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Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
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Ms. Alexander’s ENG 250 Class (Fall 2015) (2015)
372, After great pain, a formal feeling comes
The Soul selects her own Society (303)
This was a Poet—It is That
I heard a Fly buzz (465)
The Brain – is wider than the Sky –
I cannot live with You (640)
My Life had stood—a Loaded Gun
Publication—is the Auction
Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Four Dickinson Songs (2014)
Of All the Souls
If You Were Coming
No Promises (2007)
I Felt My Life with Both My Hands
If You Were Coming in the Fall
Songs of Ourselves (2005)
Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Four Dickinson Songs (2002)
I Dwell in Possibility
By a Departing Light (2000)
Adrift! A little boat adrift!
Three Dickinson Songs (2000)
As Imperceptibly as Grief
Will there really be a morning?
Good morning, Midnight
Too Few the Mornings Be (2000)
Poor Little Heart!
Will There Really Be a Morning?
Emily Dickinson Songs (1986)
What If I Say I Shall Not Wait
Harmonium (1981)
Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Elämän kirja (1978)
Hope is the thing with feathers
Thirteen Dickinson Songs (1978)
I Like to See It Lap the Miles
I Know Some Lonely Houses Up the Road
There Came a Wind Like a Bugle
The Wind — tapped like a tired Man
These are the days when Birds come back
What if I say I shall not wait!
If I’m lost — now
The Loneliness One dare not sound
Under the Light, yet under
She bore it till the simple veins
Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson (1950)
Nature, the Gentlest Mother
There Came a Wind Like a Bugle
Why Do They Shut Me Out of Heaven?
Dear March, Come In!
Sleep Is Supposed to Be
When They Come Back
I Felt a Funeral in My Brain
Going to Heaven!
The Chariot
Emily Dickinson Poems - third series (1896)
If the foolish, call them flowers
I had a guinea golden
I have a King, who does not speak
What Soft—Cherubic Creatures (401)
Is Bliss then, such Abyss (340)
He touched me, so I live to know
A light exists in spring
The Waking Year
A Murmur in the Trees—to note (416)
Snake
Could I but ride indefinite (661)
This World is not Conclusion
We Cover Thee—Sweet Face
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain (280)
I meant to find Her when I came
If I may have it, when it’s dead (577)
Before the ice is in the pools
Adrift! A little boat adrift!
There’s been a Death, in the Opposite House
A Clock Stopped -- Not The Mantel’s
Third Series (1896)
Drowning Is Not So Pitiful
If the foolish, call them flowers
The Inevitable
I had a guinea golden
Reticence
The Farthest Thunder That I Heard
A Man
Griefs
I have a King, who does not speak
Alpine Glow
The Brain
The Bone That Has No Marrow
What Soft—Cherubic Creatures (401)
Is Bliss then, such Abyss (340)
Thanksgiving Day
Love’s Humility
Satisfied
Loyalty
Forgotten
The Master
Not With A Club The Heart Is Broken
He touched me, so I live to know
Numen Lumen
Nature’s changes
A light exists in spring
The Waking Year
Dear March - Come in - (1320)
March
A Murmur in the Trees—to note (416)
High From The Earth I Heard A Bird
A Well
The Wind (Version 2)
A Dew Sufficed Itself
Snake
Could I but ride indefinite (661)
The Moon
The Bat
The Balloon
Evening
Aurora
The Coming Of Night
This World is not Conclusion
We Cover Thee—Sweet Face
How Dare The Robins Sing
Death
Unwarned
Asleep
Trying To Forget
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain (280)
I meant to find Her when I came
Farewell
Dead
Three Weeks Passed Since I Had Seen Her
If I may have it, when it’s dead (577)
Before the ice is in the pools
Adrift! A little boat adrift!
There’s been a Death, in the Opposite House
The Soul’s Storm
A Clock Stopped -- Not The Mantel’s
Charlotte Bronte’s Grave
Retrospect
Eternity
Poems 1890 (1890)
Rouge Gagne
Glee—The great storm is over (619)
In A Library
I know some lonely Houses off the Road (289)
The Book Of Martyrs
I taste a liquor never brewed
Surrender
If you were coming in the fall
Have you got a Brook in your little heart
Transplanted
In Vain
Renunciation
Love’s Baptism
Resurrection
The Wife
A Service of Song
Summer’s Armies
The Grass
Summer Shower
Psalm of the Day
The Purple Clover
The Bee
So bashful when I spied her! (91)
Two worlds
A Day
The Wind
Indian Summer
I think the Hemlock likes to stand (525)
There’s a certain Slant of light
One dignity delays for all
Too Late
Safe in their Alabaster Chambers
On this long storm the Rainbow rose
From The Chrysalis
I died for Beauty — but was scarce
Troubled About Many Things
To know just how He suffered—would be dear
The last Night that She lived (1100)
The First Lesson
Afraid! Of whom am I afraid?
Dying
The Chariot
Except To Heave She Is Nought
Along The Potomac
The Daisy follows soft the Sun
Emancipation
Sleep is supposed to be
97kcal
Loaded Gun
Emily Dickinson Poems - second series (1891)
I Started Early - Took my Dog
It sifts from Leaden Sieves - (311)
Five Poems by Emily Dickinson
So bashful
Poems by Emily Dickinson
Heaven has different Signs—to me (575)
Heaven—is what I cannot reach! (239)
Glee—The great storm is over (619)
Morning—means ”Milking”—to the Farmer (300)
The White Heat
Who never lost, are unprepared (73)
I can wade Grief (252)
A Dying Tiger—moaned for Drink (566)
Through the strait pass of suffering (792)
A Lady red—amid the Hill (74)
I meant to have but modest needs (476)
A little East of Jordan (59)
I know some lonely Houses off the Road (289)
A loss of something ever felt I (959)
A Mien to move a Queen (283)
A thought went up my mind to-day
A precious—mouldering pleasure (371)
I should have been too glad, I see (313)
A single Screw of Flesh (263)
It tossed—and tossed (723)
A solemn thing—it was—I said (483)
Victory comes late (690)
A something in a summer’s Day (122)
A still—Volcano—Life (601)
A Tongue—to tell Him I am true! (400)
A Wife—at daybreak I shall be (461)
I’m ceded—I’ve stopped being Theirs (508)
Ah, Moon—and Star! (240)
Good night! which put the candle out?
Renunciation
All forgot for recollecting (966)
An English Breeze
Remorse
Awake ye muses nine, sing me a strain divine (1)
Because the Bee may blameless hum (869)
I gained it so (359)
Bereavement in their death to feel (645)
Better—than Music! For I—who heard it (503)
Bloom upon the Mountain—stated (667)
Your Riches—taught me—Poverty (299)
I gave myself to Him (580)
Going to him! Happy letter! Tell him
So bashful when I spied her! (91)
The Way I read a Letter’s—this (636)
Dare you see a Soul at the White Heat? (365)
He put the Belt around my life (273)
Death sets a thing of signigicant
Delight is as the flight (257)
Despair’s advantage is achieved (799)
I think the Hemlock likes to stand (525)
Will there really be a ”Morning”? (101)
Did you ever stand in a Cavern’s Mouth (590)
Don’t put up my Thread and Needle (617)
Doubt Me! My Dim Companion! (275)
Drama’s Vitallest Expression is the Common Day (741)
Empty my Heart, of Thee (587)
I died for Beauty — but was scarce
The Skies can’t keep their secret! (191)
Arcturus is his other name (70)
First Robin
Fitter to see Him, I may be (968)
The last Night that She lived (1100)
Forever at His side to walk (246)
Forever—is composed of Nows (624)
There came a Wind like a Bugle
Forget! The lady with the Amulet (438)
Further in Summer than the Birds (1068)
The wind tapped like a tired man
Along The Potomac
Had I not This, or This, I said (904)
He fought like those Who’ve nought to lose (759)
He fumbles at your Soul (315)
She sweeps with many-colored brooms
He strained my faith (497)
Heaven (575)
Her Sweet turn to leave the Homestead (649)
Her sweet Weight on my Heart a Night (518)
Her—”last Poems” (312)
God made a little Gentian (442)
Besides the Autumn poets sing (131)
Home
How sick—to wait—in any place—but thine (368)
How the old Mountains drip with Sunset (291)
I am ashamed—I hide (473)
I Came to buy a smile—today (223)
I can’t tell you—but you feel it (65)
I could bring You Jewels—had I a mind to (697)
I read my sentence—steadily (412)
I could die—to know (570)
I cried at Pity—not at Pain (588)
I cross till I am weary (550)
The only ghost I ever saw
I dreaded that first Robin, so (348)
Their Height in Heaven comforts not (696)
I got so I could take his name (293)
I had no Cause to be awake (542)
I had not minded—Walls (398)
If anybody’s friend be dead (509)
I have never seen “Volcanoes” (175)
Our journey had advanced
I haven’t told my garden yet (50)
I know where Wells grow—Droughtless Wells (460)
I learned—at least—what Home could be (944)
I live with Him—I see His face (463)
I ment to find her when I came (718)
I never felt at Home—Below (413)
I play at Riches—to appease (801)
I prayed, at first, a little Girl (576)
I rose—because He sank (616)
I see thee better—in the Dark
I showed her Heights she never saw (446)
I tend my flowers for thee (339)
I think I was enchanted (593)
I think to Live—may be a Bliss (646)
I watched the Moon around the House (629)
I would not paint—a picture (505)
I’ll tell you how the sun rose
If He were living—dare I ask (734)
If I’m lost—now (256)
If the foolish, call them “flowers” (168)
I’ll clutch—and clutch (427)
I’m ”wife”—I’ve finished that
I’m saying every day (373)
I’m sorry for the Dead—Today (529)
I’m the little “Heart’s Ease” (176)
In Winter in my Room (1670)
It always felt to me—a wrong (597)
It don’t sound so terrible—quite—as it did (426)
It feels a shame to be Alive (444)
It knew no Medicine (559)
It struck me every day
It was given to me by the Gods (454)
It will be Summer—eventually (342)
It would never be Common—more—I said (430)
It’s coming—the postponeless Creature (390)
It’s easy to invent a Life (724)
It’s thoughts—and just One Heart
I’ve known a Heaven, like a Tent (243)
I’ve none to tell me to but Thee (881)
Joy to have merited the Pain (788)
Like eyes that looked on Wastes (458)
Like Flowers, that heard the news of Dews (513)
Like Some Old fashioned Miracle (302)
Like trains of cars on tracks of plush
Love—thou art high (453)
Me prove it now—Whoever doubt (537)
More Life—went out—when He went (422)
Most she touched me by her muteness (760)
My first well Day—since many ill (574)
My Portion is Defeat—today (639)
No Crowd that has occurred (515)
No Man can compass a Despair (477)
No matter—now—Sweet (704)
No Rack can torture me (384)
Not in this world to see his face
Of all the Sounds despatched abroad (321)
Of Being is a Bird (653)
Ourselves were wed one summer—dear (631)
Precious to Me—She still shall be (727)
Promise This—When You be Dying (648)
Removed from Accident of Loss (424)
Savior! I’ve no one else to tell (217)
Severer Service of myself (786)
She dealt her pretty words like Blades (479)
Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church
Some Rainbow—coming from the Fair! (64)
Some—Work for Immortality (406)
Sweet—safe—Houses (457)
Sweet—You forgot—but I remembered (523)
Take your Heaven further on (388)
Taking up the fair Ideal (428)
The Angle of a Landscape (375)
The Beggar Lad—dies early (717)
The Birds begun at Four o’clock (783)
The Birds reported from the South (743)
The Black Berry—wears a Thorn in his side
The Child’s faith is new (637)
The Color of the Grave is Green (411)
The cricket sang
The Day that I was crowned (356)
The feet of people walking home (7)
The Fingers of the Light (1000)
The first Day’s Night had come (410)
The Future—never spoke (672)
The Grass so little has to do
The Judge is like the Owl (699)
The Malay—took the Pearl (452)
The Manner of its Death (468)
The Morning after Woe (364)
The Murmur of a Bee (155)
The name—of it—is “Autumn” (656)
The Province of the Saved (539)
The Robin’s my Criterion for Tune (285)
The Soul has Bandaged moments (512)
The Soul’s Superior instants (306)
The Spider holds a Silver Ball
The Sun and Moon must make their haste (871)
The Sun kept setting—setting—still (692)
The Tint I cannot take—is best (627)
The Truth—is stirless (780)
The Wind begun to knead the Grass (824)
The Wind didn’t come from the Orchard—today (316)
There came a Day at Summer’s full (322)
There is a flower that Bees prefer (380)
There’s something quieter than sleep (45)
These are the days when Birds come back (130)
These—saw Visions (758)
They leave us with the Infinite (350)
Those fair—fictitious People (499)
Tie the strings to my life, my Lord
Tis good—the looking back on Grief (660)
Tis One by One — the Father counts (545)
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)
To fight aloud, is very brave (126)
Train
Twas a long Parting—but the time (625)
Twas Crisis—All the length had passed
Twas Love—not me (394)
Twas the old—road—through pain (344)
Twas warm—at first—like Us (519)
We don’t cry—Tim and I (196)
We dream—it is good we are dreaming (531)
We learned the Whole of Love (568)
We like march, his shoes are purple
We pray—to Heaven (489)
We see—Comparatively (534)
We talked as Girls do (586)
What care the Dead, for Chanticleer (592)
What shall I do when the Summer troubles (956)
What would I give to see his face? (247)
When I hoped, I recollect (768)
When I was small, a Woman died (596)
Where I have lost, I softer tread (104)
Where Thou art—that—is Home (725)
Why make it doubt—it hurts it so (462)
Within my Garden, rides a Bird (500)
You know that Portrait in the Moon (504)
You said that I
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 (234)
Two butterflies went out at noon
Sacred Songs for Pantheists
Intoxication
Second Series
I bring an unaccustomed wine
The nearest Dream recedes—unrealized
Hope is the thing with feathers
The Railway Train
Tho’ I get home how late—how late
A poor — torn heart — a tattered heart
God gave a Loaf to every Bird
A shady friend for torrid days
Each life converges to some centre
Before I got my eye put out
The Preacher
Heart, not so heavy as mine
Unto my Books—so good to turn
I had been hungry, all the Years
To learn the Transport by the Pain
I Years Had Been From Home
I know that He exists
Musicians wrestle everywhere
Just lost, when I was saved!
Of all the souls that stand create
The Night was wide, and furnished scant
The Rose did caper on her cheek
The Moon Is Distant From The Sea
What if I say I shall not wait!
Nature—the Gentlest Mother is
At Half-Past Three A Single Bird
The day came slow, till five o’ clock
The Sun—just touched the Morning
The Robin is the One
From Cocoon forth a Butterfly
Before you thought of spring
An altered look about the hills
Whose are the little beds, I asked
Pigmy seraphs—gone astray
To hear an Oriole sing
The Oriole
In Shadow
Two Butterflies went out at Noon— (533)
By The Sea
An awful Tempest mashed the air
A Bird came down the Walk (328)
A Narrow Fellow in the Grass
The Mushroom
I know a place where summer strives
The wind begun to rock the grass
Bring me the sunset in a cup
My Cricket
As Imperceptibly as Grief
The Gentian weaves her fringes
The Blue Jay
Going to Heaven!
I Have Not Told My Garden Yet
Some, too fragile for winter winds
Death sets a Thing significant
Pompless No Life Can Pass Away
On such a night, or such a night
If I should die
Her final Summer was it
One need not be a chamber to be haunted
Wait till the Majesty of Death
Went Up A Year This Evening!
Requiem
It was not Death, for I stood up (510)
I should not dare to leave my friend
Of Tribulation, these are They
I think just how my shape will rise
Selected Letters
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
2
20
204 (2 March 1859) Mrs. J. G. Holland
22
23
24
25
26
27
29
3
30
31
32
33
330a (11 May 1869) [T. W. Higginson to ED]
34
341 (June 1870?) Samuel Bowles
35
36
38
39
393 (summer 1873) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
4
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
5
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
6
60
61
62
63
64
66
67
68
69
7
70
71
72
73
75
76
77
78
79
8
80
9
Letter 292 (Cambridge, June 1864) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
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 [unknown]
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 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 [unknown]
Letter 248a (?) [Charles Wadsworth to ED]
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 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 274 (6 October 1862) T. W. Higginson
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 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 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 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 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 323 (16 July 1867) T. W. Higginson
Letter 324 (about April 1868) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 326 (about 1868) Mrs. Luke Sweetser
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 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 344 (1870?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 345 (1870?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 349 (about 1870 - Franklin: about 1869) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
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 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
Letter 367 (early October 1871) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 368 (November 1871) T. W. Higginson
Letter 369 (late November 1871) Mrs. J. G. Holland
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
Letter 375 (27 July 1872) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 376 (1872? - Franklin: about 1870) - no ms. Mrs. Henry Hills
Letter 377 (late August 1872) Mrs. J. G. Holland
Letter 378 (autumn 1872) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 379 (late 1872) - no ms. Louise Norcross
Letter 380 (late 1872) - no ms. Louise Norcross
Letter 381 (late 1872) T. W. Higginson
Letter 382 (winter 1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 383 (early 1873?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 384 (early 1873?) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 385 (early 1873) - no ms. Frances Norcross
Letter 386 (about February 1873) Perez Cowan
Letter 388 (April 1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 389 (late April 1873) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 390 (late May 1873) - no ms. Frances Norcross
Letter 391 (early summer 1873) Mrs. J. G. Holland
Letter 392 (August 1873) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 394 (September 1873) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letter 395 (about September 1873) Mrs. J. G. Holland
Letter 397 (autumn 1873) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 398 (autumn 1873) Edward (Ned) Dickinson
Letter 399 (autumn 1873) Mrs. J. G. Holland
Letter 400 (1873?) - no ms. Louise and Frances Norcross
Letters 221 (May 1860) Susan Davis Phelps
Letters 226 (October 1860) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
The Faces of Love
If You Were Coming in the Fall
It Makes No Difference Abroad
The Poems of Emily Dickinson Edited by R. W. Franklin (Harvard University Press, 1999)
After great pain a formal feeling comes (J341, F372)
Others
A Letter
These are the days when birds come back
Her sweet weight
The Moon and the Sea
Will There Really Be a Morning
Answer July
Hope Is the Thing With Feathers
Split the Lark
Broken
Crickets
Funeral in My Brain
Hope (with Feathers)
The wind tapped like a tired man
There Came a Wind Like a Bugle
I taste a liquor never brewed
Joy
Will There Really Be a Morning
Funeral in My Brain
#258
#280
1096
21
259 (287)
37
74
764
A Bee his burnished Carriage
A Bird Came Down (class page)
A Coffin — is a small Domain
A Drop fell on the Apple Tree (794)
A fuzzy fellow, without feet
A House upon the Height
A little bread — a crust — a crumb
A narrow Fellow in the Grass - Copy
A Northeast Storm
A precious Mouldering
A Prison gets to be a friend
A science — so the Savants say
A Solemn thing within the Soul
A Visitor in Marl
A Wounded Deer
Again — his voice is at the door
Ah, Teneriffe!
Alabaster Wool
All overgrown by cunning moss
All these my banners be
Although I put away his life
American Literature Digital Anthology (Beginnings through 1914)
Answer July (386)
As far from pity, as complaint
As if some little Arctic flower
As the Starved Maelstrom laps the Navies
As Watchers hang upon the East
Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Because I could not stop for Death (1890)
Because I Could Not Stop For Death - Emily Dickinson
Because I Couldn’t Stop
Because I did not stop for death
Because the Bee may blameless hum
Behind Me — dips Eternity
Bereaved of all, I went abroad
Besides the Autumn poets sing
By my Window have I for Scenery
Chillin’ Wit Emily D.
Civilization — spurns — the Leopard!
Cocoon above! Cocoon below!
Color - Caste - Denomination - (970)
Conscious am I in my Chamber
Could live — did live
Crisis is a Hair
Dare you see a Soul
Dawn (XVII)
Delayed till she had ceased to know
Despair’s advantage is achieved
Did Our Best Moment last
Distrustful of the Gentian
Do People moulder equally
Don’t put up my Thread and Needle
Drama’s Vitallest Expression is the Common Day
Dust is the only Secret
Dying! Dying in the night!
Dying! To be afraid of thee
Emily Bailey (ft. Mia Lane, Alan Watts, Asra Prester, Souleymane Diamanka & Emily Dickinson)
Except to Heaven, she is nought
Faith — is the Pierless Bridge
Flowers — Well — if anybody
For every Bird a Nest
For this — accepted Breath
Four Trees — upon a solitary Acre
Funeral in my brain
Going to Him! Happy letter!
Good Morning ‑‑ Midnight
Good Morning — Midnight
Grief is a Mouse
Growth of Man—like Growth of Nature
Had I presumed to hope
Have any like Myself
He fought like those Who’ve nought to lose
He fumbles at your spirit
He gave away his Life
He parts Himself—like Leaves
He told a homely tale
He was weak, and I was strong—then
Heart not so heavy as mine
Her
Hope Is the Thing With Feathers
Hope is the thing with feathers - Eng. Comp. II
How many times these low feet staggered
How noteless Men, and Pleiads, stand
I Am Alive I Guess
I am alive—I guess
I Can Wade Grief
I cannot buy it—’tis not sold
I cannot dance upon my Toes
I can’t tell you—but you feel it
I cautious, scanned my little life
I could not prove the Years had feet
I could suffice for Him, I knew
I did not reach Thee
I Died For Beauty
I Dwell in Possibility
I Dwell in Possibility Annotations
I envy Seas, whereon He rides
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain (class page)
I felt my life with both my hands
I had some things that I called mine
I have a Bird in spring
I have never seen
I haven’t told my garden yet
I heard a Fly buzz - when I died (class page)
I like to see it lap the Miles
I like to see it lap the Miles (43)
I make His Crescent fill or lack
I measure every Grief I meet (561)
I met a King this afternoon!
I never hear that one is dead
I never told the buried gold
I often passed the village
I reckon—when I count it all
I Shall Keep Singing
I Taste a Liquor Never Brewed
I taste a liquor never brewed (214)
I think the longest Hour of all
I tie my Hat—I crease my Shawl (443)
I tried to think a lonelier Thing
I was the slightest in the House
I watched the Moon around the House
If any sink, assure that this, now standing
If He dissolve—then—there is nothing
If I Can Stop
If I could bribe them by a Rose
In Ebon Box, when years have flown
In falling Timbers buried
Inconceivably solemn!
Is There Such a Thing As Day?
It bloomed and dropt, a Single Noon
It ceased to hurt me, though so slow
It did not surprise me
It don’t sound so terrible—quite—as it did
It makes no difference abroad
It might be lonelier
It troubled me as once I was
It was a Grave, yet bore no Stone
It would have starved a Gnat
I’m ceded—I’ve stopped being Theirs
I’m the little
I’m the little (176)
I’ve known a Heaven, like a Tent
I’ve none to tell me to but Thee
Let Us play Yesterday
Letter 257 (late March 1862? - Franklin: December 1861) Samuel Bowles
Letter 275 (mid-November 1862) Samuel Bowles
Letter 350 (about 1870) Susan Gilbert Dickinson
Letter 872 - To Charles H. Clark, Mid October 1883
Life—is what we make of it
Love—is that later Thing than Death
Make me a picture of the sun
Many a phrase has the English language
Members of the Resurrection
Moon and Star
Musicians Wrestle Everywhere
My Faith is larger than the Hills
My Life
My Life had stood𑁋a ǀoaded Gun
My period had come for Prayer
My wheel is in the dark
My Worthiness is all my Doubt
Myself was formed—a Carpenter
Nature, the Gentlest Mother
No Notice gave She, but a Change
Of Bronze—and Blaze
Of Brussels—it was not
Of nearness to her sundered Things
One Anguish—in a Crowd
One Blessing had I than the rest
One Crucifixion is recorded—only
One day is there of the series
One Life of so much Consequence!
One need not be a chamber to be haunted
One Sister have I in our house (14)
One Year ago—jots what?
Only a Shrine, but Mine
Oriole
Our little Kinsmen—after Rain
Out of sight? What of that?
Possibility
Rain In Loves
Read—Sweet—how others—strove
Robbed by Death—but that was easy
Safe in Their Alabaster Chambers
Sanctuary Privileges
Savior! I’ve no one else to tell
She bore it till the simple veins
She lay as if at play
She rose to his requirement, dropped
Sic transit gloria mundi
Struck, was I, not yet by Lightning
Sweet Mountains—Ye tell Me no lie
That after Horror—that ’twas us
The Admirations—and Contempts—of time
The Battle fought between the Soul
The Bible Is An Antique Volume
The Birds begun at Four o’clock
The Child’s faith is new
The Court is far away
The Day undressed—Herself
The Doomed—regard the Sunrise
The face I carry with me—last
The first Day that I was a Life
The Grass So Little Has to Do
The Heaven vests for Each
The Lightning playeth—all the while
The Loneliness One dare not sound
The lonesome for they know not What
The Love a Life can show Below
The Luxury to apprehend
The Months have ends—the Years—a knot
The Moon is distant from the Sea
The Moon was but a Chin of Gold
The name—of it—is
The Outer—from the Inner
The Props assist the House
The Robin’s my Criterion for Tune
The Sun kept stooping—stooping
The Sunrise runs for Both
The Trees like Tassels—hit—and swung
The Whole of it came not at once
The Winters are so short
The World—stands—solemner—to me
There came a wind like a bugle
There is a June when Corn is cut
There is a Languor of the Life
There is a morn
There is a morn by men unseen
There is a word
There is another sky
There’s a Certain Slant of Light
There’s something quieter than sleep
These Are the Days
They called me to the Window, for
They put Us far apart
They Shut Me Up in Prose
This Chasm, Sweet, upon my life
This Consciousness that is aware (822)
This is a Blossom of the Brain
Tho’ my destiny be Fustian
Three times—we parted—Breath—and I
Through lane it lay—through bramble
Till Death—is narrow Loving
Title divine—is mine!
To die—takes just a little while
To interrupt His Yellow Plan
To My Wife
To put this World down, like a Bundle
Träumerei
Trust in the Unexpected
Two Travellers perishing in Snow
T’is So Much Joy
Under the Light, yet under
Unit, like Death, for Whom?
Unto like Story—Trouble has enticed me
Unto Me? I do not know you—
We
We -- Bee and I -- live by the quaffing --
We do not play on Graves
We don’t cry—Tim and I
We Grow Accustomed to the Dark
We should not mind so small a flower
Wedding Wind
Wert Thou but ill—that I might show thee
What did They do since I saw Them?
What I see not, I better see
What If I Say I Shall Not Wait!
What is
What shall I do—it whimpers so
When we stand on the tops of Things
Where bells no more affright the morn
Who never lost
Who occupies this House?
Why do I love You, Sir?
Why—do they shut Me out of Heaven?
Will there really be a
Will There Really Be a Morning?
Will There Really Be A Morning?
Winter Afternoons
Without this—there is nought
XVI
You love me—you are sure
You see I cannot see—your lifetime
You taught me Waiting with Myself
You’ll find—it when you try to die
You’re right
You’ve seen Balloons set—Haven’t You?
’Tis not that Dying hurts us so
’Tis so appalling — it exhilarates
’Twas just this time, last year, I died
’Twas like a Maelstrom, with a notch