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Hope Is The Thing With Feathers By Emily Dickinson

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Hope Is The Thing With Feathers By Emily Dickinson
Without hope what would we do? It gets us through our most difficult times, and gives us something to hold onto when there's nothing. Emily Dickinson's Hope is the thing with Feathers describes what hope does for us. The poem's theme is that hope is always there, and gets us though our toughest times, but never asks for anything in return.
In the very first stanza Dickinson describes what hope is. "Hope is thing with feathers, that perches in the soul (1-2)." In this quote, the reader can identify that Dickinson metaphorically describes hope as a bird. Throughout the poem, the bird metaphor is continuously used. Also in the first stanza there is textual evidence about how hope, is always there. "And sings the tune-without the words, and never stops at all (3-4)."
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“And sore must be the storm, that could abash the little bird, that kept so many warm (6-8)." This quote shows that for something to overcome hope, it has to be forceful and strong.
In the last stanza, the author talks about how hope is everywhere. "I’ve heard it in the chilliest land, and on the strangest sea (9-10)." In this excerpt is conveys to the reader that hope never asks for anything in return, even though it has done so much for us. "Yet, never in extremity, it never asked a crumb of me. (11-12)"
Hope is something familiar and reliable. It is always there, and we can count on it all the time. No matter how much it gives to us we will never be able to repay the debt of gratitude we owe to

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