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Poems by Emily Dickinson
Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)
[section]
1.
I. LIFE.
2.
II. LOVE.
3.
III. NATURE.
1.
I. NATURE'S CHANGES.
2.
II. THE TULIP.
3.
[III. A light exists in spring]
4.
IV. THE WAKING YEAR.
5.
V. TO MARCH.
6.
VI. MARCH.
7.
VII. DAWN.
8.
[VIII. A murmur in the trees to note]
9.
[IX. Morning is the place for dew]
10.
[X. To my quick ear the leaves conferred]
11.
XI. A ROSE.
12.
[XII. High from the earth I heard a bird]
13.
XIII. COBWEBS.
14.
XIV. A WELL.
15.
[XV. To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee]
16.
XVI. THE WIND.
17.
[XVII. A dew sufficed itself]
18.
XVIII. THE WOODPECKER.
19.
XIX. A SNAKE.
20.
[XX. Could I but ride indefinite]
21.
XXI. THE MOON.
22.
XXII. THE BAT.
23.
XXIII. THE BALLOON.
24.
XXIV. EVENING.
25.
XXV. COCOON.
26.
XXVI. SUNSET.
27.
XXVII. AURORA.
28.
XXVIII. THE COMING OF NIGHT.
29.
XXIX. AFTERMATH.
4.
IV. TIME AND ETERNITY.
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Poems by Emily Dickinson
79
VI.
SONG.
Summer
for thee grant I may be
When summer days are flown!
Thy music still when whippoorwill
And oriole are done!
For thee to bloom, I'll skip the tomb
And sow my blossoms o'er!
Pray gather me, Anemone,
Thy flower forevermore!
Poems by Emily Dickinson