Literary Analysis
April 1, 2009
Success and Comprehension: Akin, or Adversarial?
While Emily Dickinson writes of success as a sort of ethereal nectar, she also condemns it by elevating the idea of success to a virtually unattainable plateau. Dickinson parallels success with a group of select few who are able to actually identify and appreciate it: the defeated. The notion of comprehension seen within Success is Counted Sweetest prevails throughout the entire poem. While Dickinson seems to portray comprehension as a means to an end, she is in fact showing us a literary mirror in comprehension’s stead: The reader then sees what the reader wishes to see. In doing so, rather than seeing success through comprehension, we are shown victory through loss. One question remains however; is comprehension a tool to understanding victory, or achieving it?
Read the Poem: "Success is Counted Sweetest".
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Success is Counted Sweetest (Essay In Progress)
Posted by Benjamin Bowes, B.A. at 6:43 PM
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1 comments:
Ahh, the beauty of essays "in progress", when you're not a student anymore. Finally I can say: "I don't feel like it right now" with a smile!
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