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"I taste a liquor never brewed". Analysis of Emily Dickinson’s “I Taste a Liquor
Never Brewed” Emily Dickinson. What comes to mind from her name? ...
... rise ? Poem #214 "I taste a liquor never brewed", is generally considered
to be a poem of importance amongst Dickinson’s works. The ...
... major metro areas o Almost a 20% drop in Liquor Sales in ... America’s never bitter light ...
wheat ale spiced in the Belgian tradition for uncommonly smooth taste. ...
... Here is one of them: I taste a liquor never brewed, From tankards scooped in
pearl; Not all the vats upon the Rhine Yield such an alcohol! ...
... revealed that teens see more ads for liquor than they ... of course is the infamous slogan
“great taste, less filling ... to get home in one piece, I never knew what ...
Submitted by pprzman on April 1, 2007
Category: Miscellaneous
Words: 1056 | Pages: 5
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Analysis of Emily Dickinson’s “I Taste a Liquor Never Brewed”
Emily Dickinson. What comes to mind from her name? Having written nearly 1,800 poems, she was a very prolific poet and, as some consider, “a poet of dread” (Melani). Was she all that dreadful? Death is a major topic in many of her poems but I think she had a very keen sense of life as well. In Dickinson’s poem, “I taste a liquor never brewed,” she uses metaphor, symbolism and imagery to articulate her appreciation of nature.
The theme of Emily Dickinson’s “I taste a liquor never brewed” can be interpreted in several ways. Some have suggested that the “I” in the poem stands for a “hummingbird which [Dickinson] imagines to be telling about its drunken spree” (Eby 517). My interpretation of the poem is that the “I” is Dickinson herself. This gives the poem a more personal, symbolic meaning. She compares her enjoyment and pleasure from nature to that of being intoxicated.
She gets a natural high as opposed to an artificial one from a drug. Today’s society is shifting away from this feeling of nature. This poem brings us back to a time when technology was not needed to be entertained.
Dickinson uses metaphors, or comparisons, to establish the theme. The first line that is also used as the title, “I taste a liquor never brewed,” has a metaphor that one can only understand if the theme is known. Her liquor that is never brewed is nature. She is tasting nature in a sense. Dickinson continues the theme of drunkenness in the second stanza: “Inebriate of air am I / And debauchee of dew” (5-6). She is comparing her feeling for nature to being drunk by saying that the air and dew literally cause intoxication. Another example of metaphor is “Reeling, through endless summer days” (Dickinson 7). She is reeling, or staggering, like an intoxicated person from the “endless summer days” instead of an alcohol. The third stanza has a metaphor: “When landlords turn the drunken bee / Out of...
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