From Us She wandered now a Year,
Her tarrying, unknown,
If Wilderness prevent her feet
Or that Ethereal Zone
No eye hath seen and lived
We ignorant must be—
We only know what time of Year
We took the Mystery.
-Fr794, J890, sheet 60, early 1864
In the Franklin ordering of the poems we have now left the fascicles and moved on to some poems that were written on separate sheets of paper and were believed by Franklin to have been written in early 1864. I would've preferred to have moved onto the next fascicle as I believe Dickinson put her "keeper" poems into fascicles, which she arranged with a certain sense of order. But as this blog has, from the beginning, followed the Franklin ordering of the poems, with the project of attempting to include them all, we will tackle several before we get onto the next fascicle.
This one feels slighter than usual, but presuming that all of Dickinson's poems were written with purpose in mind, let's do our best to get a sense of what she is doing here.
Here we have a woman who "From Us...wandered" a year ago. I presume this means that she died. But it's possible that this woman merely disappeared and wandered off. It says we don't know whether the "Wilderness" prevented her feet from going forward, or it was an "Ethereal Zone."
This poem centers around the idea that no one knows what comes after death. It is a mystery. "We only know what time of Year." Maybe that's all this poem is doing, just stating that no one knows. This is, in itself, bold in a time when the majority of people professed faith in an afterlife.
What is the difference, then, between death as a Wilderness or death as an Ethereal Zone?
Both the Wilderness and an Ethereal Zone give us a sense of the unknown, though one is earthly, and one is of the ether, beyond the earth. Ethereal, according to the Dickinson Lexicon, means: Unearthly; supernatural; mystical; mysterious; unexplainable; immortal; beyond death.
So the question here seems to rest on whether when we die we simply return to the earth or transcend to some unknown zone beyond.
I think either possibility, earth or ether, is made more beautiful by Dickinson's word choices of Wilderness and Ethereal Zone.
The last line of this poem "We took the Mystery" is a pretty remarkable way of looking at death. When someone dies all we can do is take the Mystery.
The poem is a striking example of Keats' idea of Negative Capability, which he defines as "capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.”
-/)dam Wade l)eGraff
The Monk by the Sea by Caspar David Friedrich, 1808
Biographical note: "Thomas Johnson suggests that the dead woman may be Lamira Norcross, the young wife of Emily’s mother’s youngest brother. If so, the ‘us’ of the poem may include Emily’s cousins, Louise and Frances Norcross, nieces of Lamira Norcross." -David Preest
Negative capability
ReplyDelete“A theory first articulated by John Keats about the artist’s access to truth without the pressure and framework of logic or science. Contemplating his own craft and the art of others, especially William Shakespeare, Keats supposed that a great thinker is “capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.” A poet, then, has the power to bury self-consciousness, dwell in a state of openness to all experience, and identify with the object contemplated.”
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/education/glossary/negative-capability
I prefer two short and sweet explanations of negative capability
“The Emily Dickinson revealed in her works is complex and inconsistent, often contradictory, moving from ecstasy to desperation, from a fervent faith to a deep suspicion and skepticism, from humility and submissiveness to defiance and scorn. She is blasphemous as often as devout, and in her poetry God is accused of petty vindictiveness and cold indifference as often as He is celebrated for benevolence or admired for His majesty.”
Sherwood, W.R., Circumference and Circumstance. 1968.
“The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function".
F. Scott Fitzgerald. February, 1936. ‘The Crack-Up’. Esquire magazine.
Trivia:
ReplyDelete"Lamira Norcross (1836–1862) was the wife of Joel W. Norcross and a figure in the correspondence of Emily Dickinson, the famous poet. She died on May 3, 1862, in Lynn, Massachusetts."
https://www.google.com/search?q=Lamira+Norcross&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS944US944&oq=Lamira+Norcross&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOdIBBzg3MWowajSoAgCwAgE&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Franklin (1998, meta work data) felt that his estimated date for this poem, about 1864, was irreconcilable with ED's "now a year", which precluded this poem from being a commemoration of the first anniversary of Lamira Norcross's death.
However, Miller and Mitchell (2024) add an additional note supporting about Lamira Norcross as the "She":
Delete"Perhaps prompted by the wedding anniversary of Lamira and Joel Warren Norcross (January 1854) and her death in May 1862."
Cristanne Miller and Domhnall Mitchell (eds.), 2024. The Letters of Emily Dickinson. Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.
"Wilderness", in ED's biblical mind, may refer to Luke 4: 1-2 (KJV, enjambed), which describes Jesus' death-like 40-day fast while Satan temped him:
ReplyDelete"And Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from Jordan, and was led by the Spirit into the wilderness,
Being forty days tempted of the devil. And in those days he did eat nothing: and when they were ended, he afterward hungered."
EDLex defines “ethereal” as:
ReplyDelete1. Heavenly; celestial; seraphic; of spirit; existing beyond mortality
2. Unearthly; supernatural; mystical; mysterious; unexplainable; immortal; beyond death.
The first definition of “ethereal” in EDLex is “heavenly”, which suggests ED might have equated “ethereal” with “heaven”, but, as you say, Adam, she could mean some unknown zone “beyond death”, which is the last EDLex definition of ethereal.
ED, wherever you are, your name is Ambiguity, and we’re glad of it. It gives us lifetime job security.