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into adulthood is not clear. What we see instead is the hierarchic, rule- bound adult

consciousness opposed to the child’s assumption of supreme authority. Dickinson shows us

the tension that complicates and binds these very different discourses as a means of

challenging the notion that the child is subsumed by the adult. Within her formulation,

abstract social codes and the artificial demarcations of class and age are all adult means

of confining the child’s limitlessness. . . . Because the speaker retroactively recalls an

authority she surrendered unknowingly, we can hear the voice of that earlier authority in

her present determination.

When the speaker puts her dolls behind her and proposes for herself a new baptism

("But this time, consciously, / of Grace—"), she founds her achievement on

a historically based perception of self—all sense of accomplishment depends on the

perception that change is possible only if she clings to what she has been in the past

instead of becoming what she hopes to be. Her insistence that there be a new baptism shows

her intent to improve upon what happened "before, without the / choice." The

poem reads as a prelude rather than an entrance into new consciousness; the last line

suggests a state about to be entered and not a presence already achieved. The speaker sees

herself as having been a "half] too unconscious Queen / But this time" things

will be different, this time she possesses the "Will to choose . . . just a

Crown—." And here the poem leaves us: in a place somewhere between the child and

the adult. The speaker’s dismay at having been named and baptized without the knowledge

that she was subscribing to an external authority opens her mind to the infinity of her

experience as a child. An upward-pointing dash after "Crown" counters the

downward-pointing dash after "Queen" as a way of underscoring the speaker’s

overly simplistic belief that she can correct the error of her earlier

"unconscious" station.

Dickinson’s considerable use of visual effects like these dashes alerts readers to

the constructed nature of language that the speaker wades through in an effort to reassert

her independence. Through lineation, in particular, Dickinson further disrupts culturally

determined continuities already undermined by dashes. Separating "being Theirs"

from the first line magnifies the speaker’s detachment from her parents, a violation of

conventional notions of physical, emotional, and spiritual connectedness that is extended

to her face in line 4 and the church in line 6, and concludes with "Crown." The

collective impact of this fragmentation is first an increased awareness of the centrifugal

force that dismantles the ritual of baptism and second a heightened sense of the speaker’s

struggle to make the now disassembled ritual come together and serve her ends.

The first stanza concludes with a powerful visual comment on the unraveling of logic

that is extended through the second stanza and countered in the third. Dashes that frame

"too" at the end of line 12 combine with the misplaced horizontal cross of the

manuscript "t" to effectively reduce the symbolic coherence necessary to see

"too" as a word and not as a meaningless duster of marks (see fig. 3, page 48).

We "read" the word as a cartoon enactment of the speaker’s determination to

cease her "threading" of adult logic; now she will take advantage of her power

to act as she believes adults do by making symbols serve her authority.

This illustration of the way readers must consent to symbolic meaning by making raw

data conform to anticipated patterns sets the tone for the next stanza’s interrogation of

the highly symbolic ritual of baptism. When Dickinson situates three crosses in the spaces

between lines 18 and 20 and then writes in the word "Eye" on line 19, she seems

to be commenting on the way readers actively exercise their eyes to gather all the

physical data that must be processed before discerning meaning. The combination of three

crosses simultaneously suggests a pun on "eye" and "I" that positions

the speaker among three crosses, as if her earlier baptism corresponded to Jesus’

mortification on Golgotha—a humbling experience over which she will ultimately

achieve Christlike triumph. Ironically, the poem so effectively demonstrates the

reader’s role in the construction of meaning that it erodes the speaker’s efforts to

turn ritual authority to her own ends. Though she may not be conscious of what she has

done, her deconstruction of baptism has emptied it of the very power she wishes to employ.

By introducing a speaker who rejects a known past and is about to enter an imagined but

undefined future, the poem establishes a link connecting past and future at the instant

that the speaker’s anticipation of change is greatest. Thanks to visual signals and the

disjunctive power of dashes, we see the speaker’s entrapment in circular reasoning, where

all she imagines of a more liberated future—a future in which she has "stopped /

being Their’s"—is what she has learned from adults. As readers, we see more than

she does: that in order to achieve her aim of discarding all that she now finds burdensome

and oppressive, she must step outside of herself, creating what Kristeva describes as

"an area of chance" that makes possible the discovery of a new semantic and

ideological self: "a localized chance as condition of objective understanding, a

chance to be uncovered in the relationship of the subject of metalanguage to the writing

under study, and/or to the semantic and ideological means of constitution of the

subject" (Desire 98). We contribute to the makeup of this "area" by

reading the poem’s visual commentary on meaning construction and setting it in dialogue

with the expectations we attribute to the speaker.

This participation in the speaker’s desire for change increases our awareness of a

primary instability that de-centers the subject. Our activity as readers parallels that of

Dickinson who, as poet, reads what she has written and responds by creating new text based

on her experience as a reader of her own words. The visual signals built into the poem are

our clearest indication that she wants readers to participate with her on this level. If

the voice that emerges is allowed to register the many shifts in perspective that

inevitably occur as the writer grasps the implications of a particular stance or attitude,

the resulting poem is necessarily made up of many voices, not a single unified voice. As

the poem’s interplay of thought and perception proceeds, each voice is subjected to the

same destabilizing process, and each voice acquires new form as new choices occur to the

writer and the readers. The area of chance defined by the repeated rupturing of logical

sequence feeds a growing realization that the self is far greater than any linguistic

manifestation. In this sense, Dickinson’s child speaker surfaces through a voice that

dissipates once it enters language, making the child the least stab1e of all

Dickinson’s speakers. Listening to the child, therefore, is always a matter of

hearing a voice that mutates in the direction of adulthood even as it speaks. If we as

readers decide that the speaker who claims that she has already "ceded" in the

first line is the same speaker who is in the act of choosing in the last line, we do so as

a matter of choice, not because the poem commands such a reading.

In order to consider the broader dimensions of the poem, as readers we must consider

the poem’s overall coherence. At the outset we know only that the poem inhabits a space

created by the writer, the speaker, and the reader. As we read the poem in its entirety,

we notice shifts from present to past as the speaker aggressively denies the objects and

actions of her past and struggles to define a future she lacks the language to describe in

concrete terms. We can immediately see how concrete and abstract language correlate with

the speaker’s movement from past to present and future tenses. "They

dropped" water on her face in the past, but she is "ceded" now; she was

"Crowned—Crowing—on [her] / Father’s breast" before, but now she

is" Adequate— / Erect."

We can see also that the longest continuous syntactic units occur in the first stanza,

where the greatest attention is given to the past. Dickinson chooses not to use a period

that would close the door on the ordered and concrete past that has taken up so much of

the speaker’s life and dictated so much of the poem’s form. When in the second

stanza we are told that "Existence’s whole Arc" is now "filled up, /

With one small Diadem" we hear a voice mocking the linear progression of historically

grounded sentences. Following visual effects that assert the role of the "Eye"

(and "I") in constructing meaning, the speaker’s words communicate her refusal

to accept as sufficient a diminished perception of self and world: a "small

Diadem" fills "Existence’s whole Arc."

In the final stanza, the speaker dismisses the past, reducing all recollections to

impotent fragments no longer able to impose order on the poem’s form. The "Will

to choose" is finally "will" in the service of a speaker struggling to

assert her power "to choose, / or to reject" and who decides to "choose,

just a / Crown." We are left with a speaker who, by assuming the crown, claims

dominion over time and identity. The inconclusiveness of the last line, as signaled by the

disjunctive dash, reminds readers of the discrepancy between pure potential and the

certainty of limited existence. The poem shows us that the crown symbolizing the

speaker’s achievement of personal authority is incapable of fulfilling the

child’s expectations because its power depends on conformity within established

symbology. Situated at the threshold of a present that is about to unfold, the speaker

approximates as closely as possible the limitless potentiality that characterizes the

child. Our efforts to imagine the experience the speaker seeks to recapture take us back

through heteroglossia to the materiality that predates and surrounds even the most potent

symbols.

"I’m ceded—I’ve stopped / being Their’s—", demonstrates that the

child’s voice must be thought of in dialogue with other voices. To hear the child is also

to hear the voices that instruct, curse, comfort, and punish an innocent, unformed

consciousness. These voices represent social discourses on parenting and religious belief,

for instance, that enter poems as verbal distillations of the environment readers must

interpret according to their understanding of prevailing conventions. Speaker, writer, and

reader construct meaning through a process of affirming or denying values perpetuated in

these discourses. Consequently, speakers define themselves in terms of voice properties

perceivable within the reader’s horizon of expectation. Because the child trusts adult

authority, the child articulates conventional social expectations in the baldest terms

imaginable and in this way informs the reader’s horizon.

from Inflections of the Pen: Dash and Voice in Emily Dickinson. Copyright ?

1997 by The University Press of Kentucky.