Emily Dickinson Poem Analysis - the Last Night That She Lived
By: Mike • Essay • 593 Words • November 28, 2009 • 3,095 Views
Essay title: Emily Dickinson Poem Analysis - the Last Night That She Lived
The Last Night that She Lived
After evaluating my perception of The Last Night that She Lived, by Emily Dickinson. The message in this poem is we take life for granted and we don’t appreciate it until we are threatened with losing it. Emily used what seems to me as free verse with no apparent rhyme but alliteration at times. This is a Narrative poem that tells a story about a death of a young woman.
In the first verse Dickinson was saying when she wrote,
“The last Night that She lived
It was a common night
Except to the Dying--This to Us
Made Nature different”
In that verse the poet was describing that to the ordinary person it was a regular night not out of the ordinary. Since she was dying the world seemed different to her. She had different views on her life and all of the sudden the smallest things she used to take for granted meant so much to her. This verse is an aphorism on how you don’t know what you truly have until it’s gone.
Once you’re faced with losing your life even the smallest things become meaningful. All of the sudden when dying the meaning to life becomes important. As the woman was grasping her last hours on earth and seizing each moment other people were going on living, as if the day meant nothing because they had so much more of life to live. It was just a regular ordinary day to them, but to her it was everything. When Dickinson uses the phrase, “As We went out and in Between Her final Room And Room Where those alive,” She is saying in other words as the woman lived her final hours, everyone else was still alive.
Realizing that her life was slipping away, the woman became jealous of the people who were alive and well. They were taking their lives for granted,