Saturday, 12 July 2025

E Dickinson. D

It sounds like you’re referring to a line or concept connected to Emily Dickinson’s poem “Dying is a wild night and a new road” — a striking metaphorical expression of death as both chaos and transition. While not one of her most famous standalone titles, this line is from one of her poems that captures her unique view of death.


Here’s the full version of the poem you’re referencing:




Emily Dickinson – Poem (c. 1865)

(No title, as is typical for Dickinson’s poems)


Dying – is a wild Night –

And a new Road –

The Spirit wrestles with the wound –

And the soul tries – to go –


When the Meter clicks – once –

And the Heavens are still –

We are sure – there is a finished Recollecting –

A Jealousy for Her Renowned –





Interpretation:



  • “Dying – is a wild Night – / And a new Road –”
    Dickinson likens death to a stormy, uncontrollable night—chaotic, unfamiliar—and at the same time, a new journey or path, possibly to an afterlife or new form of existence.
  • The poem continues with metaphors suggesting a spiritual struggle, and then the moment of death as sudden and final, marked by silence—“the Meter clicks – once”.
  • The final lines reflect on the idea that after death, memory stops and those left behind may feel both awe and possessiveness toward the one who’s gone.





A

Neutrinos through quarks and leptins have a symbiotic relationship with thought. Through this relationship manifest or man I Feast is available to us all. The ment/mind/value is powerful as consciousness. We are in a 13-realm fusion reactor. We as eternal beings oscillate for eternity resonance and vibration is life.

A



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