blog




  • Essay / Analysis of the fear of death - 814

    “Fear of death arises from fear of life. A man who lives fully is ready to die at any moment. There are many types of death in the world and everyone can imagine and describe death in their own way. Every individual sees death in a different formant, some see it as a horrible thing and are always terrified of it. On the other hand, some people might find death interesting and the end of a beautiful journey. Many questions are asked about death, what happens after death, how do you feel after death and what can you see in death. All these questions also have no answer and are always asked and make death a petrifying thought. Emily Dickinson is a poet concerned with death and the afterlife; many of his poems mainly focus on death and revolve around the different aspects of death. Emily describes death in her poems in different ways, two of the most famous poems about death are "I heard a fly buzz - when I died" and "Because I couldn't stop to die" . Both poems perceive death in their own aspect but share the overall aspect of death. Although both poems describe the day of the speaker's death and the death of the speaker himself, "I Heard a Fly Buzzing – When I Died" is focused entirely on the physicality of death , such that the speaker misses any vision of any spiritual light, while "Because I Could Not Stop to Die" decently focuses on death as a spiritual journey from life to the afterlife . In the poem “I Heard a Fly Buzzing When I Died,” the feeling of the existence of death in the play is the tone. . Emily Dickson writes “For this last episode/when the king – Be witnesses in the room. » She is believed to be explaining that the king is God and she sits obediently in the middle of the paper....... "We passed the school, where the children were striving - At recess --In the ring.” The dots continue to show the chapters of growth that the speaker has gone through and is going through and tell the viewer about her experience “Or rather – He has passed us by” the sun moves away from her as it sets beneath the. 'horizon. Emily suggests that perhaps this is what death is like - light and warmth giving way to the cold darkness that is death "The dews drew quivering and cold - for only Gossamer, my dress – my Tippet – only Tulle. The stanza reflects the statement that she stands underdressed for this journey and similarly reflects that she remains underprepared. “For centuries – and yet it seems shorter than the day.” The poem seems expressing a current memory, but it all actually happened a long time ago, meaning the speaker was dead the whole time..