Emily Dickinson
- Question: How many of Dickinson’s 1,789 poems were published during her lifetime?
- Answer: Dickinson circulated her poems among family and friends but seems to have been ambivalent about publishing them for a wider audience. The few poems that did appear in print were published anonymously and may have been submitted by acquaintances of Dickinson’s without her knowledge.
- Question: What kind of animal was Dickinson’s beloved pet Carlo?
- Answer: Carlo, a Newfoundland, lived from 1849 to 1866. He makes a brief appearance in the poem that begins “I started Early—Took my dog—And visited the Sea—“
- Question: Which of the following poets was NOT a significant influence on Emily Dickinson’s poetry?
- Answer: Although today Dickinson and Whitman are generally held to be the two great 19th-century American poets, Dickinson had no interest in Whitman’s work. She dismissed it in a letter to Thomas Wentworth Higginson in 1862, writing, ''You speak of Mr. Whitman—I never read his book—but was told that he was disgraceful.''
- Question: Fill in the blank: “Hope” is the thing with ________
- Answer: “ ‘Hope’ is the thing with Feathers—/ That perches in the soul—/ And sings the tune without the words—/ And never stops—at all—”
- Question: Which American essayist did Dickinson carry out a lifelong correspondence with, after seeking his opinion about her poetry?
- Answer: After Dickinson’s death, Higginson coedited two collections of her poetry.
- Question: What was Emily’s younger sister’s name?
- Answer: Lavinia was two years younger than Emily. The two were extremely close, and after Emily’s death Lavinia was one of the principal proponents of publishing Emily’s poems.
- Question: Fill in the blank: I heard a Fly buzz—___________
- Answer: “I heard a Fly buzz—when I died—/ The Stillness in the Room/ Was like the Stillness in the Air—/ Between the Heaves of Storm—”
- Question: Fact or Fiction: Emily Dickinson began writing poetry only late in her life.
- Answer: She began writing as an adolescent, and the most productive years of her career were the early 1860s, when she was in her 30s.
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Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (neg. no. LC-USZ62-90564)
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (neg. no. LC-USZ62-90564)