Perhaps an unusal topic for her
Perhaps an unusual topic for one of her poems, but Jesus Christ might fit all the lines. The fist stanza entirely, and then the second with the "Kingdom of Heaven" perhaps. And a Prince who was "Son to none" and instead "In Dulicate divine" would perhaps refer to Jesus consubstantiation -- that he and God were one in existence, the Son not born of man.
Emily herself said that she sometimes wished there was no immortality because it would be nice to cease to exist. That indicates that she believed, and it also encourages me to believe that she might consider the arch of her own immortality as having a certain parallelism with that of Jesus's (since it her belief would likely be that immortality is through belief in him). She often pondered the nature of human existence, thought of herself as having spiritual immortality, and perhaps explored the source of that immortality.
Perhaps an unusal topic for her
Perhaps an unusual topic for one of her poems, but Jesus Christ might fit all the lines. The fist stanza entirely, and then the second with the "Kingdom of Heaven" perhaps. And a Prince who was "Son to none" and instead "In Dulicate divine" would perhaps refer to Jesus's consubstantiation -- that he and God were one in existence, the Son not born of man.
Emily herself said that she sometimes wished there was no immortality because it would be nice to cease to exist. That indicates that she believed, and it also encourages me to believe that she might consider the arch of her own immortality as having a certain parallelism with that of Jesus's (since it her belief would likely be that immortality is through belief in him). She often pondered the nature of human existence, thought of herself as having spiritual immortality, and perhaps explored the source of that immortality.