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- Subject: English - Dickinson, "Pain has an element of blank..."
-
- Although cryptic in language and structure, Dickinson gives her work an
- instinctually vivid sense of emotion. Her examination of the feeling of
- pain focuses in on only a few of the subtler nuances of pain that are
- integral parts of the experience. She draws in on an "Element of Blank"
- that she introduces in her opening line. In exploring pain, she proposes
- that this "blankness" is a self-propagating force that is subject to the
- dynamic forces of time, history and perception, but only to an extent.
- Her first mention of "Pain" in the first line does not distinguish this
- particular emotion as being of a particular brand of pain. She substitutes
- no other words for "pain." By suggesting no other words for "pain," she
- chooses the most semantically encompassing term for the emotion. She thus
- gives her work the responsibility of examining the collective, general
- breadth of "pain." Her alternatives offer connotations that color her usage
- of "Pain": the sense of loss in "grief" and "mourning" or the sense of pity
- in "anguish" and "suffering." She chooses the lexical vagueness of "Pain"
- to embrace all these facets of the emotion.
-
- In introducing the "Element of Blank," it becomes the context that she thus
- examines pain. The exact context of "Blank" possesses a vagueness that
- suggests its own inadequacy of solid definition. Perhaps this sense of
- indefinition is the impression that this usage of "Blank" is meant to
- inspire. In this context, this "blankness" is suggestive of a quality of
- empty unknowingness that is supported by the next few lines: "It cannot
- recollect When it begun." This inability to remember raises a major problem
- with respect to the nature of "Pain;" namely whether Dickinson is choosing
- to personify "Pain" by giving it a human quality like memory, or is in fact
- negating the humanity of making it unable to remember. Several lines below,
- she suggests that "Pain" does in fact possess some sort of limited sentient
- ability in recognizing "Its Past ù enlightened to perceive." It is very
- possible that it is the "Pain" that is being enlightened or perceiving.
- These conscious acts of giving "Pain" some sort of capacity of awareness
- personify "Pain" to some extent.
-
- In continuation of "PainÆs" inability to remember, She proceeds, "It cannot
- recollect When it begun ù or if there were A time when it was not."
- "PainÆs" inability to recollect further personifies it by also making it
- subject to the human ability to forget. Dickinson thus not only personifies
- "Pain," but makes it subject to the advance of time. This temporal
- placement of "Pain", establishes "Pain" within the context of the
- progression of time by giving it a Past, a Future, and presumably, a
- Present. Although she places "Pain" within the context of time, she
- indicates it is not limited by time. "PainÆs" inability to remember its own
- origins strongly suggests an extreme span of time since its inception. This
- coupled with DickinsonÆs claim that "It has no Future ù but itself," and
- that "Its Infinite contain Its Past" indicates some connection with the
- eternal. Here, the "Infinite" suggests not only the infinite sense of
- eternity, but a more spatial sense of the cosmos and the universality of the
- experience of "Pain."
-
- This use of the future also serves the notion that "Pain" leads to more
- "Pain," continuing in DickinsonÆs reference to "Its Past ù enlightened to
- perceive New Periods ù of Pain." In this one stanza, she invokes the future
- and the past, maintaining that both are key to a cyclicality, where the
- "Pain" of the past, gives rise to the "Pain" of the present and future.
- That "Pain" contains an "Infinite" within itself supports this notion of
- "Pain" being cyclical, as it can thus remain dynamic yet eternal. That it
- is "enlightened to perceive New Periods" of the sensation of "Pain" suggests
- that a mechanism of this self-propagation involves the acknowledgement of
- past periods of "Pain." The "enlightenment" thus becomes some sort of
- impetus for the propagation of the "Pain" experience as it continues from
- the past into the future.
-
- To highlight this sense of cyclicality, Dickinson completes the poem with
- the first word: "Pain." She completes the cycle of her poem in its
- reiteration, giving it closure, but at the same time, reconnecting it back
- to its beginning. In doing so, she almost invites the reader to reread the
- poem, drawing the reader back in to reconsider her meaning. In much the
- same way, it is this reexamination that "Its Past ù enlightened" suggests.
- Enlightenment comes from some degree of analysis, and is therefore related
- to the reevaluation of the poem that Dickinson invites.
-
- DickinsonÆs description of "Pain" as having an "Infinite" also suggests a
- spatial expansiveness in addition to a temporal one. This sense of "Pain"
- being limitless echoes the broad definition of "Pain" that she suggests by
- only using the one term for the experience, and using it only twice. Within
- the context of the poem, "Pain" is her only subject, and thus encompasses
- all as far as the work is concerned. The limitlessness of "PainÆs"
- existence within time lends to its sense of overwhelming size when
- considered "Infinite." It thus suggests an almost tangible existence of
- "Pain" as a corporeal entity, spanning towards every horizon. This physical
- perception of "Pain" is not quite palpable due to its lack of physical
- description in the poem. All that is known about it is its outstanding
- size. That sense of size alone lends some sort of semi-perceptible physical
- weight to the description.
-
- In her sole focus on "Pain" within the context of the "Element of Blank,"
- Dickinson chooses such a narrow focus that it is difficult to claim she is
- putting forth a definitive, encompassing definition of pain. Instead, she
- writes about a vague, undefined experience called "Pain" that she leaves the
- reader to define. Note that a semantic distinction must be made between
- pain and the notion of "Pain" that Dickinson chooses to use. She does not
- define whether her notion of pain is emotional, spiritual or physical, or
- perhaps a combination of all three. Her treatment of "Pain" as a
- semi-cognizant entity, infinite but somehow limited, makes it an abstract,
- unique concept that necessitates its distinction as "Pain."
- She does describe "Pain" within the context of the nature of its being. By
- denoting its infinite nature, she also proposes a capacity to
- self-propagate. However, she becomes unclear in defining the limitations of
- these abilities. She explains that it has existed for so long, that it has
- no memory of its inception, but it is unclear whether that is the fault of
- "PainÆs" inability to remember or "PainÆs" infinite history. Dickinson also
- indicates that "Pain" already has a fated future, one that includes only
- more "Pain." Despite its infinite nature temporally and spatially, "Pain"
- is not infinite in a sentient sense, as it is limited by its lack of
- perception and by the passage of time.
-
- Dickinson leaves much unsaid about the experience and nature of "Pain." She
- makes no tangible references about the circumstances of her "Pain," leaving
- the reader to deal only with a indeterminate, abstract notion to relate to.
- In only relating the "Element of Blank" to its place temporally and
- spatially, her only hypothesis about the mechanism of "Pain" concerns its
- cyclicality. Her sole focus on this structure avoids discussion of any
- other aspect of the experience or sensation of "Pain."
-
-
-
-
- -another imperative from your friendly local interplanetary Imperial regime
- -sulik