Without a quicker blood,
A sudden expectation –
A flying attitude!
I never hear of prisons broad
By soldiers battered down,
But I tug childish at my bars,
Only to fail again!
- F144 (1860) 77
There are two escapes described here. The first is the “flight” part of the fight-or-flight response. A bird will quickly fly away when it senses a cat or other threat near by. The word “Escape” triggers this response in the poet: if she just hears the word she imagines herself taking flight.
The second stanza is the more somber type of escape that is associated with imprisonment. Yes, soldiers have been able to batter down their prison walls, `a la the Bastille, but most prisoners must simply wait, day after day, year after year, for their release. And so the poet feels imprisoned. Despite the hopelessness of the attempt she still tries, in childish hope, to shake or pull the bars loose. This time the trigger for these feelings of trapped helplessness come over the poet when she hears of prisons – it reminds her of her own.
Agustín Víctor Casasola: Mirada y memoria |
One can read this as a soul being trapped in a body and wanting to fly free. Birds are typically symbols of the spirit and of freedom. But it may also remind us that life for a uniquely creative woman in her day and place would be very challenging. Especially when Father, Mother and brother exert pressure on the woman to stay home and tend the sick, the kitchen, and the garden. Although Dickinson voluntarily withdrew from larger society, eventually staying within her own property line, her real confinement was in, dare I say it?, not being a man and free to tramp about the world as her male friends did. The creative women she knew were either quite conventional or looked at askance in polite society (her friend and sister-in-law Sue). Better, perhaps, to stay at home and let the mind run free than to battle as George Eliot and other Victorian creative women did for freedom and respect. The fact that Mary Anne Evans took a male pseudonym speaks volumes about that.
Such a thoughtful explanation. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
ReplyDeletethank u for explanation
ReplyDeleteyes
ReplyDeleteWhat does attitude mean in this story?
ReplyDeleteWell, 'attitude' means the feelings, thoughts, and ideas you have about something. You might have a cocky attitude one day and a humble attitude the next. In this poem the speaker mentions a 'flying' attitude -- so that's what you want to think about.
Deletethankyou for the explanation
ReplyDeletewow you are so underrated and amazing <3
ReplyDeleteI’m just digging into Emily Dickinson, and these analyses really help me to understand and enjoy her work. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI think that in the first stanza she says that whenever she hears the word “escape” (whatever it means to her, I don’t believe that societal pressure was her main problem) it stirs hope. The second stanza states that she’s never heard of prisons battered down by soldiers. Even strong soldiers cannot achieve this. Yet she cannot help tugging at her bars and repeated failure is inevitable. It seems to me that she suggests it would be less painful if she could give up all hope and stop trying.
ReplyDeleteI personally think of this poem as more of a message of hope and resilience, even when the world seems stacked against you.
Deletee.m. cioran wouldn't agree with your interpretation
DeleteWhy wouldn't E.M. Cioran agree?
DeleteParagraph 2 Sentence 4 of Susan K’s 2011 explication, ”Although Dickinson voluntarily withdrew from larger society, eventually staying within her own property line, her real confinement was in, dare I say it?, not being a man and free to tramp about the world as her male friends did.”, precedes by a decade my borrowed Comment 3 on the previous poem, ‘She died at play’ (F141). Isn’t it telling that what ED says in in these cryptic 1860 poems precedes by 162 years Susan K’s apologetic or feigned apologetic phrase, “dare I say it"? Our culture has made some progress toward equality of the sexes in those 162 years, but we’re still a long way from the finish line.
ReplyDeleteCorrection: The previous poem was 'Exultation is the going' (F143).
ReplyDeletewhat did they mean as without quicker blood?
ReplyDeleteThe faster the heart's pulse the more quickly the blood moves. People's hearts often beat faster when they are excited or scared, and that's what she's getting at here.
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ReplyDeleteThank you for the great analysis
ReplyDelete“my bars” may also mean whatever self-imposed vexation we just can’t escape but long for release
ReplyDelete