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Encyclopedia > Identification of Emily Dickinson Poems

Identifying Emily Dickinson's poems presents challenges. Though she wrote over 1700 poems (1,775 exactly), Dickinson only provided titles for about 20. Other issues have been introduced due to the convoluted history behind the publication of her work. There are two commonly used strategies for referring to one of her poems, but both have limitations. This article does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...


One strategy is to identify the first line of the poem. However, different editions of her poems have variations even in their first line, so this approach is not foolproof.


The second strategy is to use "Johnson Numbers", first assigned by Dickinson editor and biographer Thomas H. Johnson in 1955. Johnson's numbering was an attempt to identify the approximate chronological order in which the poems were composed. Although some of his chronology has been superseded by later scholarship, the numbering scheme of his edition of the poems still represents a common identification system among Dickinson scholars. The 1998 variorum edition of Dickinson's poems, edited by R.W. Franklin, re-ordered and re-edited Dickinson's poems; increasingly, scholars refer to Franklin's numbers as well as or instead of Johnson's. A Variorum is a work that collates all known variants of a text. ...


Although many conflicting editions of Dickinson’s poems are available on the internet, a useful starting point is the version of Dickinson’s poems available at Project Gutenberg.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Emily Dickinson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2918 words)
Dickinson was born in Amherst in western Massachusetts to a prominent family.
William Austin Dickinson ( 1829 – 1895), usually known by his middle name, was her older brother, later married her friend Susan Gilbert in 1856 and made his home next door to the house in which Emily lived most of her life.
After a possible short-lived romance with Emily Fowler circa 1850, some conjecture that the first major love interest of Dickinson's life was Susan Gilbert, a schoolteacher whom Dickinson fell in love with in 1851 and to whom she wrote numerous love letters.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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