Emily Dickinson

September’s Baccalaureate

September’s Baccalaureate - meaning Summary

Late-summer Reflection

The poem sketches a September mood as a blend of sensory details—crickets, crows and a coy breeze—that together evoke memory and quiet unease. Dickinson presents this late-summer atmosphere as a catalyst: subtle hints and an "innuendo sear" prompt the heart to contain its playfulness and adopt a reflective, philosophical stance. The result is a compact meditation on seasonal change as an occasion for inward thought.

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September’s Baccalaureate A combination is Of Crickets – Crows – and Retrospects And a dissembling Breeze That hints without assuming – An Innuendo sear That makes the Heart put up its Fun And turn Philosopher.

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