1951
DOI: 10.2307/361347
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Letters of Emily Dickinson

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“…What Flick meant to say is that by trying to obscure the fact of death by speaking through suffering or acquiring the whole truth, that the lucky individual may attain immortality in this life. Chase (1951) himself states that "Emily Dickinson believed that the poet was indeed possessed at the moment of utterance by that 'spectral power in thought that walks alone'" (pp. 190-91).…”
Section: Faith and Religious Convictionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What Flick meant to say is that by trying to obscure the fact of death by speaking through suffering or acquiring the whole truth, that the lucky individual may attain immortality in this life. Chase (1951) himself states that "Emily Dickinson believed that the poet was indeed possessed at the moment of utterance by that 'spectral power in thought that walks alone'" (pp. 190-91).…”
Section: Faith and Religious Convictionmentioning
confidence: 99%