but just Ourselves-And Immortality. The idea of                   immortality is the first indication that this poem believes in an afterlife. In many                   religions, where there is a grim reaper type spirit, this being will deliver a                   person's soul to another place, usually heaven or hell. In the third stanza the                   speaker talks of how she and Death passed the school, the Fields of Gazing                   Grain-We passed the Setting Sun. This stanza is referring to the woman                   looking back on her own life as she is dying. This would not be possible                   without an afterlife because if the soul were to simply drift away into                   nothingness, it wouldnt be able to reflect its lifetime. After this Dickinson                   presents the idea of the coldness of death in saying The Dews drew                   quivering and chill. This is when we know for sure that the woman is in fact                   dead. In the fifth stanza, Death and the woman pause before ...a House that                   seemed A Swelling of the Ground- The Roof was scarcely visible- The                   Cornice in the Ground-. Even though the poem does not come out and say                   it, it is likely that this grave is the woman's own. If this is true, then her spirit                   or soul must be what is looking at the house. In most religions, the idea of                   spirits and souls usually mean that there is an afterlife. It is not until the sixth                   and final stanza where the audience gets solid evidence that this poem                   believes in an afterlife. The woman recalls how it has been ...Centuries- and                   yet feels shorter than the Day I first surmised the Horses' Heads were toward                   Eternity-. To the soul, it has been at least a hundred years since Death                   visited her, but to the ...