Though Emily Dickinson spent almost all her life in Amherst, Massachusetts, her poems represent a broad range of imaginative experience. They are rich in feeling, wide in their knowledge of nature, books, and geography, and expansive in their vision. Dickinson’s training in science suggests a source for her skill in accurate observation, whether of plants and animals or the workings of her own mind. The greatest effect of her scientific studies, though, is in her experimental attitude about life’s great issues.
Release Date: January 01, 1988
Invalid Date
March 11, 2018
August 21, 2008
January 12, 2022
January 01, 1976
March 13, 2002
October 07, 2016
May 01, 2017