Skip directly to:
Main content
Main navigation
University of Virginia Library
Search this document
Poems by Emily Dickinson
Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)
[section]
[This is my letter to the world]
I. LIFE.
1.
I. SUCCESS.
2.
[II. Our share of night to bear]
3.
III. ROUGE ET NOIR.
4.
IV. ROUGE GAGNE.
5.
[V. Glee! the great storm is over]
6.
[VI. If I can stop one heart from breaking]
7.
VII. ALMOST!
8.
[VIII. A wounded deer leaps highest]
9.
[IX. The heart asks pleasure first]
10.
X. IN A LIBRARY.
11.
[XI. Much madness is divinest sense]
12.
[XII. I asked no other thing]
13.
XIII. EXCLUSION.
14.
XIV. THE SECRET.
15.
XV. THE LONELY HOUSE.
16.
[XVI. To fight aloud is very brave]
17.
XVII. DAWN.
18.
XVIII. THE BOOK OF MARTYRS.
19.
XIX. THE MYSTERY OF PAIN.
20.
[XX. I taste a liquor never brewed]
21.
XXI. A BOOK.
22.
[XXII. I had no time to hate, because]
23.
XXIII. UNRETURNING.
24.
[XXIV. Whether my bark went down at sea,]
25.
[XXV. Belshazzar had a letter]
26.
[XXVI. The brain within its groove]
II. LOVE.
III. NATURE.
IV. TIME AND ETERNITY.
Collapse All
|
Expand All
Poems by Emily Dickinson
93
XXI.
THE MOUNTAIN.
The
mountain sat upon the plain
In his eternal chair,
His observation omnifold,
His inquest everywhere.
The seasons prayed around his knees,
Like children round a sire:
Grandfather of the days is he,
Of dawn the ancestor.
Poems by Emily Dickinson