This quote by Emily Dickinson speaks with the concept of death as a journey. Death is typically viewed as a frightening and unidentified experience, however Dickinson recommends that it can likewise be viewed as a wild and amazing adventure. The expression "wild night" implies a sense of liberty and exploration, while the phrase "new roadway" suggests a course that is unknown and unexplored. This quote encourages us to take a look at death in a different light, as a journey that can be welcomed with a sense of interest and anticipation. It is a reminder that death is a part of life, and that it can be viewed as a clean slate rather than an ending. Dickinson's words advise us to be brave and to welcome the unidentified, even in the face of death.
This quote is written / told by Emily Dickinson between December 10, 1830 and May 15, 1886. She was a famous Poet from USA.
The author also have 44 other quotes.
"So many people are working in vaudeville today that I looked for three weeks to book enough acts for an hour bill and didn't have them until the night before we opened in Buffalo and money was no object!"
"He appeared every night, like myself, at about nine o'clock, in the office of Mr. Tyler, to learn the news brought in the night Associated Press report. He knew me from the Bull Run campaign as a correspondent of the press"
"I see America spreading disaster. I see America as a black curse upon the world. I see a long night settling in and that mushroom which has poisoned the world withering at the roots"
"On the night of the 1st of September we observed for the first time signs of the natives being in the neighbourhood. Fires were seen on the low land near Cape Frederick Henry, and at daylight we saw the natives with our glasses"