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to the reader is the step-by-step scenario of "Funeral," a familiar ritual whose

configuration has been decreed by society. All Congregationalist funerals followed very

much the same outline, and few readers will have difficulty in recognizing it: the

mourners who pay their respects, the church service, the removal to graveyard and burial,

the tolling of the bell as friends and family leave to resume the pursuits of the living.

What makes this poem startling, of course, is that the ritual observed in real life by the

mourners is reported here by the deceased itself.

Although it is an impossible feat, seeing one’s own funeral and reading one’s own

obituary are among the most common fantasies of our culture, and they have become stock

components of our literature as well. Congregationalist ministers enjoined the members of

their congregations to reflect upon the moment of death as a spiritual exercise, to

imagine how family and friends would feel (would they be confident of meeting the deceased

in Heaven, or would they fear an eternity of separation because the life of the deceased

had given no signs of saving Grace?). Mark Twain played humorously with the remnants of

this religious notion in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer; and in the twentieth century

Thornton Wilder’s Our Town dramatized the pathos in life by using a proleptic

narrator who sees, among other things, her own funeral. The premise behind all of these is

the same: from the absolute vantage of death, we will be able to ascertain what is really

important in life–what events were significant, what values are enduring. At last,

perhaps, we can know what people really thought of us or how God will ultimately judge us:

seeing our funeral might allow us finally to understand our "self." This poem is

grotesque, and deliberately so, principally because Dickinson’s rendition of the

convention turns all the usual advantages of these literary devices against themselves. No

information about life or self can be gathered from this funeral. The mourners are

silent, muffled figures whose movement, though constant, "treading–treading,"

leads only "to and fro"; the funeral service has no sound but the relentless

"beating–beating" of the unmusical, toneless "Drum." One horror,

then, is the hollow abstraction of this retrospective view. Instead of confirming the

importance of certain particular events and values, instead of revealing the true feelings

of people for a specific soul now deceased, it suggests that nothing and no one can have

enduring value. The only lasting value is the unvarying ritual itself as ritual, and

both the reader and the proleptic Voice cling to the formal, abstract structure of the

ceremony that alone seems capable of imposing order upon death.

In ironic juxtaposition to the regularized, conventional progress of the funeral rites

is the second force in the poem, the disruptive capacity of death–a jumbling together of

all categories that apply to the speaker and serve to define identity. The funeral is

"felt"; the "Mind" becomes "numb"; the coffin is lifted

"across" the soul; being is reduced to "an Ear," as speaker and

"Silence" become members of the same "strange Race" of creatures. The

speaker’s plight in the penultimate stanza of the poem recollects Dickinson’s assertion

that Immortality is "the Flood subject," for even the possibility of

consciousness after death becomes confused and terrifying when both speaker and

"Silence" find themselves "Wrecked, solitary, here." The

"Plank" of reason in the last stanza may seem cryptic to a modern reader;

however, a contemporary reader might well have recognized Dickinson’s allusion to the

iconography of conservative, mid-nineteenth-century religious culture. In Holmes and

Barber’s Religious Allegories (1848), there is an emblem called "WALKING BY

FAITH" (modeled on the passage from II Corinthians 5:7, "For we walk by faith,

not by sight"). It depicts a man "just starting from what appears to be solid

ground, to walk upon a narrow plank [with the word 'FAITH' imprinted on it], stretched

across a deep "gulph" and which ends nobody knows whither." On one side is

life, and on the other is Heaven; only the plank of "FAITH" can provide

transport–so this emblem asserts. Yet having renounced faith, Dickinson substitutes a

"Plank in Reason," which breaks because no rational explanation can be adequate

to bridge the abyss between earth and Heaven. The poem concludes with a fall that is an

apotheosis of confusion. Perhaps it recapitulates that first fall into Hell (the poem’s

recourse to the emblem tradition supports this inference); perhaps it is the horror of a

residual self, dropping endlessly through infinite, interstellar space ("And hit a

World, at every plunge," seems to confirm this reading)–no Heaven or Hell, just

unbounded and eternal loneliness; perhaps it is a surrealistic fall into some dark,

endless, undefined interior of being (the initial placing of the funeral "in my

Brain" encourages this inference). And of all these possibilities, the first is

perhaps the most comforting because the resort to a familiar mythic world makes it at

least partially comprehensible.

This is an extraordinarily self-conscious piece of verse, with Dickinson making both

artifice and the relationship between art and life explicit concerns of the poem. Thus two

forces, the familiar order of ritual and the expanding disjunction of categories that are

used to define the speaker’s existence, function to balance each other in some measure.

Without the systematic, articulated ceremony of the funeral rites, a reader might have no

idea what the speaker was describing, and the poem would lack coherence and unity; without

the steady distortion of the terms by which self is defined, the reader could not

apprehend the full experiential anguish of the process. Yet they work together in one

respect: each in its own way tacitly argues that human beings must create their own

order, for we live in a universe that has an imperative only for annihilation.

The ultimate horror is this: that the inescapable activity of destruction derives much

of its fearsomeness from being tied to the laws of unvarying and intractable

movement–time, the third major force at work in the poem. And whereas the sequential

order of the funeral and the violating disorder of disrupted categories are conveyed

through diction, time’s indifferent ruthlessness is rendered less directly–through

absences and through syntactic and rhythmic structures. Thus the reader feels the

force of time in the poem more keenly than he or she apprehends it intellectually.

We feel it first because of the oddities in the account of the funeral. In the

latter-day Puritan culture of Emily Dickinson’s Amherst, funeral services were forms of

proto-narrative: since the ceremony was stylized, different portions of it were not of

equal importance, even though they might take equal amounts of time to enact. The

"narrative structure" of the funeral rite was dominated by the sermon, which

summed up the life of the deceased and served as the centerpiece of the ritual: everything

that preceded it was merely anticipatory; everything that followed was anticlimactic. A

funeral told the tale of transition from earth to afterlife, and its sermon was the dead

person’s final "earthly appearance." Drawing upon a tradition of many

centuries, the minister would begin with a suitable text from the Bible; he would then

select the most significant events in the dead person’s life in order to reveal his or her

essential Christian nature; finally, he would draw a conclusion concerning the spiritual

state of the newly deceased–sometimes even estimating the chances for salvation. Although

soul had been severed from body at death, society’s formal recognition of

this event did not occur until this moment, when the body lying in the casket was

explicitly distinguished from both the mortal being who had lived on earth and its soul,

now departed. The invariable chant at the graveside–"ashes to ashes, dust to

dust"–gives articulation to this recognition. Pivoting upon the sermon, then, the

funeral service balanced hope against apparent loss: all that was essential to the nature

of he departed had moved to an afterlife, saved (it was hoped) by the merciful sacrifice

of Christ; the mortal remains were thus no occasion for grief, for the "fall"

into the grave could be canceled by the "rise" into Heaven. Funeral sermons were

so important as exemplary renditions of Christian character and explicit instances of

God’s mercy that they were very often printed and published, to be read devotionally. Many

of Heman Humphrey’s and a number of Edward Hitchcock’s still survive in this form.

Any accurate recapitulation of the funeral "narrative," then, would be shaped

to mirror this structure, and such a recapitulation would of course reflect the crucial

significance of the sermon as final exegesis of identity. A merely sequential movement of

the verse would have to be modulated to highlight the central importance of this moment.

However, such is not the case n Dickinson’s version here. There is no narrative center

to this poem. Quite the opposite: there is a curiously detached, even clinical tone,

an apparent determination to tell only "what happened" in orderly, impartial,

and merely temporal sequence, a fading out at the end into terrible uncertainty. Thus,

although Dickinson employs the successive stages in the funeral ritual to establish a

recognizable sequence in the poem, she does not "shape" this temporal

arrangement to make the sermon take precedence: the "Service" is but one event

among many, each of apparently equal consequence. This is a brutal violation, this

flattening of the narrative so that temporal sequence provides the only order; and it

accomplishes one part of its effect merely through a felt absence. There is no

sermon in this service. The proleptic speaker’s individual character does not dominate

even her own funeral.

The second way a reader feels time’s force in this poem, however, is probably its

prominent feature: immutable clock-time conveyed grammatically through the driving,

implacable forward movement of parataxis. Events occurring without pause, without yielding

insight, without any logical relationship to one another, without any ordering of

importance: life is swept remorselessly along in the swift current of time, swept over the

edge, perhaps to come to rest in some unfathomed end, perhaps merely to fall forever.

There is virtually no syntactic subordination in this poem; the few instances are either

hypothetical ("As [if]") or, more commonly, temporal ("till … when …

till … then … then … then"). The insistent beat of "when" and

"then" merely reinforces the drumming tattoo of ticking time, which becomes more

insistent with each stanza and climaxes with the paratactic thumping of "And"

that is concentrated in the fifth stanza ("And … And … And … And") as the

Voice recounts its final, undefined descent beyond understanding. It is thus that the

reader is propelled forward by the driving force of time: urgent, impatient, uncaring.

Here, the metrical dominance of "eights and sixes" hymnal cadence, serves as

bitter irony–the hope offered by Christ utterly forsworn by the bleak vision of the

verse; and probably Dickinson intended a trope for metrical foot in the image of

"those same Boots of Lead, again"–death busy about his usual work of blight and

annihilation.

The somber implication of paratactic movement is by no means confined to this one poem:

it is rendered unmistakably (though unobtrusively) in "A Clock stopped–" by

"Nods from the Gilded pointers–/ Nods from the Seconds slim–"; and the

irony in that poem is that God is as completely entrapped by the inflexible nature of His

invention as mankind is. Indeed, throughout Dickinson’s work, the use of parataxis almost

always signals the inexorable drive toward death.

From Emily Dickinson. Copyright ? 1988 by Cynthia Griffin Wolff.

Karen Ford

The relationship between figurative excess and endings that lack closure suggests why

so many of Dickinson’s poems were originally published with their difficult endings

deleted (or not selected for publication at all until they were published in the complete,

variorum edition in 1955). "[I felt a Funeral, in my Brain]" (P 280) was

typically printed without its last stanza:

[. . . .]

And then a Plank in Reason, broke

And I dropped down, and down–

And hit a World, at every plunge,

And Finished knowing–then–

Yet, if we recognize the final stanza as a product of figurative escalations that are

excessive rather than standard, we begin to understand its place in the poem.

"[I felt a Funeral--in my Brain]" begins, as so many of the poems do, with an

assertion whose stability sounds unquestionable. Despite its semantic oddness, the first

line is delivered with rhetorical assurance that temporarily contains its volatile subject

matter. The sense of containment is not merely a product of orderly syntax and confident

tone, however; it also derives from the claustrophobic setting of the funeral. Though the

feeling of a funeral occurs in the speaker’s brain, the analogy suggests premature burial.

The mental state the speaker describes is not merely like a funeral in her brain, it is

like being buried alive: the heightened awareness of sounds (treading, beating, creaking,

tolling) and the sense of enclosure ("in my Brain," they all were seated,"

"a Box") combine with other evidence in the poem to suggest that the mourners

are conducting a funeral service for a speaker who is not yet dead ("My Mind was

going numb," "creak across my Soul").

The mental state described here begins as a numbing, monotonous, claustrophobic feeling

but proceeds to its opposite. If the beginning of the poem figures extreme interiority,

the ending of the poem depicts an even more disturbing exteriority whose boundlessness is

finally indescribable. The "Plank in Reason" that breaks in the final stanza is

anticipated in the shift from interior to exterior space, as though the walls, floor, and

ceiling of the room (or the sides, lid, and bottom of the coffin), all made of planks,

suddenly disappear, plunging the speaker into limitless and terrifying space.

The figurative path to the complete loss of reason, and its attendant spatial

dissolution, is difficult to follow. Comparison with the more logical sequence of a

similar poem offers an instructive contrast. "[I felt a Cleaving in my Mind]" (P

937) employs a metaphor that describes exactly what "[I felt a Funeral, in my

Brain]" enacts (that is, poem 937 says what poem 280 does):

I felt a Cleaving in my Mind–

As if my Brain had split–

I tried to match it–Seam by Seam—

But could not make them fit.

The thought behind, I strove to join

Unto the thought before–

But Sequence ravelled out of Sound

Like Balls–upon a Floor.

The word "cleaving" may abbreviate the contradictions of "[I felt a

Funeral, in my Brain]" between the description of the mental state as claustrophobic

(cleaving together) and boundless (cleaving apart). The second line establishes that the

sensation being described here is some sort of mental falling apart. The orderly

progression of thoughts, compared to a string of yarn or thread, cannot be knit or sewn

together into a coherent sequence. On the contrary, the balls of yarn (perhaps a graphic

corollary for the brain with its bundled folds and convolutions) unravel when they roll to

the floor.

Not only does this poem describe the movement toward disintegration that poem 280

undertakes to depict, but it also refers to the difficulty of such representation:

"But Sequence ravelled out of Sound" is not just a description of mental

undoing, it is an account of linguistic failure. The sequence of mental events that leads