As with much of her poetry there exists no discernible rhyme pattern. The particular scheme is best described as ABCB – a set of four line stanzas where the second and fourth line rhyme. In the poem, the deceased narrator tells the story of the day when death came calling for her. In the first stanza, the poet claims she went on too busily to stop for death, so out of his civility he stopped for her in his carriage along with “immortality.” At first death seemed gentlemanly, but from the perspective of eternity resembles a seducer. As they begin traveling in the carriage, they pass many places and near a cemetery, the location where the writer has dwelt for centuries. In the realm of death, time elapsed into centuries, though it seems shorter than her last day when she first knew her journey progressed toward …show more content…
Dickinson wrote this poem in the first person and looks back at the moment of death. After the writer announces that she heard a fly buzz, she goes on to tell of the moments that led up to this event. She describes the silence of the room and the quietness of the people present. In the third stanza, she says she just made her final wishes when a fly interrupted. The last two sentences describe how the fly seemed to block out the light, and then all light ceased. In the end, the poem … that sound will be important, the middle of the poem emphasizes the silence as temporary, and the end of poem returns to the sound of the fly – inconsequential, not a storm at all, yet making such a