ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


19th-Century Literature Videos 51 videos

A Christmas Carol
33104 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.

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

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...

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?

A Christmas Carol
33104 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...

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.