I used to think that Walt Whitman was the good guy of late
nineteenth century U.S. poetry, and that Emily Dickinson was irrelevant. In
what way did I think she was irrelevant? Irrelevant to the political, spiritual, and social
revolutions that were churning at that time.
Whitman, on the other hand, earned
his living partly as an orator, making fiery speeches against slavery and in
favor of populist American democracy. Emily Dickinson sat in a room in her
father’s comfortable house in the little town of Amherst, Massachusetts and had
almost nothing little to say publicly about the political storms of that period.
To me, they seemed like polar opposites. Well, not exactly polar. Dickinson
seemed like a frozen pond, and Whitman like a jungle during a sunshower.
Emily Dickinson |
Then I read Richard Sewell’s The Life of Emily Dickinson. It’s entirely my fault that it took me
so long to find this book, since I actually took a Shakespeare class with
Professor Sewell when I was an undergraduate at Yale at the same time he was
writing his biography of Dickinson. But I didn’t follow Sewell’s work after I
finished the final paper for that class. I only read his book on Dickinson when
I reluctantly prepared to teach her writing in an American poetry survey class
about thirty years later.
In his biography, Sewell reveals what a complex and
interesting response the poet had to her time. He describes how Dickinson was
more or less driven out of Mount Holyoke College (then called Mount Holyoke
Female Seminary) because she was part of the group of students considered “hopeless” by the fundamentalists of the Second Great Awakening, which was then hurricaning
through New England.
And when I read Dickinson’s poetry in that light, I started
to see that she was profoundly rebellious as well:
Some keep the Sabbath going to
Church –
I keep it, staying at Home –
With a Bobolink for a Chorister –
And an Orchard, for a Dome –
What more eloquent statement could there be of the
individual’s right to communicate directly with the Spirit, and to see the
divine directly in nature? And how similar to Whitman’s “The bull and the bug
never worshipp'd half enough,” in “Song of Myself.”
Around this time I also read Adrienne Rich’s remarkable essay
on Dickinson, “Vesuvius at
Home.” Rich makes a convincing case that Dickinson understood the explosive
nature of her rebellion, and that that Dickinson deliberately kept close to her
home to protect the revelation of her poetry and her ideas. “I have a notion
that genius knows itself;” writes Rich, “that Dickinson chose her seclusion,
knowing she was exceptional and knowing what she needed. It was, moreover, no
hermetic retreat, but a seclusion which included a wide range of people, of
reading and correspondence.”
I think Rich is right that Dickinson’s reticence to share
her poetry was not the withdrawal of a dry school marm but a savvy choice. Emily Dickinson's father was the local congressman. Dickinson had the shelter of his home as a
writer’s retreat—so long as her work didn’t embarrass or disgrace her father
and the family. Dickinson’s best choice for publishing and preserving her
revolutionary poems was to turn them into a sort of time capsule. That way her
poems could be read, understood, and appreciated in a future century—which they are.
Rich does not put much emphasis, though, on Dickinson’s love
poems. Yes, Dickinson wrote love poems, and they can be quite sexy:
Is it too late to touch you, Dear?
We this moment knew—
Love Marine and Love terrene—
Love celestial too—
If Whitman had known that poem, I wonder if he would he have
seen the parallel with one of his most sensual poems, “I Sing the Body
Electric,” where he says, “If any thing is sacred the human body is sacred.”
Walt Whitman |
I just wish that Emily could have met Walt, and they could
have sat down together in a café in Brooklyn. I imagine that she would order Darjeeling
tea and a lingonberry scone, and he would order coffee and pour some of a
flask into the steaming cup. I think that if they could have bridged the
enormous cultural gap between small town New England and the alleyways of
Brooklyn where kids played deafening ballgames, Walt and Emily would have
realized that they were both rebels in their own ways, and had more in common
than they had differences.
Zack’s most recent book of poems, Irreverent Litanies
Zack’s most recent translation, Bérénice 1934–44: An Actress in Occupied Paris by Isabelle Stibbe
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How to Get Published
Getting the Most from Your Writing Workshop
How Not to Become a Literary Dropout
Putting Together a Book Manuscript
Working with a Writing Mentor
How to Deliver Your Message
Does the Muse Have a Cell Phone?
Why Write Poetry?
Poetic Forms: Introduction; The Sonnet, The Sestina, The Ghazal, The Tanka, The Villanelle
Praise and Lament
How to Be an American Writer
Writers and Collaboration
Types of Closure in Poetry