Assists the staggering Mind
In an extremer Anguish
Until it footing find -
An Unreality is lent,
A merciful Mirage
That makes the living possible
While it suspends the lives.
-F903, J859, 1865
It seems clear to me that, for the most part, Dickinson purposely made her poems all-purpose, one size fits all. This one, for example, carries a very general idea, one we can all fit to our own situations: all of us struggle with doubts and insecurities about belonging and being accepted, and all of us find some kind of comfort in a fantasy that helps us deal with this and go on with life. Our doubts lead us to our illusions.
That thought is a gift from Emily. It is worth thinking about. What constitutes the merciful mirage for you? Are you suspending your real life in a fantasy?
It seems clear to me that, for the most part, Dickinson purposely made her poems all-purpose, one size fits all. This one, for example, carries a very general idea, one we can all fit to our own situations: all of us struggle with doubts and insecurities about belonging and being accepted, and all of us find some kind of comfort in a fantasy that helps us deal with this and go on with life. Our doubts lead us to our illusions.
That thought is a gift from Emily. It is worth thinking about. What constitutes the merciful mirage for you? Are you suspending your real life in a fantasy?
It’s mind-boggling to think about how many ways there are to apply this maxim. Here's one. I recently heard that Gen Z was the “parasocial” generation. I asked my 16 year old daughter Sofia what Parasocial meant. She said it basically meant a one-sided relationship with celebrities on social media.* The rise of AI “friends" is another pertinent example. In both cases real Lives are being suspended. There are countless ways to suspend reality.
Okay, let’s take a deep dive into the poem.
A Doubt if it be Us
We can apply this poem in our own particular way, but still one is always deeply curious what the poem meant to Dickinson. It’s hard to say what the impetus of this poem was though. The word “Doubt” suggests the anguish of not being a "believer." Dickinson’s struggle with her self-exclusion from the church can be seen in many of her letters and poems.
But there might be another genesis for this poem. The word “Us” may point to a relationship.
If this poem is about love, in the romantic sense of the term, then one wonders what the unreal mirage was that Dickinson escaped to? Who, are what, is the mirage for Dickinson?
Could it have been poetry? Or maybe it was a good novel? “Unreality is lent,” we read, and suddenly we think of a library. Fiction is lent to us from the library. What else could be lending this Unreality? What does it mean that it is lent to us? Are we finding the mirage or is the mirage finding us?
That makes the living possible
While it suspends the lives.
Note the contrasting meanings of “living” and “lives” here. It’s a paradox. How is “living” possible if the “lives” are suspended? The false kind of life, the unreal mirage, isn’t really LIVING. Instead, it suspends real life.
“Suspends” is a super interesting word. It has a double meaning. The Unreal mirage suspends our lives, somehow keeps them afloat, but it also causes us to suspend, or put off, really living.
I also hear an echo in this poem of the phrase that was coined by the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge in his 1817 work Biographia Literaria, which I'm sure Dickinson must have read: "that willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic faith."
We suspend our disbelief, so that we may live. But deep down? We can't believe it.
-/)dam Wade l)eGraff
*I found this insightful, from First Things:
“Parasocial relationships, ersatz intimacies, are shaping Gen Z in ways we are only beginning to understand. From the rise of finstas (secondary Instagram accounts where users post more personal, unfiltered content) to ceaseless online commentary lamenting the paucity of real-life relationships, it’s clear that Gen Z craves authenticity and connection. And yet members of Gen Z are more likely than those of older generations to bail on commitments and reflexively distrust the very peers they long to connect with. This simultaneous craving for, and retreat from, the real is symptomatic of a crisis of belonging.”