Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123
Results 31 to 44 of 44

Thread: Emily...big hoax?

  1. #31
    It's an overall feeling. The poems commonly attributed to her practically scream "Hoax!!"

    Whilst trying to fight off this naturally occuring phenomenon, a little whisper starts tickling my ear . . . "Fraud, fraud, fraud . . ."

    Definitely the biggest hoax in literary history . . . that I've encountered so far, anyway.
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



  2. #32
    Alja
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Cork, Ireland
    Posts
    12
    Ok I just worked out the perfect way to settle this debate, and what's more to stay completely in character with the general character of the discussion:

    Wilfred, you're a Hoax!!!
    You're a Hoax ShoutGrace!!!!!

    That feel good eh?

  3. #33
    It didn't do much for me . . . but I hope it was good for you.

    It's still an honor to be in the same hoaxish class as Dickinson . . . maybe I'll turn into a really famous hoax and have people remember my alleged poetry long after I've departed.
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



  4. #34
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    2,429
    Blog Entries
    4
    Quote Originally Posted by ShoutGrace View Post
    He's not out of the woods either . . . I greatly suspect his hoaxery as well.
    Well let me say Shoutgrace’s empty claim of Emily Dickinson as being a hoax is less believable than Thomas Higginson’s recount of correspondences with Emily Dickinson.

  5. #35
    Vezara
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Narnia - wishing
    Posts
    2

    Predictable

    Just a thought...I think the author of this thread just doesn't have anything better to do... and that he/she just wants to get some attention, that's all. It is indeed attention-catching if you suddenly out-of-the-blue claim that someone notoriously famous is a hoax, especially someone who a lot of people admire.

    Poor guy! Maybe we should just all say "Hi!" to him just to make his day.

  6. #36
    Pièce de Résistance Scheherazade's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Tweet @ScherLitNet
    Posts
    23,903
    Quote Originally Posted by Vezara View Post
    Just a thought...I think the author of this thread just doesn't have anything better to do... and that he/she just wants to get some attention, that's all. It is indeed attention-catching if you suddenly out-of-the-blue claim that someone notoriously famous is a hoax, especially someone who a lot of people admire.

    Poor guy! Maybe we should just all say "Hi!" to him just to make his day.
    Please do not personalise your arguments.
    ~
    "It is not that I am mad; it is only that my head is different from yours.”
    ~


  7. #37
    yes, that's me, your friendly Moderator 💚 Logos's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Posts
    6,508
    Blog Entries
    19
    Quote Originally Posted by Vezara View Post
    Just a thought...I think the author of this thread just doesn't have anything better to do...
    I guess "Wilfred" did find better things to do: Last Activity: 01-31-2004 10:52 PM
    Blame it on ShoutGrace for resurrecting this 'gem' of a 2+ yr old topic

    Oh and Emily was very much a real person according to the most comprehensive genealogical site in the world http://www.familysearch.org/
    Pics of her gravestones on findagrave.com "called back on 15 May 1886"
    Forum » Rules » FAQ » Tags » Blogs » Groups » Quizzes » e-Texts »
    .
    📚 📚 📒 📓 📙 📘 📖 ✍🏻 📔 📒 📗 📒 📕 📚 📚 📚 📚 📚 📚 📚
    .

  8. #38
    Registered User WriterAtTheSea's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Somewhere between reality and creativity... Whether East or West, living at the SEA suites me best!
    Posts
    53
    Blog Entries
    47

    Emily a Hoax?

    I would have to concur with Logos...I have no reason to suspect or believe that Emily was anything but the real deal, and she was a heck of a good poet to say the least.

    Here is an interesting little ditty. It is an exerpt available through "Project Muse."

    Mitchell, Domhnall 1962- "Emily Dickinson, Ralph Franklin, and the Diplomacy of Translation"
    The Emily Dickinson Journal - Volume 8, Number 2, Fall 1999, pp. 39-54
    The Johns Hopkins University Press

    Excerpt

    On June 3rd, 1996, the Jones Library in Amherst, Massachusetts paid $24,150 to Sotheby's for an "unpublished poetical manuscript" by Emily Dickinson which was discovered afterwards to have been counterfeited by Mark Hofmann, the Utah forger and double murderer. Before this knowledge became public, however, and especially during the period when funds were being raised to make a bid on behalf of the Library, the appearance of a rare autograph poem generated considerable excitement. The discovery was additionally timely given the increasing levels of attention being paid to Dickinson manuscripts generally. Briefly stated, the assumption in many recent critical works is that studying Dickinson in any standard typographic edition is effectively to read her in translation, at one remove from her actual practices. More specifically, it has been claimed that line arrangements, the shape of words and letters, and the particular angle of dashes, are all potentially integral to any given poem's meaning, making a graphic contribution to its contents. 1 For people working on characteristics of Dickinson's poetry in manuscript form, then, the newly found lyric seemed to provide a novel opportunity for assessing the status of such characteristics.

    Presupposing that the text was genuine, and that it would shortly receive close critical attention in a variety of scholarly publications, one of the questions facing the reader was how best to present reproductions of the work in other, textual and electronic, environments. This challenge was a miniature counterpart to the major and genuine difficulties Ralph Franklin had been working with for more than three decades. Franklin himself had approached the problem of representing the integrity of Dickinson's originals in different ways.
    Our passions are not too strong, they are too weak. We are far too easily pleased.

    ~C.S. Lewis





    http://michellerichmond.com/fictionattic/?page_id=9

  9. #39
    Quote Originally Posted by ktd222 View Post
    Well let me say Shoutgrace’s empty claim of Emily Dickinson as being a hoax is less believable than Thomas Higginson’s recount of correspondences with Emily Dickinson.
    What if I write a bunch of letters with a person named Emily Dickinson and have her admit she is a hoax? Will that convince you?

    Quote Originally Posted by Vezara View Post
    Just a thought...I think the author of this thread just doesn't have anything better to do... and that he/she just wants to get some attention, that's all.
    They do indeed want attention . . . to be directed towards this briiliantly constructed hoax!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Vezara
    Poor guy! Maybe we should just all say "Hi!" to him just to make his day.
    Darn, Logos got there before I could:

    Quote Originally Posted by Logos View Post
    I guess "Wilfred" did find better things to do: Last Activity: 01-31-2004 10:52 PM
    Happy thoughts are never a bad thing, however. I'm sure Wilfred would appreciate it.

    Quote Originally Posted by Logos
    Blame it on ShoutGrace for resurrecting this 'gem' of a 2+ yr old topic
    Or thank ShoutGrace for bringing this atrocity to public attention once again!

    Quote Originally Posted by Logos
    Oh and Emily was very much a real person according to the most comprehensive genealogical site in the world http://www.familysearch.org/
    Pics of her gravestones on findagrave.com "called back on 15 May 1886"
    I bet you these are the same kind of people who will try and tell you that Jim Morrison and Elvis are dead.
    Last edited by ShoutGrace; 10-11-2006 at 08:55 PM. Reason: smileys!
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



  10. #40
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    2,429
    Blog Entries
    4
    What if I write a bunch of letters with a person named Emily Dickinson and have her admit she is a hoax? Will that convince you?
    I doubt you could to any degree mimic printed letters by her. Go ahead, I'll be waiting to read those letters.

  11. #41
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    2

    Help, I don't understand any of Dickinson's Poems'

    This is my first time in this forum and I am in need of some guidance. I'm to write a 1-page paper on one of the following Emily Dickinson poems.


    A Light exists in the Spring
    A narrow fellow in the grass
    Apparently with no surprise
    As imperceptibly as grief
    Because I could not stop for death
    "Faith" is a fine intervention
    I died for Beauty-but was scarce
    I felt a funeral, in my brain
    I heard a Fly buzz-when I died
    I like a look of agony
    I like to see it lap the miles
    I never saw a moor
    I taste liquor never brewed
    It sifts from Leaden Sieves
    Much madness is divinest Sense
    One dignity delays for all
    The last night that she lived
    There is no Frigate like a book
    There's a certain slant of light
    There's been a death in the opposite house
    There are the days when Birds come back
    Twas warm-at first-like Us


    I'm to note the theme of each, the similar subjects and viewpoints. I've read more than half of these and I'm totally confused. I was the same way with some of Nathaniel Hawthorne's novels, but after I read them over and over, I caught on. No such luck with these poems. I would appreciate a guide in the right direction; I just need a little guidance in understanding them.

  12. #42
    Quote Originally Posted by “NANCY1982”
    This is my first time in this forum and I am in need of some guidance.
    A big welcome to you then Nancy!

    Quote Originally Posted by “NANCY1982”
    I've read more than half of these and I'm totally confused.
    That makes a lot of sense to me. Have you read the subject title of this thread?

    Quote Originally Posted by “NANCY1982”
    I was the same way with some of Nathaniel Hawthorne's novels, but after I read them over and over, I caught on.
    Well, naturally. Hawthorne isn’t a gigantic fraud.

    Quote Originally Posted by “NANCY1982”
    I would appreciate a guide in the right direction;
    First I would ask you to open your mind and start thinking like a heroic iconoclast.

    Quote Originally Posted by “NANCY1982”
    I just need a little guidance in understanding them.
    The first step is a proper understanding of the word ‘hoax’. Do you have a dictionary handy?
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



  13. #43
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    2

    I guess I'm in the wrong thread

    Well thanks ShoutGrace, I guess I'm in the wrong thread.

  14. #44
    Quote Originally Posted by “NANCY1982”
    Well thanks ShoutGrace, I guess I'm in the wrong thread.
    It’s no problem at all.

    Whether or not you’re in the wrong thread depends on your intentions . . . there is always time available between homework problems to participate in some enlightening defrauding activities.

    I sent you a PM by the way.
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123

Similar Threads

  1. Emily Dickinson "The Last Night That She Lived"
    By Azn in forum Dickinson, Emily
    Replies: 18
    Last Post: 09-12-2011, 03:59 AM
  2. Emily Dickinson
    By mono in forum Dickinson, Emily
    Replies: 26
    Last Post: 05-07-2007, 07:33 PM
  3. Emily of New Moon
    By New_Moon in forum Book & Author Requests
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 05-03-2005, 01:32 PM
  4. HB Emily
    By simon in forum General Chat
    Replies: 18
    Last Post: 06-07-2004, 11:56 AM
  5. Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
    By american_bad_angel1407 in forum Poems, Poets, and Poetry
    Replies: 16
    Last Post: 08-01-2003, 11:32 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •