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Emily DickinsonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
“I’m Nobody! Who are you?” by Emily Dickinson (ca 1861)
Like “We never know how high we are,” this poem is something of a puzzle. Dickinson upends conventions about what it means to be a somebody and a nobody. In Dickinson’s world, the two switch places. It’s greater to be nobody than somebody. A nobody is a somebody, and a somebody is a nobody. This poem spotlights the depth of Dickinson's trickiness and subversiveness. Read alongside "We never know how high we are," this poem helps demonstrate why a straightforward interpretation of heroism is hard to pull off. As with a nobody and a somebody, a hero can be a number of things.
“The Brain—is wider than the Sky” by Emily Dickinson (ca 1862)
This poem supports a reading of “We never know how high we are” in which Dickinson casts off the warping cubits. In “The Brain—is wider than the Sky,” Dickinson declares that the human mind is larger than the sky, deeper than the sea, and equal to the weight of God. What lifts a person to great heights isn’t their stature but their brain. To live like a king, a person must build their mental powers, not their reputations.
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