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Favorite poems of Emily Dickinson by Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886

Book Information

TitleFavorite poems of Emily Dickinson
CreatorDickinson, Emily, 1830-1886, Todd, Mabel Loomis, 1856-1932, Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 1823-1911
Year1978
PPI500
Pages170
PublisherNew York : Avenel Books : Distributed by Crown Publishers
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectPoetry, Poetry
ISBN0517637510, 9780517637517
Collectioninternetarchivebooks, americana, printdisabled, inlibrary
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Identifierfavoritepoemsofe00rhva
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Description

Success -- Our share of night to bear -- Rouge et noir -- Rouge gagne -- Glee! The great storm is over -- If I can stop one heart from breaking -- Almost -- A wounded deer leaps highest -- The heart asks pleasure first -- In a library -- Much madness is divinest sense -- I asked no other thing -- Exclusion -- The secret -- The lonely house -- To fight aloud is very brave -- Dawn -- The book of martyrs -- The mystery of pain -- I taste a liquor never brewed -- A book -- I had no time to hate, because -- Unreturning -- Whether my bark went down at sea -- Belshazzar had a letter -- The brain withon its groove -- Mine -- Bequest -- Alter? When the hills do -- Suspense -- Surrender -- If you were coming in the fall -- With a flower, (Cont.) Proof -- Have you got a brook in your little heart? -- Transplanted -- The outlet -- In vain -- Renunciation -- Love's baptism -- Resurrection -- Apocalypse -- The wife -- Apotheosis -- New feet within my garden go -- Mayflower -- Why? -- Perhaps you'd like to buy a flower -- The pedigree of honey -- A service of song -- The bee is not afraid of me -- Summer's armies -- The grass -- A little road not made of man -- Summer shower -- Psalm of the day -- The sea of sunset -- Purple clover -- The bee -- Presentiment is that long shadow -- As children bid the guest good-night -- Angels in the early morning -- So bashful when I spied her -- Two worlds -- The mountain -- A day -- The butterfly's assumption-gown -- The wind -- Death and life -- Twas later when the summer went -- Indian summer -- Autumn -- Beclouded -- The hemlock -- There's a certain slant of light, (Cont.) One dignity delays for all -- Too late -- Astra Castra -- Safe in their alabaster chambers -- On this long storm the rainbow rose -- From the chrysalis -- Setting sail -- Look back on time with kindly eyes -- A train went through a burial gate -- I died for beauty, but was scarce -- Troubled about many things -- Real -- A funeral -- I went to thank her -- I've seen a dying eye -- Refuge -- I never saw a moor -- Playmates -- To know just how he suffered -- The last night that she lived -- The first lesson -- The bustle in a house -- I reason, earth is short -- Afraid? Of whom am I afraid? -- Dying -- Two swimmers wrestled on a spar -- The chariot -- She went as quiet as the dew -- Resurgam -- Except to heaven she is nought -- Death is a dialogue between -- It was too late for man -- Along the Potomac, (Cont.) The daisy follows soft the sun -- Emancipation -- Lost -- If I shouldn't be alive -- Sleep is supposed to be -- I shall know why when time is over -- I never lost as much but twice