ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


19th-Century American Literature Videos 35 videos

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
2299 Views

Should you ever find yourself on a raft, floating down the Mississippi River, you're going to want something to do. Reading Mark Twain's classic, T...

Moby-Dick
19421 Views

The book is as big as the whale.

Moby-Dick (Spanish)
268 Views

Moby-Dick - una ballena extraña. Nuestro amigo capitán Ahab la había perseguido para años, pero no es el mejor lider en el mundo. Piensas que p...

See All

ELA 11: 4.10a Emily Dickinson 89 Views


Share It!


Description:

We're going to pardon Emily Dickinson's sister for publishing Em's personal diary after she died... We did get some pretty sweet poetry out of the deal.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

It was a dark and stormy night in Amherst Massachusetts

00:08

if you happen to go by the old Dickinson place and look at an upstairs window at

00:13

just the right moment you might notice a pale woman dressed all in white eek a [Man stood in front of house with umbrella sees eerie white figure in a window]

00:19

ghost whoops scratch that it's just Emily being Emily yeah. Born in Amherst

00:25

in 1832 the family that founded and pretty much ran Amherst College, Emily Dickinson

00:30

spent her early years skipping school because of her fragile physical

00:33

condition. When her tummy ached she couldn't just pop a Rolaid... As a young [Edward Dickinson holding a pile of homework whilst Emily is laid in bed]

00:38

woman she went to Mount Holyoke College but she was put off by the school's

00:42

Christian evangelical efforts organized religion just didn't you know jingle

00:47

her keys. And so she ditched uni for a life at home with her family, fewer

00:52

toga parties but otherwise much better. As the oldest unmarried daughter Emily [Emily stood with her family, Edward still has the large pile of homework]

00:57

was expected to look after her parents and unmarried brother. She was expected

01:01

to do chores and to keep the garden from turning into a jungle with that

01:05

kind of mundane and housebound experience is it any wonder that Emily

01:08

took to writing poetry? Well because her life was so boring it wasn't too long

01:13

before Emily got serious about her poems she published a few of them in a paper

01:17

owned by a friend. She also befriended literary critic Thomas Wentworth

01:21

Higginson by mail and earned herself a reputation as one of the nuttiest pen [Thomas Higginson opens an envelope from Emily full of nuts]

01:26

pals ever. By the late 1860's Emily was becoming more and more reclusive she'd

01:31

chill with her family and nieces and nephews but well pretty much nobody else

01:35

she really preferred to be by herself writing poetry, maybe doing a sudoku or two...

01:40

In 1874 for Emily started losing all the people she loved great for her poetry

01:45

bad for her heart, her dad died then her mom, then her favorite nephew and a [Emily cries in front of grave stones]

01:50

Massachusetts Supreme Court justice she just may have been in love with. Well

01:54

Emily died of kidney disease in 1886, it was after her death that

01:59

her sister Lavinia found her poems. Emily had rarely published her work when she

02:03

was alive because she hated the whole publishing side of things. Lavinia

02:07

however had no qualms about printing Emily's poetry. [Lavinia holds a collection of Emily's poems]

02:11

Lavinia knew how to market.. While the people of Amherst found Emily's behavior so odd

02:15

they nicknamed her the myth her poems are about things that everybody thinks

02:19

about like self-identity, death, immortality and love. They're also [Boy reading Emily Dickinson Poem's book has thought bubbles]

02:24

short which is great for when you need a poem on the go. Try one.

Related Videos

A Christmas Carol
33105 Views

How did Scrooge go from being naughty to nice so quickly, and why? (Hint: contrary to popular belief, it has nothing to do with the ghost of Santa...

The Tell-tale Heart
937 Views

What would YOU do if the heart of the person you buried under the floorboards started making noise? Only one way to find out... (Note: Shmoop does...

Lady of Shalott
441 Views

Meet the Lady of Shalott. Not to be confused with the Lady of Shallot, who is frequently in a pickle.

ELA 11 5.1: Harriet Jacobs
136 Views

Harriet Jacobs' narrative gave Americans an unprecedented account of what it meant to be a fugitive of slavery. Check out this video for more about...

ELA 11 5.2: William Lloyd Garrison
108 Views

Oh, William Lloyd Garrison and his radical ideas... like... you know... freedom and equality. Weird, right?