Respuesta :
I'm pretty positive, The relationship between the owner and the gun is that the owner is a hunter. The owner is a male because he is directly called a "he" in a few lines. It is ironic the Dickinson is comparing herself to a loaded gun because she was in her depressed state and thought herself a killing machine like a gun.
This is one of the most iconic poems by Emily Dickinson.
She -the speaker- compares herself to a "loaded gun" in the hands of her owner. The owner is a man as you can see in this verses:
To foe of His..,
Though I than He - may longer live
He longer must - than I -
This owner or master might well represent God, a Husband or even the speaker's own anger in relation with the gun that may likely symbolize power: the speaker's life and the power that her words may hold.