Emily Dickinson's poems, Because I Could Not Stop For Death and I                    Heard A Fly Buzz-When I Died, are both about one of life's few certainties,   However, that is where the similarities end. Although Dickinson wrote                   both poems, their ideas about what lies after death differ. In one, there                   appears to be life after death, but in the other there is nothing. A number of                   clues in each piece help to determine which poem believes in what. The clues                   in I heard a Fly buzz-when I died, point to a disbelief in an afterlife. In this                   poem, a woman is lying in bed with her family or friends standing all around                   waiting for her to die. While the family is waiting for her to pass on, she is                   waiting for ...the King... This symbolizes some sort of god that will take her                   away. As the woman dies, her eyes, or windows as they are referred to in the                   poem, fail and then she ...could not see to see-. As she died she saw the                   light but then her eyes, or windows, failed and she saw nothing. This is the                   suggestion of there being no afterlife. The woman's soul drifted off into                   nothingness because there was no afterlife for it to travel to. This is the                   complete opposite belief about afterlife in Dickinson's other poem, Because                   I Could Not Stop for Death. In the piece, Because I Could Not Stop For                   Death, Dickinson tells the story of a woman who is being taken away by                   Death. The speaker in the poem clearly states that she will not stop for Death                   but that it will have to come and get her. This is illustrated in the second line                   of the poem Because I could not stop for Death- He kindly stopped for                   me. The Carriage held ...