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Emily Dickinson By Emily Dickinson

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Emily Dickinson By Emily Dickinson
This poem by Emily Dickinson conveys that beauty doesn't last. It fades with time and is not very important in life. However truth is something that lasts forever, it is not a physical thing that will wear away with the years. In the poem, beauty and truth have been buried in adjoining rooms, they converse and call each other brethren but in the end, they both fade away and decay into the ground. The effect of this poem is to show that aspects of the human life, our ideals, feelings, and thoughts, are erased by death. Dickinson creates a scene that is frightening and comforting and portrays a speaker who is untroubled by her state. This poem is a free verse, only the 2nd and 4th lines in the first stanza rhyme. The first and third lines in

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