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Emily Dickinson's Hope Is A Thing With Feathers

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In “Hope is a Thing with Feathers”, using a bird to symbolize hope, Emily Dickinson conveys that hope is always present encouraging people. By describing that hope, a “thing with feathers”, “perches in the soul”, for example, Dickinson implies that since a person can’t detach from their soul, hope always remains in everyone (2). Next, when Dickinson explains that the bird “never stops” “sing[ing]”, by using the bird’s song to represent encouragement, she implies that hope, or the bird, never stops inspiring a person (4). Since it takes an extreme situation, “a sore storm”, to destroy a person's hope or “abash the bird”, Dickinson also implies that generally, hope always remains present (6). Explaining that a person can hear the bird’s song “in the chillest land” and on the “strangest sea” Dickinson, describing the entire surface of the world, thus suggests that everywhere a person goes, hope can boost him or her (9). Lastly, because the bird doesn’t “ask [for] a crumb” in return for its song, Dickinson thus implies that hope asks for nothing in return so therefore anyone can obtain it (12). …show more content…
Along with supporting Addy’s interpretation, I also take Longfellow’s description of the reaper as the author trying to convince humans to welcome death by exhibiting the compassionate reaper as an “angel”

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