The poem was published posthumously in 1890 in
Poems: Series 1, a collection of Dickinson's poems assembled and edited by her friends
Mabel Loomis Todd and
Thomas Wentworth Higginson. The poem was published under the title "The Chariot". It is composed in six
quatrains in
common metre. Stanzas 1, 2, 4, and 6 employ
end rhyme in their second and fourth lines, but some of these are only close rhyme or
eye rhyme. In the third stanza, there is no end rhyme, but "ring" in line 2 rhymes with "gazing" and "setting" in lines 3 and 4 respectively. Internal rhyme is scattered throughout.
Figures of speech include
alliteration,
anaphora,
paradox, and
personification. The poem personifies Death as a gentleman caller who takes a leisurely carriage ride with the poet to her grave. She also personifies immortality. A
volta, or turn, occurs in the fourth stanza. Structurally, the syllables shift from its regular 8-6-8-6 scheme to 6-8-8-6. This parallels with the undertones of the sixth quatrain. The personification of death changes from one of pleasantry to one of ambiguity and morbidity: "Or rather—He passed Us— / The Dews drew quivering and chill—" (13–14). The imagery changes from its original nostalgic form of children playing and setting suns to Death's real concern of taking the speaker to the afterlife. == Text ==