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Brief Biography of Emily Dickinson
Emily
Dickinson was born on 10 December 1830 in Amherst, in western Massachusetts,
and died there on 15 May 1886. Her parents were Edward Dickinson
(1803-1874) and Emily Norcross Dickinson (1804-1882). The family
included three children: Austin (1828-1895), Emily, and Lavinia
(1833-1899). Most of the family belonged to the Congregational Church,
though the poet herself never became a member. The Dickinsons were
well-off and well-educated. Both Edward and Austin were college
graduates, leaders in the community and of Amherst College. Edward
Dickinson was a Whig (later a Republican) representative to state
and national legislatures. Emily had a strong secondary education
and a year of college at South Hadley Female Seminary (later Mount
Holyoke College).
The poet was born in, and died in, a house called the Homestead,
built by her grandfather Samuel Fowler Dickinson in 1813. This house
was sold out of the family, however, in 1833, and not re-purchased
by Edward Dickinson till 1855; so most of the poet's younger years
were lived in other houses.
After her years at school, Emily Dickinson lived in the family home
for the rest of her life. She cared for her parents in their later
years and was a companion to her sister Lavinia, who also stayed
"at home" for her entire life. Neither sister married. The extended
Dickinson family included Austin's wife Susan Huntington Gilbert,
who lived for many years next door in the house called The Evergreens,
and Susan and Austin's three children.
The myth, of course, is of Dickinson as a reclusive spinster-poet,
brooding over a deep romantic mystery in her past. The realities
are more mundane. Especially among relatively wealthy families in
19th-century Massachusetts, it was far from unusual for grown women
simply to keep house as a primary occupation, neither marrying nor
working outside the home. The thing that sets Dickinson apart from
other women of her class and generation is simply her poetic gift,
something attributable more to nature and culture than to some emotional
trauma.
We know much of Dickinson's life through her correspondences. She
maintained a lifelong correspondence with Susan Dickinson, even
though they were next-door neighbors; this correspondence, preserved
by Susan, is the source for many of the poet's manuscripts. But
Emily Dickinson also corresponded with school friends, with her
cousins Fanny and Loo Norcross, and with several people of letters,
including Samuel Bowles, Dr. and Mrs. J.G. Holland, T.W. Higginson,
and Helen Hunt Jackson.
The central events, then, of Dickinson's life are those that are
central to the lives of most writers: she wrote. She compiled a
manuscript record of nearly 1,800 poems, along with many letters.
In or around 1858 she began to keep manuscript books of her poetry,
the "fascicles," hand-produced and hand-bound. In the early 1860s
she produced hundreds of poems each year. In 1864 and 1865, failing
eyesight, which impelled her to make two extended visits to Cambridge,
Massachusetts for medical treatment, slowed her production of manuscript
books. But her production of manuscripts continued at a slower pace
until her last illnesses in 1885-86.
Though she wrote hundreds of poems, Dickinson never published a
book of poetry. The few poems published during her lifetime were
anonymous (see Publishing History). The reasons why she never published
are still unclear. A myth promoted by William Luce's play The Belle
of Amherst (1976) is that Higginson discouraged her writing; however,
it is probably not the case that Dickinson met with rejection from
the literary world. For one thing, Higginson was instrumental in
getting her poetry published soon after her death, suggesting that
her reluctance and not his disapproval was the barrier to him doing
this earlier. Also, both Bowles and Hunt Jackson arranged for anonymous
publication of individual poems by Dickinson during the poet's lifetime.
At Hunt Jackson's suggestion, Thomas Niles of Roberts Brothers publishing
house tried to get the poet to submit a volume of poems for publication
in 1883; she declined.
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