Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Death in American Literature (Vol. 89) - Elizabeth A. Petrino (essay date 1994)


Death in American Literature (Vol. 89) - Elizabeth A. Petrino (essay date 1994)

Elizabeth A. Petrino (essay date 1994)

“‘Feet so precious charged’: Dickinson, Sigourney, and the Child Elegy,” Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature, Vol. 13, No. 2, Fall 1994, pp. 317-38.

[In the excerpt below, Petrino compares the treatment of children's deaths in the poems of Dickinson and Lydia Sigourney, finding Dickinson more likely to question “the validity of consoling fictions.”]

Pass to thy Rendezvous of Light,
Pangless except for us—
Who slowly ford the Mystery
Which thou hast leaped across!
Emily Dickinson(1)

Like many popular nineteenth-century elegists, Dickinson in her letters idealized children as pious exemplars, yet she was uncertain whether their early deaths offered proof of an afterlife. Like her contemporaries, Dickinson extols the dying child as a spiritual guardian, an infant-prophet whose closeness to death makes him peculiarly able to preach to adults. But rather than dwell on an imagined...

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