Introduction
Emily Dickinson’s poem “Before I got my eye put out –” (c. 1862) uses the imagined loss of sight to examine perception and transience. This essay considers how the work urges readers to value fleeting visual experiences before they disappear. The discussion draws on close textual analysis to show Dickinson’s emphasis on attentive observation of ordinary moments, an approach consistent with broader themes in nineteenth-century American poetry.
Appreciating visual details through hypothetical loss
The poem opens by contrasting the speaker’s present vision with the possibility of its removal. Lines such as “Before I got my eye put out / I liked as well to see” establish a retrospective awareness that only emerges once sight is placed at risk. By presenting blindness as a sudden, irreversible event, Dickinson highlights how everyday sights—the sky, the hills, the bee—might otherwise pass unnoticed. This technique invites the reader to rehearse the same imaginative exercise and, in doing so, to register the concrete particulars of the visible world while they remain accessible.
Emphasis on transient natural moments
Dickinson’s imagery repeatedly returns to elements of the natural environment that are beautiful yet impermanent: sunlight shifting across fields, birds in flight, the changing colours of morning. The speaker declares that, were sight withdrawn, these phenomena would be replaced by an internal catalogue of remembered images. The poem therefore positions memory as a poor substitute for direct perception. Readers are consequently prompted to attend more fully to such scenes in their own lives, recognising that they too are subject to sudden removal through accident, illness or simple inattention.
Implications for the act of reading
Although the poem never addresses an audience explicitly, its rhetorical structure performs an act of instruction. By withholding the actual blinding and leaving the threat suspended, Dickinson keeps the possibility of loss vivid. This suspension functions as a call to sustained looking: each rereading rehearses the same caution against taking vision for granted. Such a reading aligns with critical accounts that locate Dickinson’s work within a wider nineteenth-century concern for the ethics of attention (Miller, 1987).
Conclusion
Through its conditional exploration of blindness, Dickinson’s poem demonstrates that sight is both a physical faculty and a moral responsibility. By requiring readers to contemplate its absence, the text encourages a more deliberate engagement with the transient details of daily life. The resulting awareness—that ordinary visual moments deserve conscious preservation—remains the poem’s most enduring invitation.
References
- Dickinson, E. (1955) The Poems of Emily Dickinson. Edited by T. H. Johnson. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Miller, C. (1987) Emily Dickinson: A Poet’s Grammar. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

