Emily dickinson biography summary rubric
Emily Dickinson left school as a teenager, eventually living a reclusive life on the family homestead. There, she secretly created bundles of poetry and wrote hundreds of letters. Due to a discovery by sister Lavinia, Dickinson's remarkable work was published after her death — on May 15, , in Amherst — and she is now considered one of the towering figures of American literature.
Dickinson was born on December 10, , in Amherst, Massachusetts. Her family had deep roots in New England.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson (December 10,
Her paternal grandfather, Samuel Dickinson, was well known as the founder of Amherst College. Her father worked at Amherst and served as a state legislator. Dickinson ultimately never joined a particular church or denomination, steadfastly going against the religious norms of the time. Dickinson began writing as a teenager. In , Dickinson ventured outside of Amherst, as far as Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
There, she befriended a minister named Charles Wadsworth, who would also become a cherished correspondent. Among her peers, Dickinson's closest friend and adviser was a woman named Susan Gilbert, who may have been an amorous interest of Dickinson's as well. In , Gilbert married Dickinson's brother, William. The Dickinson family lived on a large home known as the Homestead in Amherst.
After their marriage, William and Susan settled in a property next to the Homestead known as the Evergreens.