I saw this on Twitter today:
Of course Mr. Atkinson's chart might make one wonder what libations would top a similar list for poets?
Well, in the case of the Dickinsons, we know exactly what would rank as their "thirst editions."
| For Emily Dickinson -- and her sister Lavinia -- the choice would be a keg of beer. There was nothing the sisters loved more than frat parties and keggers at Amherst college. | For Emmett Lee Dickinson, Emily's third cousin, twice removed -- at her request, the choice would be a Margarita, the lime libation he invented! Information about Dickinson & his delicious concoction is HERE. |
Of course, Emmett Lee Dickinson knew of his third cousin Emily's fondness for keggers at Amherst College, and he immortalized her addiction to frat parties in his now-classic poem, "As School Bells end the summer" (below on the left). His poem inspired Emily to pen her poem "As Sleigh Bells seem in summer" (below on the right).
| By Emmett Lee Dickinson: As School Bells end the summer And Boys, at Amherst show – So friendly – so flirtatious The individuals go Replete with strong libations – A Party does ensue – She’s down there in an instant Till Dawn the Ingénue. | By Emily Dickinson: As Sleigh Bells seem in summer Or Bees, at Christmas show – So fairy – so fictitious The individuals do Repealed from observation – A Party that we knew – More distant in an instant Than Dawn in Timbuctoo. |
| Pictured at the right: In 1849, Emily Dickinson wrote to her cousins Frances and Louisa Norcross. In her letter, Dickinson stated the following: "There is to be a party at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house tomorrow night. They say that home is where the heart is ~ I think it is where the Sigma house is, and the adjacent buildings. Vinnie and I will be happy amid this delightful kegger, and well we will drink our icy beers ~ and the world there will be so beautiful, and things so sweet and fair, that my heart will be soothed and comforted." |
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