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Poems by Emily Dickinson
Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)
[section]
1.
I. LIFE.
1.
I. REAL RICHES.
2.
II. SUPERIORITY TO FATE.
3.
III. HOPE.
4.
IV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT. I.
5.
V. FORBIDDEN FRUIT. II.
6.
VI. A WORD.
7.
[VII. To venerate the simple days]
8.
VIII. LIFE'S TRADES.
9.
[IX. Drowning is not so pitiful]
10.
[X. How still the bells in steeples stand]
11.
[XI. If the foolish call them ‘flowers,’]
12.
XII. A SYLLABLE.
13.
XIII. PARTING.
14.
XIV. ASPIRATION.
15.
XV. THE INEVITABLE,
16.
XVI. A BOOK.
17.
[XVII. Who has not found the heaven below]
18.
XVIII. A PORTRAIT.
19.
XIX. I HAD A GUINEA GOLDEN.
20.
XX. SATURDAY AFTERNOON.
21.
[XXI. Few get enough,—enough is one]
22.
[XXII. Upon the gallows hung a wretch]
23.
XXIII. THE LOST THOUGHT.
24.
XXIV. RETICENCE.
25.
XXV. WITH FLOWERS.
26.
[XXVI. The farthest thunder that I heard]
27.
[XXVII. On the bleakness of my lot]
28.
XXVIII. CONTRAST.
29.
XXIX. FRIENDS.
30.
XXX. FIRE.
31.
XXXI. A MAN.
32.
XXXII. VENTURES.
33.
XXXIII. GRIEFS.
34.
[XXXIV. I have a king who does not speak]
35.
XXXV. DISENCHANTMENT.
36.
XXXVI. LOST FAITH.
37.
XXXVII. LOST JOY.
38.
[XXXVIII. I worked for chaff, and earning wheat]
39.
[XXXIX. Life and Death, and Giants]
40.
XL. ALPINE GLOW.
41.
XLI. REMEMBRANCE.
42.
[XLII. To hang our head ostensibly]
43.
XLIII. THE BRAIN.
44.
[XLIV. The bone that has no marrow]
45.
XLV. THE PAST.
46.
[XLVI. To help our bleaker parts]
47.
[XLVII. What soft, cherubic creatures]
48.
XLVIII. DESIRE.
49.
XLIX. PHILOSOPHY.
50.
L. POWER.
51.
[LI. A modest lot, a fame petite]
52.
[LII. Is bliss, then, such abyss]
53.
LIII. EXPERIENCE.
54.
LIV. THANKSGIVING DAY.
55.
LV. CHILDISH GRIEFS.
2.
II. LOVE.
3.
III. NATURE.
4.
IV. TIME AND ETERNITY.
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Poems by Emily Dickinson
43
XXIX.
FRIENDS.
Are
friends delight or pain?
Could bounty but remain
Riches were good.
But if they only stay
Bolder to fly away,
Riches are sad.
Poems by Emily Dickinson