Document Type

Accepted Article

Source

The Emily Dickinson Journal

Publication Date

2019

Volume

28

Issue

2

Page Range

106-132

Abstract

Emily Dickinson’s “There is a Languor of the Life” hints at her knowledge 1 about diagnostic and surgical approaches to bodymind pain during her time. Although the poem can be read as a metaphorical portrayal of spiritual suffering, it also demonstrates Dickinson’s familiarity with contemporary medical innovations as well as her skillful use of simile to poetically depict complex bodily states. For example, the poem describes a “languor” that envelops consciousness with a “Drowsiness” that “diffuses – / a Dimness like a Fog,” evoking literal sensations one might feel while under the influence of anesthesia.2 The poem goes on to examine the consequences that may result if pain gives way to this “fog”:

The Surgeon - does not blanch - at pain -

His Habit - is severe - But tell him that it

Rights

Copyight 2019 The Johns Hopkins University Press

Publisher Statement

Published as 2019 Delchamps. “‘The Names of Sickness’: Emily Dickinson, Diagnostic Reading, and Articulating Disability.” The Emily Dickinson Journal, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 106-132. https://doi.org/10.1353/edj.2019.0006

Included in

Fiction Commons

Share

COinS