Emily
Dickinson Reading Circle December 2017
Facilitated
by Margaret Freeman
An
Afternoon with Emily Seelbinder
Margaret.
Emily, I don't think, needs any introduction, does she? The article that I sent
out, which I hope some of you at least were able to read, was "The
Bible." It came out of this book, "Emily Dickinson in Context, by
Eliza Richards." So, Emily, I'll turn it over to you.
Emily.
And we were allowed very limited space for the chapter in that book; it's meant
to be a hand book. Some of you have had a chance to read the article, which
tells you what the poem that is at the center of that piece is "Of
Tribulations these are they." A little back story - that is the poem that
sent me down the Emily Dickinson rabbit hole. I was doing a study during
January term, and my professor told me to start journaling about the poem. I
had a big ledger book, and I was writing about the poem, and I was trying to
read them from end to end; I was reading through the Johnson variorum, and I
got to this poem - Johnson number 325 - and saw her note, "I spelled ankle
wrong," and I started to try to figure out why. It took me thirty years to
get to the solution that I hope is something of a solution in the chapter. It
got me into how Dickinson is reading scripture, interpreting scripture; I wrote
a paper on the gospel according to Emily Dickinson and continued to circle back
to this on a regular basis. So, I thought what we'd do is take a look at that
poem, take a look at the manuscript that leads up to this odd interpretation of
the ending of that poem, and then work our way into some of the ones that have
to do with scripture - Dickinson's treatment of Bible texts, and maybe wander
into her own Bible and see if it sheds light on how she's interpreting
scripture. I sometimes call it "editing God."
So, let's begin with "Of Tribulations
these are they," Johnson 325, Franklin 328, and then the text I'm most
interested in is "b." I don't see anyone holding the variorum, except
Margaret."
Margaret.
Yes, it's the b copy. It's in the Boston Public Library. And, the facsimile is
from the one that Emily's going to read.
Emily reads.
Of Tribulation -
these are They,
Denoted by the
White.
The Spangled
Gowns, a lesser Rank
Of Victors,
designate -
All these- did
conquer -
But the Ones who
overcame most times -
Wear nothing
commoner than Snow-
No Ornament -
but Palms-
"Surrender"
- is a sort unknown
On this superior
soil-
"Defeat"
- an outgrown Anguish,
Remembered, as
the Mile
Our panting Ancle
barely passed,
When Night
devoured the Road-
But we- stood -
whispering in the House-
And all we said -
was Saved!
[ To hear this poem read aloud, go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-i8oOQBNJw
]
I'm just going
to put the poem out there and see what bubbles up.
Margaret. I find
it interesting that she runs over two stanzas the way you read it Emily, and
the third stanza break (sic) after the first line. So, it sort of stands by
itself for a while. - is a sort unknown
Emily. On this superior soil -
Alice. Surrender is equal to defeat, is another
thing there.
Emily. And, in
the manuscript version that she sent to Higginson, those two words are in
quotation marks, so there's a slight difference there. Both the Franklin and
Johnson variorums call our attention to the Biblical allusion here, and it's a
paraphrase, I think Johnson calls it of Revelation 7. Now, we know that
Dickinson was fond of Revelation. This particular chapter in her own Bible is
marked by two dog-eared pages facing each other. It's really the only place
that that occurs in her Bible. There's a picture of those pages in Polly
Longsworth's illustrated history. You can also go to Emily Dickinson's Bible on
the Harvard site. It's been digitized, and you can turn it page by page and
search for anything you're looking for. If it's been a while since you've read
Revelation, what's happening in chapter seven is that the sixth seal has been
opened, and the seventh seal will be opened in chapter eight, and that's the
last of the seals. What happens in chapter seven is a procession through the
streets of heaven, and the guide to John describes all of the people who are
parading through include all of the tribes of Israel, and then there's a group
of people who are dressed in very plain white robes:
After this I
beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations,
and kindreds, and people, and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the
Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands; And cried
with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God who sits upon the throne, and
unto the Lamb. And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the
elders and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on their faces, and
worshiped God, Saying, Amen: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and
thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might, be unto our God forever and
ever. Amen And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, Who are these who
are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they? And I said unto him, Sir,
thou knowest. And he said to me, These are they which came out of great
tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of
the Lamb.
So, they're the Martyrs.
And in at least one interpretation - Rebecca Patterson - she calls this a
martyrdom poem inspired by various verses in Revelation, and, according to
Dickinson's biblical source, Patterson says, those worthy to wear the white
robes have not defiled themselves with sexual intercourse. That's another way
of reading the white robes; for they are virgins. That's Revelation 14:4. So
the white robes, washed in the blood of the lamb. [ Here, Emily Seelbinder
breaks into a hymn; others join in] "There is power, power, wonder-working power/ In the blood
- in the blood - of the Lamb - of the Lamb." [laughter] So, that is the Biblical context for this poem, that
moment in Revelation when the parade of martyrs begins.
Margaret. This really is a gloss on that whole section
that you just read out, isn't it? I mean, it shows how much she was actively
participating [inaudible].
Emily. Oh, and this is an echo of that "These are
they."
These are they which were not defiled with women; for they
are virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth. These
were redeemed from among men, being the first fruits unto God
and to the Lamb.
Maybe that's where the notion that priests should be
celibate comes from. ... What do you think the point of view is here? Who's
speaking? Presumably, John and his guide are having a dialogue which John is
reporting in Revelation.
Margaret. Well,
it's interesting, because the first two stanzas are clearly referring to the
Revelation procession that you describe. Then she comments on it in the third
stanza with the surrender and the defeat, and when she introduces Our panting Ancle, she introduces us
into that procession.
Wendy. And we
are Saved.
Margaret. But we- stood - whispering in the House.
So, what were we doing? We're the
procession. Who's we?
Emily. Exactly. You begin with the
procession and then identifying those who are doing the processing, and they're
distinctive because of their white robes which bear no ornament; and they carry
palms. So in one of those wonderful reversals that happen in death, it's the
plainest, the simplest, who garner those honors, so there's no decoration
whatsoever. And then that same reversal is echoed in the third stanza. "Surrender" - is a sort unknown. "Defeat" - I love this - an outgrown Anguish. And, Remembered, as the Mile/ Our panting Ancle
barely passed.
Margaret. And there are two versions of
this poem. A variant for passed is
"gained." Remembered, as the
Mile/ Our panting Ancle barely gained. And so there we're suddenly in the
house, right? - in the procession.
Wendy. What's
the house?
Margaret. The
heavenly house - the "many mansions."
Libby. So, this superior soil, is that the afterlife?
Emily. Uh-huh.
And, Dickinson plays with this notion of surrender and defeat in other poems.
You have "Success is counted sweetest/ By those who n'er succeed,"
and some of her Civil War poems in which this notion of surrender and defeat,
and then the way in which the defeated are victors. You know, "Death,
where is thy sting?" And so forth and so on; that the victory is in having
been saved, having been faithful. These are the martyrs; they surrender the
body in martyrdom. That is no longer required of them, and what might have been
perceived as defeat on Earth is now an outgrown
Anguish in heaven. I really love this image of death arriving, if you will,
an outgrown Anguish Remembered, as the
Mile, and the notion of night devouring the road. And, the image that
really rattled me for quite some time was the panting Ancle. What made the ancle panting? It's not, perhaps, the
most unusual image in Dickinson; she does this sort of compression all the time,
but, how can an ankle pant? Mine are a little slower from eating far too much
rich food over the weekend ..
Lois. Well, it's
not the ankle that's panting.
Alice. One of
the definitions is not the breath kind of panting, but like a tremor.
Margaret. Or, it
could simply be the exhaustion after a long, long, trek - the journey which is
life.
Lois. So, is she
attempting to improve on John's account of this scenario in Heaven, or is she
taking his part in attempting to speak for him? Why would she feel the need to improve
on that ...
Margaret. Why
improve? Why not say personalize?
Alice. She's
casting a net.
Lois. That's
what I'm wondering. If she's doing that she's essentially saying, "John,
you need some help here. [laughs] This
is about "You know, I know what it takes to get those white robes, 'cause
I have one, and I know about the struggle. And, perhaps she's making note and
an indirect jab at John for making it sound like such a lofty, unapproachable,
or impossible ambition, because it sets everybody apart. I don't know, it just
strikes me, particularly in the third and fourth stanza. Like you said, until
then, she's kind of just paraphrasing, but after that she takes off on her own.
She must have felt like it hadn't been said in that passage in the Bible, and
I'm wondering what it is exactly.
Emily. This is
what sent me to the manuscript. In the variorum there are two fair copies. She
uses the word "ancle" three times in her poetry, and all three times
it's spelled with a "c" by the way. there's a note to the one she
sent to Higginson, at the bottom of which she wrote "I spelt ankle
wrong." And that was the thing that grabbed me. I can hear her to this day
saying [in a child-like sing-song way] "I spelt ankle wrooong."
Margaret. OK,
but before you go into that Emily, can I just speak to what Lois said? I
wonder, Lois, whether you're having that reaction because what hangs me up, in
that last stanza, is the "but." We have the defeat and the panting
ancle and everything else, then BUT. Then ALL we said was SAVED!
Alice. Well,
she's putting us all in that group, as we read the poem.
Lois. Well,
she's most emphatically making a group statement, because she doesn't put a
comma after "but," it's But we. .....
Emily. My working
theory was that she was making another Biblical reference, as
nineteenth-century writers often did, and they sometimes make them very
obliquely. Higginson was a minister himself; he knew scripture well, and my
sense was that she was going after something connecting it to some other
scripture. The word "ancle" appears, I think, three or four times in
King James. There's one oblique reference to ancles as bracelets in Isaiah,
where he refers to tinkling ornaments worn by women; Ezekiel has the water rise
to his ankles, in the river underneath the temple, and then there's the passage
in Acts. But, none of them seems to speak to what she might be doing until - I
found that it was continued to be spelled with a c long into the nineteenth
century, when printers then began changing out their type and correcting it to
"ankle."
[A discussion of
Emily Dickinson's position on religious belief ensues]
Margaret. Now
this one [ Johnson 1545/Franklin 1577 ] she really liked, because There are
three versions of this poem.
Emily. For me
the most interesting one is the one she sent to Ned. He was ill and couldn't
make it to church, so she titles this one "The Bible diagnosed by a
boy."
Margaret. She
also wrote, "Sanctuary privileges for Ned, as he is unable to
attend."
Emily. And so
this is a kind of sermon if you will. He gets his dose of church staying at
home.
The Bible is an antique Volume -
Written by faded men
At the suggestion of Holy
Spectres -
Subjects -Bethlehem -
Eden -the ancient Homestead -
Satan -the Brigadier -
Judas -the Great Defaulter -
David -the Troubador -
Sin -a distinguished Precipice
Others must resist -
Boys that "believe" are
very lonesome -
Other Boys are "lost" -
Had but the Tale a warbling Teller
-
All the Boys would come -
Orpheus' Sermon captivated -
It did not condemn -
[ To hear this poem read aloud,
go to https://youtu.be/FGk_2BuDzSw ]
Greg. Someone pointed out once
that these characters - the Brigadeer,
the Great Defaulter, the Troubadour - the Precipice that one might be in danger of falling over - they're all
elements of Gothic novels. [general agreement]
Emily. Yes, ancient Homestead ... I just want to go into this briefly
before I [ inaudible ] the sense that the Bible would be a really great read if
it had these Gothic characters that they would like to read in boy's books. So,
if you go from there to some of the poems where she's taking biblical
characters and representing them ... let's look at Abraham to Kill him; that's Johnson 1317 and Franklin 1332. I
presume everyone knows the biblical story of Abraham and Isaac.
Margaret reads:
Abraham
to kill him
Was
distinctly told—
Isaac
was an Urchin—
Abraham
was old—
Not
a hesitation—
Abraham
complied—
Flattered
by Obeisance
Tyranny
demurred—
Isaac—to
his children
Lived
to tell the tale—
Moral—with
a mastiff
Manners
may prevail.
[ To hear this poem read aloud, go to https://youtu.be/Unzc9FDq1to ]
Emily.
This one, to me, is framed as a kind of children's rhyme, giving them the gist
of the story and the moral of the story, and the moral is hilarious - comparing
God to a mastiff. The worst a mastiff can do is drool on you - they're very
gentle dogs, but Isaac is an Urchin, Abraham is old - here's
the children's lesson, the children's sermon if you will. And, there are
several poems where she's riffing off of the biblical text and offering either
a condensation, or some sort of oblique criticism, or some sort of new angle
for that. She re-tells Jacob's wrestling with the angel in A little east of Jordan, and then in a late letter she says to
Higginson, "I will not let the go until I bless thee," and Jacob says
"I will not let the go until you
bless me." She also channels
David in I took my Power in my Hand.
Margaret.
And we also have the William Tell story, and It always felt to me—a wrong/
To that Old Moses—done—
Emily. And that's where I'm headed.
Margaret. Oh, sorry. [laughter]
Emily. The
Moses poem is a fascinating discussion of what happened to Moses at the end of
his life. That's Johnson 597, Franklin 521.
It always felt to me—a wrong
To that Old
Moses—done—
To let him
see—the Canaan—
Without the
entering—
And tho' in
soberer moments—
No Moses there
can be
I'm
satisfied—the Romance
In point of
injury—
Surpasses
sharper stated—
Of Stephen—or
of Paul—
For these—were
only put to death—
While God's
adroiter will
On Moses—seemed
to fasten
With
tantalizing Play
As Boy—should
deal with lesser Boy—
To prove
ability.
The fault—was
doubtless Israel's—
Myself—had
banned the Tribes—
And ushered
Grand Old Moses
In
Pentateuchal Robes
Upon the Broad
Possession
'Twas
little—But titled Him—to see— [ Emily reads a variant here. ]
Old Man on
Nebo! Late as this—
My justice
bleeds—for Thee!
We had a discussion of this on Friday afternoon, on
Dickinson and race and the person leading the discussion was arguing that this
is a Civil War poem and that Moses is leading the slaves out of Egypt and that
Dickinson was siding with the leader in stead of the slaves, and I said "But Moses himself was a slave!" [laughter] And in defense of Moses, the Israelites behaved very
badly! For forty Years! And he marched them through to the promised land.
[crosstalk]
Margaret. Imposing their ideology on the poetry.
Emily. Its's a poem that does have to do with slavery and
liberation of the slaves, but at the heart of it, it was done to Moses.
Wendy. And tho' in soberer moments/ No Moses there
can be Is that what is sounds like? Moses isn't real, it's all a story.
Alice. Yes,
it's all a story.
Wendy. Really
heretical. This is way out there - comparing God to a boy playing dirty.
Emily. She's
criticizing God. One of the things that I mention in the chapter on Dickinson's
Bible is that in Dickinson's lifetime Biblical criticism made a dramatic shift,
in large part because of the German Biblical scholars who were so heretical as
to say these were myths - these were perhaps historical stories, and then
treating the text as an artifact of a people and a report of the time, and this
was called "higher criticism." This trickled down into discussions in Amherst
and many other places, and I argue in the chapter that The Bible is an Antique Volume is a commentary on higher criticism
and what that brings. They invite readers to read the text in an historical
context. This was considered really quite radical in the time, but by the end
of the nineteenth century that form of biblical interpretation had really taken
over. It was being taught in the seminaries, and from looking at some of the
books that Dickinson might have consulted I've been able to determine that this
would have been something that she would have been familiar with. ... Well,
there's another poem where Moses gets mentioned in a similiar way, and it's So I pull my Stockings off. Johnson
1201, Franklin 1271.
Margaret. It's
interesting that this poem starts with "So."
Emily. And it
includes [ sings ] "Wade in the water."
So I pull my Stockings off
Wading in the
Water
For the
Disobedience' Sake
Boy that lived
for "or'ter"
Went to Heaven
perhaps at Death
And perhaps he
didn't
Moses wasn't
fairly used —
Ananias wasn't
—
Wendy. Who is Ananias?
Emily. Ananias
appears twice in Acts, and it's two characters. There are two men named Ananais
within inches of each other in your Bible. One of them is a man who is sent to
heal Saul. Actually there are three Ananais'. One is a man, with his wife
Sophira, sells his land and is going to give the funds to Peter and John, and
he holds a little back. When Peter says, Is this all of it? and the man says
yes, and Peter says, Are you sure? I'm paraphrasing - and the man falls to the
ground dead. Later his wife comes, and she's also asked the same questions,
holds something back, and she is struck dead. Later, another Ananias, who is
sent to heal Saul's blindness, which he does, and this is faithfully reported.
Then later, there's a priest named Ananias who causes people to strike Paul in
the face and to abuse him, and betrays him to the authorities to be put to
death. Which Ananias does she have in mind?
Wendy. Somebody
who wasn't fairly used.
Emily. Right,
but are any of them fairly used? Was it the one that was struck dead? [general
agreement].