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Emily Dickinson is, according to the Poetry Foundation, “one of America’s greatest and most original poets of all time.” Many people are familiar with at least one or two of her poems, such as “Because I Could Not Stop For Death” or “Hope Is the Thing With Feathers.” However, despite the fame she enjoys today, in life she was something of a recluse, remaining in obscurity beyond the circle of her friends and acquaintances with whom she shared some of her poems — the vast majority of which were only published posthumously. This past December 10 was the 187th anniversary of her birth, so we take a moment here to share 10 interesting facts about her life …
1. She spent the last 15 years of her life locked up in her house. Historians do not know for sure the reason for her isolation. Some believe it was because it gave her greater autonomy while writing; others maintain that it was because she suffered from anxiety and/or depression, like her mother.
2. Only between seven and 10 of her poems were published while she was alive, and the majority were published anonymously and without her consent. After she died, it was her younger sister, Lavinia, who found all the notebooks with her poems in her room.
3. One of the books that left a mark on her life was Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë.
4. She was not at all sociable. She never married, never had children, and did not even like to see her friends in person; rather, she preferred to communicate with them and with her family through letters (despite the fact that her brother lived next door).
5. She loved gardening. On her family’s property, she planted hundreds of flowering plants and trees of all kinds. She likewise personally took care of her greenhouse. Thus, it is not at all surprising that she makes references to plants in several of her poems.
6. It is a myth that she only wore white clothing. While it is true that, before dying, she was often seen wearing a white dress, and asked her family that she be buried in a coffin of the same color, in her letters she also refers to a brown dress, and there are photographs of her wearing dark clothes.
7. Although she studied at a college for women that sought to instill religious faith and went regularly to church until she was 30 years old, she had a conflicted relationship with the faith of her family and society (mostly Congregationalist); as an adult, she did not identify as Christian, and her poems reflect at times a certain preference for science. Nonetheless, her poems also reveal her belief in the existence of God and the realm of transcendence, and a complex, albeit unconventional, spirituality.