'Tis customary as we part |
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'Tis not that Dying hurts us so |
-
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'Tis so appalling — it exhilarates |
-
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'Twas just this time, last year, I died |
-
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'Twas like a Maelstrom, with a notch |
-
|
'Twould ease — a Butterfly |
-
|
"Faith" is a fine invention |
Second Series
|
"I"m Wife" |
-
|
"Presentiment is that long shadow" |
-
|
"The Brain, within its Groove" |
-
|
#258 |
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#280 |
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#937 |
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10 |
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1096 |
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11 |
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12 |
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13 |
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14 |
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15 |
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16 |
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17 |
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18 |
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19 |
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2 |
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20 |
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204 (2 March 1859) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
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21 |
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22 |
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23 |
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24 |
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25 |
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259 (287) |
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27 |
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28 |
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29 |
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3 |
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30 |
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31 |
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32 |
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33 |
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330a (11 May 1869) |
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34 |
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341 (June 1870?) Samuel Bowles |
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35 |
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36 |
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37 |
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372, After great pain, a formal feeling comes |
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|
38 |
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39 |
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39 (49) |
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393 (summer 1873) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
|
4 |
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40 |
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41 |
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42 |
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43 |
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44 |
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45 |
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46 |
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47 |
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48 |
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49 |
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5 |
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50 |
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51 |
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52 |
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53 |
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54 |
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55 |
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56 |
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57 |
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58 |
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59 |
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590 |
-
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6 |
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60 |
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61 |
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62 |
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63 |
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64 |
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66 |
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67 |
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68 |
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69 |
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7 |
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70 |
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71 |
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72 |
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73 |
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74 |
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75 |
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76 |
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764 |
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77 |
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78 |
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79 |
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8 |
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80 |
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9 |
-
|
A Bee his burnished Carriage |
-
|
A Bird Came Down (cla** page) |
-
|
A Bird came down the Walk (328) |
-
|
A Book |
Third Series
|
A Burdock—clawed my Gown (229) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Charm invests a face (421) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Clock Stopped -- Not The Mantel's |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Cloud withdrew from the Sky |
-
|
A Coffin — is a small Domain |
-
|
A d**h blow is a Life blow to Some |
-
|
A darting fear — a pomp — a tear |
-
|
A Day |
-
|
A Day! Help! Help! Another Day! |
-
|
A Dew Sufficed Itself |
-
|
A door just opened on a street |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A doubt if it be Us |
-
|
A Drop fell on the Apple Tree (794) |
-
|
A Dying Tiger—moaned for Drink (566) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A feather from the Whippoorwill |
-
|
A first Mute Coming |
-
|
A fuzzy fellow, without feet |
-
|
A happy lip—breaks sudden (353) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A House upon the Height |
-
|
A Lady red—amid the Hill (74) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A lane of Yellow led the eye (1650) |
-
|
A light exists in spring |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A little bread — a crust — a crumb |
-
|
A little East of Jordan (59) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Little Madness in the Spring |
-
|
A little road not made man |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A long, long sleep, a famous sleep |
-
|
A loss of something ever felt I (959) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Man |
Third Series
|
A Man may make a Remark |
-
|
A Man may make a Remark (952) |
-
|
A Mien to move a Queen (283) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Modest Lot, A Fame Petite |
-
|
A Moth the hue of this (841) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Murmur in the Trees—to note (416) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
A Narrow Fellow in the Gra** |
-
|
A nearness to Tremendousness (963) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Night—there lay the Days between (471) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Planted Life — diversified |
-
|
A poor — torn heart — a tattered heart |
Second Series
|
A Portrait |
Third Series
|
A precious Mouldering |
-
|
A precious—mouldering pleasure (371) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Prison gets to be a friend |
-
|
A Rose |
-
|
A Route of Evanescence |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A science — so the Savants say |
-
|
A Secret told |
-
|
A sepal, petal, and a thorn |
-
|
A Service of Song |
-
|
A Shade upon the mind there pa**es |
-
|
A shady friend for torrid days |
-
|
A Sickness Of This World It Most Occasions |
-
|
A single Screw of Flesh (263) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A slash of Blue |
-
|
A Solemn thing within the Soul |
-
|
A solemn thing—it was—I said (483) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A something in a summer's Day (122) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A still—Volcano—Life (601) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A Syllable |
Third Series
|
A thought went up my mind to-day |
Second Series
|
A throe upon the features (71) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
A toad can die of light! |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
A Tongue—to tell Him I am true! (400) |
-
|
A Tooth upon Our Peace |
-
|
A Train Went Through A Burial Gate |
-
|
A transport one cannot contain |
-
|
A Visitor in Marl |
-
|
A Weight with Needles on the pounds (264) |
-
|
A Well |
-
|
A Wife—at daybreak I shall be (461) |
-
|
A Word is Dead |
-
|
A Wounded Deer |
-
|
Abraham to k** Him |
-
|
Absence disembodies—so does d**h (860) |
-
|
Absent Place — an April Day |
-
|
Adrift! A little boat adrift! |
-
|
Afraid! Of whom am I afraid? |
-
|
After a hundred years |
-
|
After great pain a formal feeling comes (J341, F372) |
The Poems of Emily Dickinson Edited by R. W. Franklin (Harvard University Press, 1999)
|
Aftermath |
-
|
Again — his voice is at the door |
-
|
Ah, Moon—and Star! (240) |
-
|
Ah, Necromancy Sweet! |
-
|
Ah, Teneriffe! |
-
|
All but d**h, can be Adjusted |
-
|
All Circumstances are the Frame |
-
|
All forgot for recollecting (966) |
-
|
All I may, if small |
-
|
All overgrown by cunning moss |
-
|
All the letters I can write |
-
|
All these my banners be |
-
|
Almost |
Poems 1890
|
Alone, I cannot be (298) |
-
|
Along The Potomac |
-
|
Alpine Glow |
-
|
Alter! When the Hills do |
Poems 1890
|
Although I put away his life |
-
|
Always Mine! |
-
|
Ambition cannot find him |
-
|
American Literature Digital Anthology (Beginnings through 1914) |
-
|
Ample make this Bed |
-
|
An altered look about the hills |
-
|
An awful Tempest mashed the air |
-
|
An English Breeze |
-
|
An everywhere of silver |
-
|
An Hour is a Sea |
-
|
An ignorance a Sunset |
-
|
And this of all my Hopes (913) |
-
|
Angels, in the early morning |
-
|
Answer July (386) |
-
|
Apocalypse |
-
|
Apology for Her |
-
|
Apotheosis |
-
|
Apparently with no Surprise |
-
|
Arcturus is his other name (70) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
Artists wrestled here! |
-
|
As by the dead we love to sit |
-
|
As Children bid the Guest |
-
|
As Children bid the Guest "Good Night" (133) |
-
|
As Everywhere of Silver |
-
|
As far from pity, as complaint |
-
|
As Frost is best conceived |
-
|
As if I asked a common Alms |
-
|
As if some little Arctic flower |
-
|
As if the Sea should part |
-
|
As imperceptibly as grief |
-
|
As One does Sickness over |
-
|
As plan for Noon and plan for Night |
-
|
As Sleigh Bells seem in summer |
-
|
As the Starved Maelstrom laps the Navies |
-
|
As Watchers hang upon the East |
-
|
Asleep |
-
|
Aspiration |
Third Series
|
Astra Castra |
-
|
At Half-Past Three A Single Bird |
-
|
At last, to be identified! |
-
|
At least—to pray—is left—is left (502) |
-
|
Aurora |
-
|
Autumn |
-
|
Autumn — overlooked my Knitting |
-
|
Awake ye muses nine, sing me a strain divine (1) |
-
|
Away from Home are some and I (821) |
-
|
Baffled for just a day or two |
-
|
Banish Air from Air (854) |
-
|
Be Mine the Doom |
-
|
Beauty — be not caused — It Is |
-
|
Because I could not stop for d**h (476) |
-
|
Because I could not stop for d**h (712) |
-
|
Because I could not stop for d**h (cla** page) |
-
|
Because the Bee may blameless hum |
-
|
Because the Bee may blameless hum (869) |
-
|
Beclouded |
-
|
Bee! I'm expecting you! |
-
|
Bee! I'm expecting you! (1035) |
-
|
Bees are Black, with Gilt Surcingles |
-
|
Before He comes we weigh the Time! |
-
|
Before I got my eye put out |
-
|
Before the ice is in the pools |
-
|
Before you thought of spring |
-
|
Behind Me — dips Eternity |
-
|
Belshazzar Had A Letter |
Poems 1890
|
Bequest |
Poems 1890
|
Bereaved of all, I went abroad |
-
|
Bereavement in their d**h to feel (645) |
-
|
Besides the Autumn poets sing |
-
|
Besides the Autumn poets sing (131) |
-
|
Besides this May |
-
|
Best Gains—must have the Losses' Test (684) |
-
|
Best Things dwell out of Sight (998) |
-
|
Better—than Music! For I—who heard it (503) |
-
|
Between My Country — and the Others |
-
|
Blazing in Gold and quenching in Purple (228) |
-
|
Bless God, he went as soldiers |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Bloom upon the Mountain—stated (667) |
-
|
Bound—a trouble (269) |
-
|
Braind within its groove, The |
-
|
Bring me the sunset in a cup |
-
|
Bustle in a house |
-
|
But little Carmine hath her face |
-
|
By a flower — By a letter |
-
|
By Chivalries as tiny |
-
|
By my Window have I for Scenery |
-
|
By such and such an offering |
-
|
By The Sea |
-
|
Charlotte Bronte's Grave |
-
|
Chartless |
-
|
Childish Griefs |
-
|
Civilization — spurns — the Leopard! |
-
|
Cobwebs |
-
|
Cocoon |
-
|
Cocoon above! Cocoon below! |
-
|
Color - Caste - Denomination - (970) |
-
|
Come slowly |
-
|
Come Slowly—Eden (211) |
-
|
Conjecturing a Climate (562) |
-
|
Conscious am I in my Chamber |
-
|
Consecration |
-
|
Contrast |
Third Series
|
Could I but ride indefinite (661) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Could I—then—shut the door (220) |
-
|
Could live — did live |
-
|
Could—I do more—for Thee (447) |
-
|
Crisis is a Hair |
-
|
Crumbling is not an instant's Act (997) |
-
|
d**h And Life |
-
|
d**h is a Dialogue between |
-
|
d**h is potential to that Man (548) |
-
|
d**h Leaves Us homesick, Who Behind |
-
|
d**h sets a thing of signigicant |
-
|
d**h sets a Thing significant |
-
|
Dare you see a Soul |
-
|
Dare you see a Soul at the White Heat? (365) |
-
|
Dawn |
Poems 1890
|
Dawn (Version 2) |
-
|
Dead |
-
|
Dear March - Come in - (1320) |
-
|
Dear March, Come In! |
-
|
Deed |
-
|
Defrauded I a Butterfly |
-
|
Delayed till she had ceased to know |
-
|
Delight becomes pictorial |
Second Series
|
Delight is as the flight (257) |
-
|
Denial — is the only fact |
-
|
Departed to the judgment |
-
|
Deprived of other Banquet |
-
|
Desire |
-
|
Despair's advantage is achieved |
-
|
Despair's advantage is achieved (799) |
-
|
Did Our Best Moment last |
-
|
Did the Harebell loose her girdle |
-
|
Did we disobey Him? (267) |
-
|
Did you ever stand in a Cavern's Mouth (590) |
-
|
Disenchantment |
-
|
Distrustful of the Gentian |
-
|
Do People moulder equally |
-
|
Don't put up my Thread and Needle |
-
|
Don't put up my Thread and Needle (617) |
-
|
Doom is the House without the Door |
-
|
Doubt Me! My Dim Companion! (275) |
-
|
Drab Habitation of Whom? |
-
|
Drama's Vitallest Expression is the Common Day |
-
|
Drama's Vitallest Expression is the Common Day (741) |
-
|
Dreams |
-
|
Dreams—are well—but Waking's better (450) |
-
|
Dropped into the Ether Acre (665) |
-
|
Drowning Is Not So Pitiful |
Third Series
|
Dust is the only Secret |
-
|
Dying |
-
|
Dying! Dying in the night! |
-
|
Dying! To be afraid of thee |
-
|
Each life converges to some centre |
-
|
Each Scar I'll keep for Him |
-
|
Each Scar I'll keep for Him (877) |
-
|
Each Second is the last |
-
|
Each That We Lose Takes Part Of Us |
-
|
Elysium is as far as to |
-
|
Emancipation |
-
|
Embarra**ment of one another |
-
|
Emily Dickinson's Coconut Cake Recipe |
-
|
Empty my Heart, of Thee (587) |
-
|
Ending |
-
|
Endow the Living—with the Tears (521) |
-
|
Escaping backward to perceive |
-
|
Essential Oils — are wrung |
-
|
Evening |
-
|
Except the Heaven had come so near |
Emily Dickinson Poems - second series (1891)
|
Except To Heave She Is Nought |
-
|
Except to Heaven, she is nought |
-
|
Exclusion (The soul selects her own society) |
Poems 1890
|
Exhilaration—is within (383) |
-
|
Expectation — is Contentment |
-
|
Experience |
-
|
Experience is the Angled Road |
-
|
Experiment To Me |
Second Series
|
Exultation is the going |
-
|
Fairer through Fading—as the Day (938) |
-
|
Faith — is the Pierless Bridge |
-
|
Fame is a bee (1763) |
-
|
Fame is a fickle food (1659) |
-
|
Fame is the tine that Scholars leave (866) |
-
|
Fame of Myself, to justify |
-
|
Far From Love The Heavenly Father |
-
|
Farewell |
-
|
Father, I Bring Thee Not Myself |
-
|
Few Get Enough, Enough Is One |
Third Series
|
Finding is the first Act |
-
|
Finite—to fail, but infinite to Venture (847) |
-
|
First Robin |
-
|
Fitter to see Him, I may be (968) |
-
|
Flowers — Well — if anybody |
-
|
For d**h—or rather (382) |
-
|
For each ecstatic instant |
Second Series
|
For every Bird a Nest |
-
|
For largest Woman's Hearth I knew (309) |
-
|
For this — accepted Breath |
-
|
Forbidden Fruit (I) |
Third Series
|
Forbidden Fruit (II) |
Third Series
|
Forever at His side to walk (246) |
-
|
Forever—is composed of Nows (624) |
-
|
Forget! The lady with the Amulet (438) |
-
|
Forgotten |
-
|
Four Trees — upon a solitary Acre |
-
|
Frequently the wood are pink (6) |
-
|
Friends |
Third Series
|
From Blank to Blank |
-
|
From Cocoon forth a Butterfly |
-
|
From The Chrysalis |
-
|
From Us She wandered now a Year |
-
|
Funny — to be a Century |
-
|
Further in Summer than the Birds (1068) |
-
|
Garland for Queens, may be |
-
|
Give little Anguish (310) |
-
|
Given in Marriage unto Thee |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Glee—The great storm is over (619) |
Poems 1890
|
Glowing is her Bonnet |
-
|
God gave a Loaf to every Bird |
Second Series
|
God is a distant—stately Lover (357) |
-
|
God made a little Gentian (442) |
-
|
God permit industrious angels |
-
|
Going to Heaven! |
-
|
Going to Him! Happy letter! |
-
|
Going to him! Happy letter! Tell him |
-
|
Good Morning — Midnight |
-
|
Good night, because we must |
-
|
Good night! which put the candle out? |
-
|
Good to hide, and hear 'em hunt! |
-
|
Gratitude—is not the mention (989) |
-
|
Great Caesar! Condescend |
-
|
Grief is a Mouse |
-
|
Griefs |
-
|
Growth of Man—like Growth of Nature |
-
|
Had I not This, or This, I said (904) |
-
|
Had I presumed to hope |
-
|
Have any like Myself |
-
|
Have you got a Brook in your little heart |
-
|
He forgot—and I—remembered |
-
|
He fought like those Who've nought to lose |
-
|
He fought like those Who've nought to lose (759) |
-
|
He found my Being—set it up |
-
|
He fumbles at your Soul (315) |
-
|
He fumbles at your spirit |
-
|
He gave away his Life |
-
|
He outstripped Time with but a Bout |
-
|
He parts Himself—like Leaves |
-
|
He put the Belt around my life (273) |
-
|
He strained my faith (497) |
-
|
He told a homely tale |
-
|
He touched me, so I live to know |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
He was weak, and I was strong—then |
-
|
He who in Himself believes |
-
|
Heart, not so heavy as mine |
-
|
Heart, We Will Forget Him |
-
|
Heaven (575) |
-
|
Heaven has different Signs—to me (575) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
Heaven is so far of the Mind (370) |
-
|
Heaven—is what I cannot reach! (239) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
Her |
-
|
Her breast is fit for pearls |
-
|
Her final Summer was it |
-
|
Her Grace is all she has— |
-
|
Her smile was shaped like other smiles |
-
|
Her Sweet turn to leave the Homestead (649) |
-
|
Her sweet Weight on my Heart a Night (518) |
-
|
Her—"last Poems" (312) |
-
|
Herein a Blossom lies |
-
|
High From The Earth I Heard A Bird |
-
|
His Bill an Auger is (1034) |
-
|
His Feet are shod with Gauze (916) |
-
|
His mind of man, a secret makes (1663) |
-
|
Home |
-
|
Hope |
Third Series
|
Hope is the thing with feathers (254) |
Second Series
|
Houses—so the Wise Men tell me |
-
|
How Dare The Robins Sing |
-
|
How far is it to Heaven? |
-
|
How fortunate the Grave |
-
|
How happy I was if I could forget |
-
|
How Happy Is The Little Stone |
-
|
How many Flowers fail in Wood |
-
|
How many times these low feet staggered |
-
|
How noteless Men, and Pleiads, stand |
-
|
How sick—to wait—in any place—but thine (368) |
-
|
How Still The Bells In Steeples Stand |
Third Series
|
How the old Mountains drip with Sunset (291) |
-
|
How the Waters closed above Him |
-
|
How well I knew Her not |
-
|
I 've Got An Arrow Here |
-
|
I am alive—I guess |
-
|
I am ashamed—I hide (473) |
-
|
I asked no other thing (621) |
Poems 1890
|
I breathed enough to learn the trick |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
I breathed enough to take the Trick |
-
|
I bring an unaccustomed wine |
Second Series
|
I Came to buy a smile—today (223) |
-
|
I can wade Grief (252) |
Second Series
|
I can't tell you—but you feel it |
-
|
I can't tell you—but you feel it (65) |
-
|
I cannot be ashamed |
-
|
I cannot buy it—'tis not sold |
-
|
I cannot dance upon my Toes |
-
|
I cannot live with You (640) |
-
|
I cautious, scanned my little life |
-
|
I could bring You Jewels—had I a mind to (697) |
-
|
I could die—to know (570) |
-
|
I could not drink it, Sweet |
-
|
I could not prove the Years had feet |
-
|
I could suffice for Him, I knew |
-
|
I cried at Pity—not at Pain (588) |
-
|
I cross till I am weary (550) |
-
|
I died for Beauty — but was scarce |
-
|
I dreaded that first Robin, so (348) |
-
|
I Dwell in Possibility |
-
|
I envy Seas, whereon He rides |
-
|
I fear a Man of frugal Speech |
-
|
I felt a cleaving in my mind |
-
|
I Felt a Funeral in My Brain |
-
|
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain (280) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain (cla** page) |
-
|
I felt my life with both my hands |
-
|
I found the phrase to every thought |
Second Series
|
I gained it so (359) |
-
|
I gave myself to Him (580) |
-
|
I got so I could take his name (293) |
-
|
I had a guinea golden |
Third Series
|
I had been hungry, all the Years |
-
|
I had no Cause to be awake (542) |
-
|
I had no time to Hate (478) |
Poems 1890
|
I had no time to hate, because |
-
|
I had not minded—Walls (398) |
-
|
I had some things that I called mine |
-
|
I had the Glory—that will do (349) |
-
|
I have a Bird in spring |
-
|
I have a King, who does not speak |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
I have never seen |
-
|
I have never seen "Volcanoes" (175) |
-
|
I Have No Life But This |
-
|
I Have Not Told My Garden Yet |
-
|
I haven't told my garden yet |
-
|
I haven't told my garden yet (50) |
-
|
I heard a Fly buzz - when I died (cla** page) |
-
|
I heard a Fly buzz (465) |
-
|
I held a Jewel in my fingers |
-
|
I hide myself within my flower (903) |
-
|
I keep my pledge |
-
|
I know a place where summer strives |
-
|
I know lives, I could miss (372) |
-
|
I know some lonely Houses off the Road (289) |
Poems 1890
|
I know that He exists |
-
|
I know where Wells grow—Droughtless Wells (460) |
-
|
I learned—at least—what Home could be (944) |
-
|
I like a look of Agony |
-
|
I like to see it lap the Miles |
-
|
I like to see it lap the Miles (43) |
-
|
I live with Him—I see His face (463) |
-
|
I lived on Dread (770) |
-
|
I lived on dread; to those who know |
-
|
I lost a World - the other day! |
-
|
I made slow Riches but my Gain |
-
|
I make His Crescent fill or lack |
-
|
I many times thought Peace had come (739) |
-
|
I meant to find Her when I came |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
I meant to have but modest needs (476) |
Second Series
|
I measure every Grief I meet (561) |
-
|
I ment to find her when I came (718) |
-
|
I met a King this afternoon! |
-
|
I never felt at Home—Below (413) |
-
|
I never hear that one is dead |
-
|
I never hear the word |
-
|
I never hear the word 'escape' |
Second Series
|
I never lost as much but twice |
-
|
I Never Saw a Moor |
-
|
I never told the buried gold |
-
|
I Noticed People Disappeared |
-
|
I often pa**ed the village |
-
|
I pay—in Satin Cash (402) |
-
|
I play at Riches—to appease (801) |
-
|
I prayed, at first, a little Girl (576) |
-
|
I read my sentence—steadily (412) |
-
|
I reason, Earth is short |
-
|
I reckon—when I count it all |
-
|
I robbed the Woods |
-
|
I rose—because He sank (616) |
-
|
I saw no Way—The Heavens were stitched (378) |
-
|
I see thee better—in the Dark |
-
|
I send Two Sunsets (308) |
-
|
I shall keep singing! |
-
|
I shall know why—when Time is over |
-
|
I should have been too glad, I see (313) |
Second Series
|
I should not dare to leave my friend |
-
|
I showed her Heights she never saw (446) |
-
|
I sing to use the Waiting |
-
|
I sometimes drop it, for a Quick (708) |
-
|
I started Early - Took my Dog |
-
|
I stepped from plank to plank |
-
|
I stole them from a Bee |
-
|
I taste a liquor never brewed |
Poems 1890
|
I taste a liquor never brewed (214) |
-
|
I tend my flowers for thee (339) |
-
|
I think I was enchanted (593) |
-
|
I think just how my shape will rise |
-
|
I think the Hemlock likes to stand (525) |
-
|
I think the longest Hour of all |
-
|
I think to Live—may be a Bliss (646) |
-
|
I tie my Hat—I crease my Shawl (443) |
-
|
I took my Power in my Hand (540) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - second series (1891)
|
I tried to think a lonelier Thing |
-
|
I want—it pleaded—All its life (731) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
I was the slightest in the House |
-
|
I watched the Moon around the House |
-
|
I watched the Moon around the House (629) |
-
|
I went to heaven |
-
|
I went to thank Her (363) |
-
|
I Wish I Knew That Woman's Name |
-
|
I Wonder If The Sepulchre |
-
|
I Worked For Chaff, And Earning Wheat |
-
|
I would distil a cup |
-
|
I would not paint—a picture (505) |
-
|
I Years Had Been From Home |
-
|
I'll clutch—and clutch (427) |
-
|
I'll send the feather from my Hat! |
-
|
I'll send the feather from my Hat! (687) |
-
|
I'll tell you how the sun rose |
-
|
I'm |
-
|
I'm "wife"—I've finished that (199) |
-
|
I'm ceded—I've stopped being Theirs |
-
|
I'm ceded—I've stopped being Theirs (508) |
-
|
I'm Nobody! Who Are You? |
Second Series
|
I'm saying every day (373) |
-
|
I'm sorry for the Dead—Today (529) |
-
|
I'm the little |
-
|
I'm the little "Heart's Ease" (176) |
-
|
I'm the little (176) |
-
|
I've heard an Organ talk, sometimes |
-
|
I've heard an Organ talk, sometimes (183) |
-
|
I've known a Heaven, like a Tent |
-
|
I've known a Heaven, like a Tent (243) |
-
|
I've none to tell me to but Thee |
-
|
I've none to tell me to but Thee (881) |
-
|
I've nothing else—to bring, You know |
-
|
I've nothing else—to bring, You know (224) |
-
|
I've seen a Dying Eye (547) |
-
|
Ideals are the Fairly Oil (983) |
-
|
If any sink, a**ure that this, now standing |
-
|
If anybody's friend be dead (509) |
-
|
If Blame be my side—forfeit Me (775) |
-
|
If He dissolve—then—there is nothing |
-
|
If He were living—dare I ask (734) |
-
|
If I Can Stop |
-
|
If I can stop one heart from breaking |
Poems 1890
|
If I could bribe them by a Rose |
-
|
If I may have it, when it's dead (577) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
If I may have it, when it's dead (577) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
If I should cease to bring a Rose |
-
|
If I should die |
-
|
If I shouldn't be alive |
-
|
If I shouldn't be alive (182) |
-
|
If I'm lost—now (256) |
-
|
If it had no pencil |
-
|
If pain for peace prepares |
-
|
If recollecting were forgetting |
-
|
If she had been the Mistletoe |
-
|
If the foolish, call them "flowers" (168) |
-
|
If the foolish, call them flowers |
Third Series
|
If this is |
-
|
If this is "fading" (120) |
-
|
If those I loved were lost |
-
|
If What we could—were what we would (407) |
-
|
If you were coming in the fall |
Poems 1890
|
If your Nerve, deny you (292) |
-
|
Immortal Is An Ample Word |
-
|
Immortality |
-
|
Impossibility, like Wine |
-
|
In A Library |
Poems 1890
|
In Ebon Box, when years have flown |
-
|
In falling Timbers buried |
-
|
In lands I never saw—they say |
-
|
In rags mysterious as these |
-
|
In Shadow |
-
|
In This Short Life |
-
|
In Vain |
-
|
In Winter in my Room (1670) |
-
|
Inconceivably solemn! |
-
|
Indian Summer |
-
|
Is Bliss then, such Abyss (340) |
-
|
Is Heaven A Physician? |
Second Series
|
Is it true, dear Sue? (218) |
-
|
It always felt to me—a wrong (597) |
-
|
It bloomed and dropt, a Single Noon |
-
|
It can't be |
-
|
It can't be "Summer"! (221) |
-
|
It ceased to hurt me, though so slow |
-
|
It did not surprise me |
-
|
It don't sound so terrible—quite—as it did |
-
|
It don't sound so terrible—quite—as it did (426) |
-
|
It Dropped So Low -- In My Regard |
-
|
It feels a shame to be Alive (444) |
-
|
It is a lonesome Glee |
-
|
It is an honorable thought, |
-
|
It is dead—Find it (417) |
-
|
It is easy to work when the soul is at play (244) |
-
|
It knew no lapse, nor Diminuation |
-
|
It knew no Medicine (559) |
-
|
It makes no difference abroad |
-
|
It might be lonelier |
-
|
It sifts from Leaden Sieves - (311) |
-
|
It struck me every day |
-
|
It tossed—and tossed (723) |
Second Series
|
It troubled me as once I was |
-
|
It was a Grave, yet bore no Stone |
-
|
It was given to me by the Gods (454) |
-
|
It was not d**h, for I stood up (510) |
-
|
It was too late for Man |
-
|
It will be Summer—eventually (342) |
-
|
It would have starved a Gnat |
-
|
It would never be Common—more—I said (430) |
-
|
It's all I have to bring today |
-
|
It's all I have to bring today (26) |
-
|
It's coming—the postponeless Creature (390) |
-
|
It's easy to invent a Life (724) |
-
|
It's like the light |
-
|
It's such a little thing to weep |
-
|
It's such a little thing to weep |
-
|
It's such a little thing to weep (189) |
-
|
It's thoughts—and just One Heart |
-
|
Jesus! thy Crucifix |
-
|
Joy In d**h |
-
|
Joy to have merited the Pain (788) |
-
|
Just as He spoke it from his Hands (848) |
-
|
Just lost, when I was saved! |
-
|
Just so—Jesus—raps |
-
|
k** your Balm—and its Odors bless you |
-
|
Knows how to forget! (433) |
-
|
Lay This Laurel On The One |
-
|
Least Bee that brew |
-
|
Least Rivers—docile to some sea |
-
|
Let Down The Bars, O d**h! |
-
|
Let Us play Yesterday |
-
|
Letter 1 |
-
|
Letter 200 (13 February 1859) Mrs. Joseph Haven |
-
|
Letter 201 (about 1859) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 202 (about 20 February 1859) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 203 (about March 1859) - no ms. Catherine Scott Turner (Anthon) |
-
|
Letter 205 (early April 1859) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 206 (late April 1859) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 207 (September 1859) - no ms. Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 208 (1859?) - no ms. Catherine Scott Turner (Anthon) |
-
|
Letter 209 (late 1859?) - no ms. Catherine Scott Turner (Anthon) |
-
|
Letter 210 (December 1859) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 211 (December 1859?) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 212 (10 December 1859) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 213 (after Christmas 1859 - Franklin: about 1 January 1860) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 214 (about 1859) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 215 (March 1860) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 216 (1860?) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 217 (late April 1860) - no ms. Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 218 (about 1860) Mrs. Horace Ward |
-
|
Letter 219 (about 1860 - Franklin: spring 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 220 (about 1860 - Franklin: early 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 222 (summer 1860?) - no ms. Catherine Scott Turner (Anthon) |
-
|
Letter 223 (early August 1860) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 224 (August 1860) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 225 (mid-September 1860) - no ms. Louise e Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 227 (1860) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 228 (December 1860?) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 229 (about February 1861 - Franklin: about February 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 230 (early March 1861) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 231 (about April 1861) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 232 (about 19 June 1861) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 233 (about 1861 - Franklin: Summer 1861) Master |
-
|
Letter 234 (1861?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 235 (about August 1861) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 236 (about August 1861) Mary Warner Crowell |
-
|
Letter 237 (September 1861) Edward S. Dwight |
-
|
Letter 238 (summer 1861 - Franklin: late 1859-about 1861) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 239 (about 1861) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 241 (October 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 242 (early December 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 243 (December 1861) Edward S. Dwight |
-
|
Letter 244 (about 20 December 1861) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 245 (31 December 1861) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 246 (2 January 1862) Edward S. Dwight |
-
|
Letter 247 (about 11 January 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 248 (early 1862? - Franklin: spring 1861) Master |
-
|
Letter 248a (?) |
-
|
Letter 249 (early 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 250 (early 1862 - Franklin: spring 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 251 (early 1862 - Franklin: June 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 252 (early 1862 - Franklin: about 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 253 (early March 1862) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 254 (March 1862?) - no ms. Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 255 (late March 1862) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 256 (late March 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 257 (late March 1862? - Franklin: December 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 258 (early 1862) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 259 (early April 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 260 (15 April 1862) T. W. Higginson ("Tell me what is true?") |
-
|
Letter 261 (25 April 1862) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 262 (spring 1862) Mrs. Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 263 (early May 1862) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 264 (late May 1862) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 265 (7 June 1862) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 266 (early summer 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 267 (mid-July 1862) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 268 (July 1862) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 269 (summer 1862?) - no ms. Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 270 (about 20 July 1862) Eudocia C. Flynt |
-
|
Letter 271 (August 1862) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 272 (about August 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 273 (1862?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 274 (6 October 1862) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 275 (mid-November 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 276 (late November 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 277 (late November 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 278 (late January 1863) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 279 (early February 1863) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 280 (February 1863) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 281 (late May 1863) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 282 (about 1863 - Franklin: late 1862) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 283 (about 1863 - Franklin: 1862) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 284 (autumn 1863) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 285 (7 October 1863) - no ms. Louise and Frances Nonrcross |
-
|
Letter 286 (mid-October 1863?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 287 (about 1864) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 288 (Cambridge, about 1864 - Franklin: about 1865) (1) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 289 (Cambridge, about May 1864) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 290 (Cambridge, early June 1864) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 291 (Cambridge, 19 June 1864) Edward (Ned) Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 292 (Cambridge, June 1864) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 293 (Cambridge, July 1864) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 294 (Cambridge, September 1864) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 295 (Cambridge, about 1864) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 296 (Cambridge, November 1864) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 297 (Cambridge, 13 November 1864) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 298 (1864?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 299 (about 1864 - Franklin: early 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 300 (about 1864 - Franklin: December 1861) Samuel Bowles |
-
|
Letter 301 (early 1865?) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 302 (early 1865) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 303 (early 1865?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 304 (March 1865) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 305 (March 1865) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 306 (about March 1865) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 307 (March 1865) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 308 (Cambridge, mid-May 1865) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 309 (Cambridge, May 1865) Lavinia N. Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 310 (about 1865 - Franklin: about 1866) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 311 (early November 1865) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 312 (early December 1865) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 313 (late 1865?) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 314 (late January 1866) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 315 (early March 1866) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 316 (17 March 1866) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 317 (spring 1866?) - no ms. Catherine Scott Turner (Anthon) |
-
|
Letter 318 (early May 1866) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 319 (9 June 1866) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 320 (about August 1866) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 321 (late November 1866?) - no ms. Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 322 (1866?) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 323 (16 July 1867) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 324 (about April 1868) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 325 (about 1868) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 326 (about 1868) Mrs. Luke Sweetser |
-
|
Letter 327 (about 1868) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 328 (about 1868) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 329 (late 1868?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 330 (June 1869) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 331 (summer 1869?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 332 (October 1869) Perez Cowan |
-
|
Letter 333 (autumn 1869) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 334 (about 1869 - Franklin: about 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 335 (about 1869) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 336 (about 1869 - Franklin: about 1865) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 337 (late 1869) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 338 (late February 1870) Mrs. Joseph A. Sweetser |
-
|
Letter 339 (early spring 1870) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 340 (May 1870?) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 342 (16 August 1870) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 342a Higginson wrote his wife that evening |
-
|
Letter 342b Next day he wrote his wife again, enclosing further notes: |
-
|
Letter 343 (late summer 1870?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 344 (1870?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 345 (1870?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 346 (about 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 347 (about 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 348 (about 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 349 (about 1870 - Franklin: about 1869) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 350 (about 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 351 (about 1870) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 352 (26 September 1870) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 353 (about October 1870) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 354 (early October 1870) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 355 (late October 1870) Perez Cowan |
-
|
Letter 356 (19 December 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 357 (December 1870?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
-
|
Letter 358 (about 1 January 1871) Edward (Ned) Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 359 (early January 1871) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 360 (spring 1871) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 361 (spring 1871) Mrs. Henry Hills |
-
|
Letter 362 (mid-July 1871) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
-
|
Letter 363 (late July 1871) - no ms. Mrs. Lucius Boltwood |
-
|
Letter 364 (September 1871) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
-
|
Letter 365 (about 1871) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 366 (about 1871) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 367 (early October 1871) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 368 (November 1871) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 369 (late November 1871) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 370 (about 1872) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
-
|
Letter 371 (mid-March 1872) T. W. Higginson |
-
|
Letter 372 (early May 1872) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 373 (mid-May 1872? - Franklin: about 1871) Edward (Ned) Dickinson |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 374 (1872?) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 375 (27 July 1872) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 376 (1872? - Franklin: about 1870) - no ms. Mrs. Henry Hills |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 377 (late August 1872) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
Selected Letters
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Letter 378 (autumn 1872) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 379 (late 1872) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
Selected Letters
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Letter 380 (late 1872) - no ms. Louise Norcross |
Selected Letters
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Letter 381 (late 1872) T. W. Higginson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 382 (winter 1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
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Letter 383 (early 1873?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 384 (early 1873?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 385 (early 1873) - no ms. Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
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Letter 386 (about February 1873) Perez Cowan |
Selected Letters
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Letter 387 (March 1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 388 (April 1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
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Letter 389 (late April 1873) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 390 (late May 1873) - no ms. Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
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Letter 391 (early summer 1873) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
Selected Letters
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Letter 392 (August 1873) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 394 (September 1873) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 395 (about September 1873) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 396 (about 1873) T. W Higginson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 396(a) (about 1873) T. W Higginson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 397 (autumn 1873) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
Selected Letters
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Letter 398 (autumn 1873) Edward (Ned) Dickinson |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 399 (autumn 1873) Mrs. J. G. Holland |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 400 (1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross |
Selected Letters
|
Letter 872 - To Charles H. Clark, Mid October 1883 |
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Letters 221 (May 1860) Susan Davis Phelps |
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Letters 226 (October 1860) Susan Gilbert Dickinson |
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Lickety Splickety * |
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Life—is what we make of it |
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Life, and d**h, and Giants |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Life's Trades |
Third Series
|
Light is sufficient to itself |
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Like Brooms of Steel (1252) |
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Like eyes that looked on Wastes (458) |
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Like Flowers, that heard the news of Dews (513) |
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Like her the Saints retire |
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Like Mighty Foot Lights—burned the Red |
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Like Some Old fashioned Miracle (302) |
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Like trains of cars on tracks of plush |
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Look back on time with kindly eyes |
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Lost |
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Lost Faith |
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Lost Joy |
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Love |
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Love reckons by itself—alone |
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Love—is anterior to Life |
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Love—is that later Thing than d**h |
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Love—thou art high (453) |
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Love's Baptism |
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Love's Humility |
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Low at my problem bending |
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Loyalty |
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Luck is not chance (1350) |
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Make me a picture of the sun |
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Mama never forgets her birds |
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Many a phrase has the English language |
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Many cross the Rhine |
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March |
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May-Flower |
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Me from Myself—to banish (642) |
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Me prove it now—Whoever doubt (537) |
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Me, change! Me, alter! |
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Me! Come! My dazzled face |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Midsummer, was it, when They died (962) |
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Mine |
Poems 1890
|
Mine—by the Right of the White Election! (528) |
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More Life—went out—when He went (422) |
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Morning—is the place for Dew |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Morning—means |
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Morning—means "Milking"—to the Farmer (300) |
Poems by Emily Dickinson
|
Morns like these—we parted |
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Most she touched me by her muteness (760) |
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Much Madness is divinest Sense |
Poems 1890
|
Musicians wrestle everywhere |
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Must be a Woe |
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Mute thy Coronation |
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My best Acquaintances are those (932) |
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My Country's Wardrobe |
Second Series
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My Cricket |
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My Eye is fuller than my vase |
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My Faith is larger than the Hills |
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My first well Day—since many ill (574) |
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My friend attacks my friend! |
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My friend must be a Bird |
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My Garden |
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My Garden—like the Beach (484) |
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My life closed twice before its close (96) |
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My Life had stood—a Loaded Gun |
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My nosegays are for captives |
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My period had come for Prayer |
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My Portion is Defeat—today (639) |
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My Reward for Being, was This (343) |
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My River runs to thee |
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My Soul—accused me—And I quailed (753) |
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My wheel is in the dark |
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My Worthiness is all my Doubt |
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Myself was formed—a Carpenter |
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Nature and God—I neither knew |
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Nature is what we see— |
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Nature rarer uses yellow |
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Nature—sometimes sears a Sapling (314) |
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Nature—the Gentlest Mother is |
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Nature, the Gentlest Mother |
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Nature's changes |
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Never for Society |
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New feet within my garden go (99) |
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No Bobolink—reverse His Singing |
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No Crowd that has occurred (515) |
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No Man can compa** a Despair (477) |
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No matter—now—Sweet (704) |
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No Notice gave She, but a Change |
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No Other can reduce (982) |
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No Prisoner be (720) |
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No Rack can torture me (384) |
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No Romance sold unto |
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Nobody knows this little Rose |
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None can experience sting |
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Noon—is the Hinge of Day |
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Not "Revelation"—'tis—that waits (685) |
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Not All Die Early, Dying Young |
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Not Any Higher Stands The Grave |
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Not in this world to see his face |
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Not probable—The barest Chance |
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Not that We did, shall be the test (823) |
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Not With A Club The Heart Is Broken |
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Numen Lumen |
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Of all the souls that stand create |
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Of all the Sounds despatched abroad (321) |
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Of Being is a Bird (653) |
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Of Bronze—and Blaze |
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Of Brussels—it was not |
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Of Consciousness, her awful Mate |
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Of Course—I prayed (376) |
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Of nearness to her sundered Things |
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Of Silken Speech and Specious Shoe (896) |
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Of Tolling Bell I ask the cause? (947) |
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Of Tribulation, these are They |
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On a Columnar Self |
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On such a night, or such a night |
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On that dear Frame the Years had worn (940) |
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On The Bleakness Of My Lot |
Third Series
|
On this long storm the Rainbow rose |
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On this wondrous sea |
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Once more, my now bewildered Dove (48) |
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One and One—are One (769) |
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One Anguish—in a Crowd |
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One Blessing had I than the rest |
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One Crucifixion is recorded—only |
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One day is there of the series |
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One dignity delays for all |
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One Life of so much Consequence! |
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One need not be a chamber to be haunted |
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One Sister have I in our house (14) |
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One Year ago—jots what? |
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Only a Shrine, but Mine |
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Only God—detect the Sorrow |
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Our journey had advanced |
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Our little Kinsmen—after Rain |
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Our lives are Swiss |
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Our share of night to bear (113) |
Poems 1890
|
Ourselves were wed one summer—dear (631) |
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Out of sight? What of that? |
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|
Over and over, like a Tune (367) |
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Over the fence |
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Pain Has An Element |
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|
Pain has an element of Blank (650) |
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Pain—expands the Time |
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Papa above! |
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Partake as doth the Bee (994) |
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Parting |
Third Series
|
Patience—has a quiet Outer |
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|
Peace is a fiction of our Faith |
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|
Perhaps I Asked Too Large |
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Perhaps you think me stooping |
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Perhaps you'd like to buy a flower (134) |
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Philosophy |
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|
Pigmy seraphs—gone astray |
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|
Playmates |
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Pompless No Life Can Pa** Away |
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Poor little Heart! |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Portraits are to daily faces |
Emily Dickinson Poems - second series (1891)
|
Power |
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|
Prayer is the little implement (437) |
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|
Precious to Me—She still shall be (727) |
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|
Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn |
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|
Promise This—When You be Dying (648) |
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|
Proof |
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|
Psalm of the Day |
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Publication—is the Auction |
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Purple—is fashionable twice |
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Put up my lute! |
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Read—Sweet—how others—strove |
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Real |
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Real Riches |
Third Series
|
Refuge |
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Rehearsal to Ourselves (379) |
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Remembrance |
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Remorse |
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|
Removed from Accident of Loss (424) |
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Renunciation |
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Requiem |
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Rest at Night |
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Resurection |
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Resurgam |
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Resurrection |
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Reticence |
Third Series
|
Retrospect |
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|
Reverse cannot befall (395) |
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|
Ribbons of the Year |
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|
Robbed by d**h—but that was easy |
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Rouge Et Noir |
Poems 1890
|
Rouge Gagne |
Poems 1890
|
Safe in their Alabaster Chambers (216) |
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Sanctuary Privileges |
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Satisfied |
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|
Saturday Afternoon |
Third Series
|
Savior! I've no one else to tell |
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|
Savior! I've no one else to tell (217) |
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|
Setting Sail |
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Severer Service of myself (786) |
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|
Sexton! My Master's sleeping here |
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|
Sexton! My Master's sleeping here (96) |
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|
She bore it till the simple veins |
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|
She dealt her pretty words like Blades (479) |
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|
She died at play |
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|
She died—this was the way she died |
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|
She dwelleth in the Ground (671) |
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|
She hideth Her the last |
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|
She lay as if at play |
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|
She rose to his requirement, dropped |
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|
She slept beneath a tree |
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|
She sped as Petals of a Rose (991) |
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|
She staked her Feathers—Gained an Arc (798) |
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|
She sweeps with many-colored brooms |
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|
She went as quiet as the Dew |
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|
She's happy, with a new Content (535) |
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|
Shells from the Coast mistaking (693) |
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|
Should you but fail at—Sea |
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|
Sic transit gloria mundi |
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|
Size circumscribes—it has no room (641) |
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|
Sleep is supposed to be |
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|
Smiling back from Coronation |
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|
Snake |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Snow beneath whose chilly softness |
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|
Snow flakes |
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|
So bashful when I spied her! (91) |
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|
So from the mould |
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|
So glad we are—a Stranger'd deem |
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|
So glad we are—a Stranger'd deem (329) |
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|
So has a Daisy vanished |
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|
So much Summer |
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|
So proud she was to die |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
So set its Sun in Thee |
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|
So the Eyes accost—and sunder (752) |
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|
So well that I can live without (456) |
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|
Soil of Flint, if steady tilled |
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|
Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church |
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|
Some Rainbow—coming from the Fair! (64) |
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|
Some such Butterfly be seen (541) |
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|
Some things that fly there be |
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|
Some—Work for Immortality (406) |
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|
Some, too fragile for winter winds |
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|
Song |
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|
Soto! Explore thyself! (832) |
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|
Soul, Wilt thou toss again? (139) |
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|
South Wind — has a pathos |
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|
South Winds jostle them |
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|
Sown in dishonor |
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|
Speech'—is a prank of Parliament (688) |
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|
Split the Lark—and you'll find the Music (861) |
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|
Spring is the Period (844) |
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|
Storm |
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|
Strong Draughts of Their Refreshing Minds (711) |
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|
Struck, was I, not yet by Lightning |
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|
Success |
Poems 1890
|
Success is counted Sweetest |
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|
Such is the Force of Happiness |
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|
Summer for thee, grant I may be |
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|
Summer Shower |
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|
Summer's Armies |
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|
Sunset |
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|
Sunset at Night—is natural (415) |
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|
Superfluous were the Sun (999) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Superiority To Fate |
Third Series
|
Surgeons must be very careful |
Second Series
|
Surrender |
Poems 1890
|
Suspense |
Poems 1890
|
Suspense—is Hostiler than d**h (705) |
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|
Sweet Hours Have Perished Here |
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|
Sweet Mountains—Ye tell Me no lie |
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|
Sweet—safe—Houses (457) |
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|
Sweet—You forgot—but I remembered (523) |
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|
Sweet, to have had them lost (901) |
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|
T Was Later When The Summer Went |
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|
T'is So Much Joy |
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|
Take your Heaven further on (388) |
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|
Taking up the fair Ideal (428) |
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|
Talk with prudence to a Beggar |
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|
Teach Him—When He makes the names |
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|
Tell All the Truth, But Tell it Slant |
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|
Thanksgiving Day |
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|
That after Horror—that 'twas us |
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|
That Distance was between Us |
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|
That first Day, when you praised Me, Sweet |
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|
That I did always love |
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|
That is solemn we have ended |
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|
That Such Have Died Enables Us |
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|
The Admirations—and Contempts—of time |
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|
The Angle of a Landscape (375) |
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|
The Balloon |
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|
The Bat |
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|
The Battle fought between the Soul |
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|
The Bee |
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|
The Bee is not afraid |
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|
The Bee is not afraid of me (111) |
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|
The Beggar Lad—dies early (717) |
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|
The Bible Is An Antique Volume |
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|
The Bird must sing to earn the Crumb |
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|
The Birds begun at Four o'clock |
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|
The Birds begun at Four o'clock (783) |
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|
The Birds reported from the South (743) |
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|
The Black Berry—wears a Thorn in his side |
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|
The Blue Jay |
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|
The Body grows without (578) |
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|
The Bone That Has No Marrow |
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|
The Book Of Martyrs |
Poems 1890
|
The Brain |
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|
The Brain – is wider than the Sky – |
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|
The Brain, within its Groove (556) |
Poems 1890
|
The Bustle In The House |
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|
The butterfly's a**umption-gown |
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|
The Chariot |
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|
The Chemical conviction |
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|
The Child's faith is new |
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|
The Child's faith is new (637) |
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|
The Color of a Queen, is this (776) |
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|
The Color of the Grave is Green (411) |
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|
The Coming Of Night |
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|
The Court is far away |
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|
The cricket sang |
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|
The Daisy follows soft the Sun |
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|
The day came slow, till five o' clock |
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|
The Day that I was crowned (356) |
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|
The Day undressed—Herself |
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|
The Definition of Beauty is (988) |
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|
The difference between Despair (305) |
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|
The Distance That The Dead Have Gone |
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|
The Ditch is dear to the Drunken man (Fr1679) |
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|
The Doomed—regard the Sunrise |
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|
The Drop, that wrestles in the Sea |
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|
The Dust behind I strove to join (992) |
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|
The dying need but little, dear |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
The face I carry with me—last |
-
|
The Farthest Thunder That I Heard |
Third Series
|
The feet of people walking home (7) |
-
|
The Fingers of the Light (1000) |
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|
The first Day that I was a Life |
-
|
The first Day's Night had come (410) |
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|
The First Lesson |
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|
The Flower must not blame the Bee |
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|
The Future—never spoke (672) |
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|
The Gentian weaves her fringes |
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|
The good Will of a Flower |
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|
The Gra** |
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|
The Gra** so little has to do |
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|
The Grace—Myself—might not obtain (707) |
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|
The Grave My Little Cottage Is |
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|
The Guest is gold and crimson |
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|
The hallowing of Pain |
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|
The Heart asks Pleasure - first - (536) |
Poems 1890
|
The Heart has Narrow Banks |
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|
The Heaven vests for Each |
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|
The Himmaleh was known to stoop |
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|
The Hollows round His eager Eyes (955) |
-
|
The Inevitable |
Third Series
|
The Judge is like the Owl (699) |
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|
The Juggler's Hat her Country is |
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|
The Juggler's Hat her Country is (330) |
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|
The Lady feeds Her little Bird (941) |
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|
The Lamp burns sure—within |
-
|
The last Night that She lived (1100) |
-
|
The Leaves like Women interchange (987) |
-
|
The Lightning playeth—all the while |
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|
The Loneliness One dare not sound |
-
|
The lonesome for they know not What |
-
|
The Lost Thought |
Third Series
|
The Love a Life can show Below |
-
|
The Luxury to apprehend |
-
|
The Malay—took the Pearl (452) |
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|
The Manner of its d**h (468) |
-
|
The Martyr Poets—did not tell |
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|
The Master |
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|
The Missing All—prevented Me (985) |
-
|
The Months have ends—the Years—a knot |
-
|
The Monument |
-
|
The Moon Is Distant From The Sea |
-
|
The Moon was but a Chin of Gold |
-
|
The Morning after Woe (364) |
-
|
The morns are meeker than they were |
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|
The Mountain sat upon the Plain |
-
|
The Mountains—grow unnoticed |
-
|
The Murmur of a Bee (155) |
-
|
The Mushroom |
-
|
The Mystery of Pain |
Poems 1890
|
The name—of it—is |
-
|
The name—of it—is "Autumn" (656) |
-
|
The nearest Dream recedes—unrealized |
Second Series
|
The Night was wide, and furnished scant |
-
|
The One who could repeat the Summer day |
-
|
The only ghost I ever saw |
-
|
The Only News I know |
-
|
The Oriole |
-
|
The Outer—from the Inner |
-
|
The Outlet (162) |
-
|
The Past |
-
|
The pedigree of honey |
-
|
The Poets light but Lamps |
-
|
The power to be true to You (464) |
-
|
The Preacher |
-
|
The Props a**ist the House |
-
|
The Province of the Saved (539) |
-
|
The Purple Clover |
-
|
The Railway Train |
Second Series
|
The rainbow never tells me |
-
|
The Rat |
-
|
The Red—Blaze—is the Morning (469) |
-
|
The Robin for the Crumb |
-
|
The Robin is the One |
-
|
The Robin's my Criterion for Tune |
-
|
The Robin's my Criterion for Tune (285) |
-
|
The Rose did caper on her cheek |
-
|
The Savior must have been a docile Gentleman (1487) |
-
|
The Sea Of Sunset |
-
|
The Secret |
Poems 1890
|
The Service without Hope |
-
|
The show is not the show |
Second Series
|
The Skies can't keep their secret! (191) |
-
|
The sky is low, the clouds are mean |
-
|
The Soul has Bandaged moments (512) |
-
|
The Soul selects her own Society (303) |
-
|
The Soul Should Always Stand Ajar |
-
|
The Soul that hath a Guest (674) |
-
|
The Soul unto itself (683) |
Second Series
|
The Soul's distinct connection |
-
|
The Soul's distinct connection (974) |
-
|
The Soul's Storm |
-
|
The Soul's Superior instants (306) |
-
|
The Spider |
-
|
The Spider holds a Silver Ball |
-
|
The Spirit is the Conscious Ear |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
The Stimulus, Beyond The Grave |
-
|
The Sun and Moon must make their haste (871) |
-
|
The Sun is gay or stark |
-
|
The Sun kept setting—setting—still (692) |
-
|
The Sun kept stooping—stooping |
-
|
The Sun—just touched the Morning |
-
|
The Sunrise runs for Both |
-
|
The Sunset stopped on Cottages |
-
|
The sweetest Heresy received |
-
|
The Test of Love—is d**h (573) |
-
|
The thought beneath so slight a film |
Second Series
|
The Tint I cannot take—is best (627) |
-
|
The Trees like Ta**els—hit—and swung |
-
|
The Truth—is stirless (780) |
-
|
The Tulip |
-
|
The Veins of other Flowers |
-
|
The Waking Year |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
The Way I read a Letter's—this (636) |
-
|
The White Heat |
Second Series
|
The Whole of it came not at once |
-
|
The Wife |
-
|
The Wind |
-
|
The Wind (Version 2) |
-
|
The Wind begun to knead the Gra** (824) |
-
|
The wind begun to rock the gra** |
-
|
The Wind didn't come from the Orchard—today (316) |
-
|
The wind trapped like a tired man |
-
|
The Winters are so short |
-
|
The Woodpecker |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
The World—feels Dusty |
-
|
The World—stands—solemner—to me |
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|
The Zeroes—taught us—Phosphorous (689) |
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|
Their Height in Heaven comforts not (696) |
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|
There are two Ripenings—one—of sight |
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|
There came a Day at Summer's full (322) |
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|
There came a Wind like a Bugle |
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|
There is a finished feeling |
-
|
There is a flower that Bees prefer (380) |
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|
There is a June when Corn is cut |
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|
There is a Languor of the Life |
-
|
There is a morn by men unseen |
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|
There is a pain — so utter |
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|
There is a Shame of Nobleness (551) |
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|
There is a solitude of space |
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|
There is a word |
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|
There is an arid Pleasure |
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|
There is another sky |
-
|
There is no frigate like a book (1263) |
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|
There's a certain Slant of light |
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|
There's been a d**h, in the Opposite House |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
There's something quieter than sleep |
-
|
There's something quieter than sleep (45) |
-
|
These are the days when Birds come back (130) |
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|
These tested Our Horizon |
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|
These—saw Visions (758) |
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|
They ask but our Delight |
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|
They called me to the Window, for |
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|
They dropped like flakes |
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|
They have a little Odor—that to me |
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|
They have not chosen me, he said |
-
|
They leave us with the Infinite (350) |
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|
They put Us far apart |
-
|
They say that "Time a**uages"— |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
They Shut Me Up in Prose |
-
|
They won't frown always—some sweet Day |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
They won't frown always—some sweet Day (874) |
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|
Thirst |
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|
This Bauble was preferred of Bees |
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|
This Chasm, Sweet, upon my life |
-
|
This Consciousness that is aware (822) |
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|
This Dust, and its Feature (936) |
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|
This heart that broke so long |
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|
This is a Blossom of the Brain |
-
|
This is My Letter to the World |
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|
This is the land the sunset washes |
-
|
This Merit hath the worst (979) |
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|
This Quiet Dust was Gentlemen and Ladies |
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|
This that would greet—an hour ago |
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|
This was a Poet—It is That |
-
|
This was in the White of the Year (995) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
This World is not Conclusion |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
Tho' I get home how late—how late |
Second Series
|
Tho' my destiny be Fustian |
-
|
Those fair—fictitious People (499) |
-
|
Those who have been in the Grave the longest |
-
|
Three times—we parted—Breath—and I |
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|
Three Weeks Pa**ed Since I Had Seen Her |
-
|
Through lane it lay—through bramble |
-
|
Through the Dark Sod—as Education |
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|
Through the strait pa** of suffering (792) |
Second Series
|
Tie the strings to my life, my Lord |
-
|
Till d**h—is narrow Loving |
-
|
Time feels so vast that were it not (802) |
-
|
Time's Lesson |
-
|
Tis Anguish grander than Delight (984) |
-
|
Tis good—the looking back on Grief (660) |
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|
Tis little I—could care for Pearls (466) |
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|
Tis One by One — the Father counts (545) |
-
|
Tis Opposites—entice (355) |
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|
Tis so much joy! 'Tis so much joy! (172) |
-
|
Tis Sunrise—Little Maid—Hast Thou (908) |
-
|
Tis true—They shut me in the Cold (538) |
-
|
Title divine—is mine! |
-
|
To be alive—is Power (677) |
-
|
To die—takes just a little while |
-
|
To fight aloud, is very brave (126) |
-
|
To fill a Gap (546) |
-
|
To hang our head—ostensibly |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
To hear an Oriole sing |
-
|
To Help Our Bleaker Parts |
-
|
To interrupt His Yellow Plan |
-
|
To know just how He suffered—would be dear |
-
|
To learn the Transport by the Pain |
-
|
To lose one's faith—surpa** |
-
|
To lose one's faith—surpa** (377) |
-
|
To Lose Thee, Sweeter Than To Gain |
-
|
To love thee Year by Year |
-
|
To make a prairie (1755) |
-
|
To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
To make One's Toilette—after d**h (485) |
-
|
To my quick ear the leaves conferred |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
To my small Hearth His fire came (638) |
-
|
To My Wife |
-
|
To offer brave a**istance (767) |
-
|
To One denied the drink (490) |
-
|
To own the Art within the Soul |
-
|
To put this World down, like a Bundle |
-
|
To see her is a Picture |
-
|
To see the summer sky (1471) |
-
|
To this World she returned |
-
|
To venerate the simple days |
Third Series
|
To wait an Hour—is long (781) |
-
|
Too Late |
-
|
Too little way the House must lie |
-
|
Train |
-
|
Transplanted |
-
|
Träumerei |
-
|
Triumph—may be of several kinds (455) |
-
|
Troubled About Many Things |
-
|
Trust in the Unexpected |
-
|
Truth — is as old as God |
-
|
Trying To Forget |
-
|
Twas a long Parting—but the time (625) |
-
|
Twas Crisis—All the length had pa**ed |
-
|
Twas Love—not me (394) |
-
|
Twas such a little—little boat |
-
|
Twas the old—road—through pain (344) |
-
|
Twas warm—at first—like Us (519) |
-
|
Twice had Summer her fair Verdure (846) |
-
|
Two butterflies went out at noon |
-
|
Two Butterflies went out at Noon— (533) |
-
|
Two Swimmers Wrestled On A Spar |
-
|
Two swimmers wrestled on the spar |
-
|
Two swimmers wrestled on the spar (201) |
-
|
Two Travellers perishing in Snow |
-
|
Two worlds |
-
|
Two—were immortal twice (800) |
-
|
Unable are the Loved to die (809) |
-
|
Uncertain lease—develops lustre (857) |
-
|
Under the Light, yet under |
-
|
Undue Significance a starving man attaches |
-
|
Unfulfilled to Observation |
-
|
Unit, like d**h, for Whom? |
-
|
Unreturning |
Poems 1890
|
Unto like Story—Trouble has enticed me |
-
|
Unto Me? I do not know you— |
-
|
Unto my Books—so good to turn |
-
|
Unwarned |
-
|
Upon Concluded Lives (735) |
-
|
Upon The Gallows Hung A Wretch |
Third Series
|
Ventures |
-
|
Victory comes late (690) |
Second Series
|
Void |
-
|
Volcanoes be in Sicily |
-
|
Wait till the Majesty of d**h |
-
|
Waiting |
-
|
Water, is taught by thirst |
-
|
We -- Bee and I -- live by the quaffing -- |
-
|
We can but follow to the Sun |
-
|
We Cover Thee—Sweet Face |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
We do not play on Graves |
-
|
We don't cry—Tim and I |
-
|
We don't cry—Tim and I (196) |
-
|
We dream—it is good we are dreaming (531) |
-
|
We Grow Accustomed to the Dark |
-
|
We Learn In The Retreating |
-
|
We learned the Whole of Love (568) |
-
|
We like march, his shoes are purple |
-
|
We lose—because we win |
-
|
We met as Sparks—Diverging Flints (958) |
-
|
We miss Her, not because We see (993) |
-
|
We never know how high we are (1176) |
-
|
We Never Know We Go, When We Are Going |
-
|
We outgrow love like other things |
-
|
We play at paste |
Second Series
|
We pray—to Heaven (489) |
-
|
We see—Comparatively (534) |
-
|
We should not mind so small a flower |
-
|
We talked as Girls do (586) |
-
|
We talked with each other about each other |
-
|
We thirst at first—'tis Nature's Act (726) |
-
|
Wedding Wind |
-
|
Went Up A Year This Evening! |
-
|
Wert Thou but ill—that I might show thee |
-
|
What care the Dead, for Chanticleer (592) |
-
|
What did They do since I saw Them? |
-
|
What I see not, I better see |
-
|
What if I say I shall not wait! |
-
|
What Inn is this |
-
|
What is |
-
|
What shall I do when the Summer troubles (956) |
-
|
What shall I do—it whimpers so |
-
|
What Soft—Cherubic Creatures (401) |
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series
|
What would I give to see his face? (247) |
-
|
When Bells stop ringing—Church—begins (633) |
-
|
When Diamonds are a Legend |
-
|
When I count the seeds |
-
|
When I have seen the Sun emerge (888) |
-
|
When I Hoped I Feared |
-
|
When I hoped, I recollect (768) |
-
|
When I was small, a Woman died (596) |
-
|
When Katie walks, this simple pair accompany her side (222) |
-
|
When Night is almost done |
-
|
When One has given up One's life (853) |
-
|
When Roses cease to bloom, Sir |
-
|
When the Astronomer stops seeking |
-
|
When They Come Back |
-
|
When we stand on the tops of Things |
-
|
Where bells no more affright the morn |
-
|
Where Every Bird Is Bold To Go |
-
|
Where I have lost, I softer tread (104) |
-
|
Where Ships of Purple—gently toss |
-
|
Where Thou art—that—is Home (725) |
-
|
Whether my bark went down at sea |
Poems 1890
|
While Asters (331) |
-
|
While it is alive (491) |
-
|
Who Court obtain within Himself |
-
|
Who Giants know, with lesser Men |
-
|
Who Has Not Found The Heaven Below |
Third Series
|
Who never lost |
-
|
Who never lost, are unprepared (73) |
Second Series
|
Who occupies this House? |
-
|
Who Robbed The Woods? |
-
|
Who? |
-
|
Whole Gulfs—of Red, and Fleets—of Red |
-
|
Whose are the little beds, I asked |
-
|
Whose cheek is this? |
-
|
Why |
-
|
Why do I love You, Sir? |
-
|
Why make it doubt—it hurts it so (462) |
-
|
Why—do they shut Me out of Heaven? |
-
|
Wild Nights – Wild Nights! (249) |
-
|
Will there really be a |
-
|
Will there really be a "Morning"? (101) |
-
|
Winter is good - his Hoar Delights (1316) |
-
|
With A Flower |
-
|
With Flowers |
Third Series
|
With thee, in the Desert |
-
|
Within my Garden, rides a Bird (500) |
-
|
Within my reach! |
-
|
Without this—there is nought |
-
|
Wolfe demanded during dying |
-
|
Would you like summer? Taste of ours (691) |
-
|
XVI |
-
|
You cannot put a Fire out (530) |
-
|
You constituted Time |
-
|
You know that Portrait in the Moon (504) |
-
|
You left me—Sire—two Legacies |
-
|
You love me—you are sure |
-
|
You love the Lord—you cannot see (487) |
-
|
You said that I |
-
|
You see I cannot see—your lifetime |
-
|
You taught me Waiting with Myself |
-
|
You'll find—it when you try to die |
-
|
You'll find—it when you try to die (610) |
-
|
You'll know Her—by Her Foot (634) |
-
|
You'll know it—as you know 'tis Noon (420) |
-
|
You're right |
-
|
You're right (234) |
-
|
You've seen Balloons set—Haven't You? |
-
|
Your Riches—taught me—Poverty (299) |
-
|