬âserved Heavenââ¬âYou know, Or sought toââ¬â I could notââ¬â Because You saturated Sightââ¬â And I had no more Eyes For sordid excellence As Paradise And were You lost, I would beââ¬â Though My Name Rang loudest On the Heavenly fameââ¬â And were Youââ¬âsavedââ¬â And Iââ¬âcondemned to be Where You were notââ¬â That selfââ¬âwere Hell to Meââ¬â So We must meet apartââ¬â You thereââ¬âIââ¬âhereââ¬â With just the Door ajar That Oceans areââ¬âand Prayerââ¬â And that White Sustenanceââ¬â Despairââ¬â "I cannot live with You", by Emily Dickinson, is an emotional poem in which she shares her experiences and thoughts on death and love. Some critics believe that she has written about her struggle with death and her desire to have a relationship with a man whose vocation was ministerial, Reverend Charles Wadsworth. She considers suicide as an option for relieving the pain she endures, but decides against it. The narrator, more than likely Emily herself, realizes that death will leave her even further away from the one that she loves. There is a possibility that they will never be together again. "Arguing with herself, Dickinson considers three major resolutions for the frustrations she is seeking to define and to resolve. Each of these resolutions is expressed in negative form: living wither her lover, dying with him, and discovering a world beyond nature. Building on this series of negations, Dickinson advances a catalogue of reasons for her covenant with despair, which are both final and insufficient. Throughout, she excoriates the social and religious authorities that impede her union, but she remains emotionally unconvinced that she has correctly identified her antagonists." (Pollack, 182) Dickinson begins her poem by saying that she cannot live with her lover because their life together is an object that can only be opened with a key. The Sexton, or church officer in charge of the maintenance of church property, keeps the key. The reverendââ¬â¢s involvement with God and with a woman at the same time is like a porcelain cup that is easily broken. This is an example of Personification.
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