The speaker of this poem is the narrator who is portrayed as someone who is dead and their ghost is telling the story. The narrator is very calm as she looks back on her previous life. To whom the speaker is speaking to is just a general audience. The title starts off in an interesting way, with the word “because.” The speaker is using this as a way to make the poem active as if they are answering a question or explaining something to the reader. Even though the title: “Because I Could Not Stop For Death” is not actually the title of the poem (Emily Dickinson never titled her work), there is much to gather from it. The title not only gives an idea of what the poem is about, it is how the narrator introduces the idea that death is …show more content…
This metaphor goes along with the idea that death does not wait for us. “Because I Could Not Stop For Death” (Dickinson 1) is an allegory because the narrator was too preoccupied to die. There is Imagery happening on when the narrator creates an image of tombstones. “We paused before a house that seemed / A swelling of the ground / The roof was scarcely visible / The cornice / in the ground” (Dickinson 17-20). In the poem there is the use of hyperbole: “Since then- 'tis Centuries- and yet / Feels shorter than the Day” (Dickinson 21-22). There are a few examples of Rhyme in “Me / Immortality / Civility / Eternity” (Dickinson 2-24). These are only some of the poetic devices and figurative language that is used in the poem. These devices are used to help the reader not only understand the story better but to have a glimpse of the world the author