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  1. Dickinson uses the image of the stopped clock to reflect on the ending of a life and what this means. The clock in the poem is a small grandfather clock: a detail we can deduce from the fact that it has a pendulum (as grandfather clocks do) and the fact that it doesn’t sit on a mantelpiece. The clock is situated in a shopman’s window. Summary.

  2. A Clock Stopped -- Not The Mantel’s. In this poem, life (and the end of it) are compared to a clock winding down and to a puppet dangling from a string. Repeatedly, Dickinson reduces life...

  3. Apr 5, 2024 · April 5, 2024. The song "A Clock Stopped -- Not The Mantel’s" by Emily Dickinson conveys the idea that not everything can be fixed or controlled by human skill or effort. The imagery of a stopped clock symbolizes the inevitability of time's passing and the limitations of human power.

  4. Emily Dickinson. A Clock Stopped Not The Mantel’s. A clock stopped not the mantel’s Geneva’s farthest skill Can’t put the puppet bowing That just now dangled still. An awe came on the trinket! The figures hunched with pain, Then quivered out of decimals Into degreeless noon.

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  6. Mar 14, 2023 · Some people might say that the clock stopped because Emily Dickinson was no longer alive, and thus the mantel was empty. Others might say that the clock stopped because Dickinson was no longer able to write, and the mantel represented her creative output.

  7. Exploiting the age-old-superstition of a person dying when a clock stops, and using the conventional comparison of life to a clock. Emily Dickinson portrays death as a sudden breakdown of a Swiss-made clock, indeed, the Swiss-clock metaphor controls the whole poem.

  8. The enigmatic poet is remembered as a recluse, rarely leaving the Dickinson estate. While she did receive callers at her home, conversations were often held from opposite sides of a closed door.

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