Response:
I have read numerous poems of Emily Dickinson and I have discovered that death is a subject that poses a potential threat in the verse of Emily Dickinson and maybe same topic is displayed by Dickinson in her poem "I heard a Fly buzz – when I died". This isn't only a poem about death; it's a poem about the occasion of death and the snapshot of dying. When the poem starts the speaker is as of now dead and portraying her experience of dying. She portrays a stillness, and silence in the room, as in the focal point of a tempest (hurricane). The poem's speaker recommends that there is a snapshot of total quiet between the tempests of life and death (Dickinson, Line 1, 4). This opening of the poem drives …show more content…
The 'blue' of line 13 might be suggestive of her longing for the unceasing or immortal. Be that as it may, with a dash all of a sudden giving a swing to the thought, the stumbling, buzzing fly comes into the scene. It interferes with her and the light, emblematically implying that it separated her and the light of reason and consciousness. The color blue is maybe utilized ironically with the fly that is normally representative of mortality, death and rot (Line, 13). This poem manages Dickinson's repetitive distractions with death. She composes this poem from a perspective after she has died. The persona depicts the experience of dying (Line, 12). She is depicting the last encounters and sensations before the correct snapshot of death. There is difference over the representative centrality of the fly and its relationship to the death of the persona. Albeit many individuals claim to come back from close death encounters with stories of life after death, nobody has ever possessed the capacity to legitimately portray the snapshot of death itself (Line, 12). Dickinson offers her own particular sight into what is birth a typical and incredible riddle of human experience; she investigates the secret and interest of death