Absence disembodies so does Death — Hypnosis

Soul leaves the body when one experiences hypnosis, same as death, or falling in love. Dickinson compared love with hypnosis in this poem.

Absence disembodies-so does Death
Hiding individuals from the Earth
Superposition helps, as well as love-
Tenderness decreases as we prove-
(F.904/J.860)
[1] Absence:: the soul left the body.
[2] Hiding, Earth:: hypnosis is similar to remove one's mind temporary from the world.
[3] Superposition:: an amendment of superstition, a condition similar to hypnosis. helps:: it's easier to be hypnotized when people are in love or superstitious. love:: falling in love is like being hypnotized.
[4] Tenderness:: the tender mind during the hypnosis. prove:: to try, verify.

The basic difference, then, between the normal and the hypnotic states seems to be a difference, not in strictly mental or even physical abilities, but in the attitudes which can be assumed with verisimilitude. These hypnotic attitudes are emotional, impulsive, and voluntary rather than intellectual. "This would leave the term 'hypnosis' with a fairly definite meaning: a state in which a person will do, in a bona fide manner, possessed of conviction, what he will not do in waking life for lack of such conviction." ─ The Supremacy of Mind (1845)