What does the first stanza of "Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church" suggest about the speaker’s view of religious customs?

She does not believe in creating religious customs.

She participates in religious customs in an unconventional way.

She finds religious customs to be tedious.

She participates only in religious customs that relate to nature.

Respuesta :

The correct answer is B.

From the first stanza of  "Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church" we deduce that the speaker does participate in religion but in her own way.

She prefers staying at home, rather than attending to church for the service. She sees the elements of nature that can be found in her yard as valid as the churhc's choir and big domes.

She believes that keeping the Sabbath is a matter of praying and devotion rather than merely attend a specific place at a specific time.

The answer is B. She participates in religious customs in an unconventional way.

 

EXPLANATION

 

Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, on December 10, 1830, to a prominent family that is influential to its communities. This makes her an American poet. She spent her seven years during her early age studying in Amherst Academy for and then briefly attended the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary before returning back to her family’s house. Dickinson was rather notorious for her isolation way of life. Dickinson was considered an unusual person, to the point of eccentricity.  

During her life, she developed a love for white clothing and her unwillingness to greet guests, to the point in later life to even leave her bedroom. Most of her friendship with others relied heavily on correspondence.  

Dickinson’s ways of writing poems are unique to her era. Dickinson wrote more than 1000 poems, nearly as many as 1800 during her lifetime, although only fewer than a dozen were actually published. Dickinson made use of many short lines, typically lacking titles and making slant rhyme her main delivery style. Many Dickinson’s poems revolved around the themes of death and immortality, of which she discussed many times with her friends.  

Even though most of Dickinson’s acquaintances were aware of her writings, it was not until her death when Dickinson’s sister, Lavinia discovered her cache of poems and then made her work public. Dickinson’s poems were subject to heavy editing especially when her first work was printed in 1890 by her personal Mabel Loomis Todd and Acquaintances Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Only starting from 1955 Dickinson’s original, mostly unchanged work became available by Thomas H. Johnson who published The Poems of Emily Dickinson.

LEARN MORE

If you’re interested in learning more about this topic, we recommend you to also take a look at the following questions:

Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church: brainly.com/question/8972175

Statement about poetry: brainly.com/question/4115822

KEYWORD: Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church, religious, customs, Emily Dickinson, Dickinson’s early life  

Subject: English

Class: 10-12

Subchapter: Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church