Emily Dickinson - Dickinson - The Complete Works

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Emily Dickinson is the iconic American poet. Little-known during her life, she has since been regarded as one of the most important figures in American poetry. Many of her poems deal with themes of death and immortality, two recurring topics in letters to her friends, and also explore aesthetics, society, nature and spirituality.
This meticulously edited poetry collection includes her complete poetical works, as well as her letters and the biography of this powerful author:
The Life and Legacy of Emily Dickinson (Illustrated Biography)
Poems—First Series:
Book I.—Life:
Success
Our share of night to bear
Rouge et Noir
Rouge gagne
Glee! the 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 within its groove
Book II.—Love:
Mine
Bequest
Alter? When the hills do
Suspense
Surrender
If you were coming in the fall
With a Flower
Proof
Have you got a brook in your little heart?
Transplanted
The Outlet
In Vain
Renunciation
Love's Baptism
Resurrection
Apocalypse
The Wife
Apotheosis
Book III.—Nature:
New feet within my garden go
May-Flower
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
'T was later when the summer went
Indian Summer
Autumn
Beclouded
The Hemlock
There's a certain slant of light
Book IV.—Time and Eternity:
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
The Funeral
I went to thank her
I've seen a dying eye…
Poems—Second Series (160+ poems)
Poems—Third Series (160+ poems)
The Single Hound (140+ verses)
The Life and Letters of Emily Dickinson

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The sun has got as far

As the third sycamore.

Screams chanticleer,

"Who's there?"

And echoes, trains away,

Sneer — "Where?"

While the old couple, just astir,

Fancy the sunrise left the door ajar!

XVI. "To fight aloud is very brave"

Table of Contents

To fight aloud is very brave,

But gallanter, I know,

Who charge within the bosom,

The cavalry of woe.

Who win, and nations do not see,

Who fall, and none observe,

Whose dying eyes no country

Regards with patriot love.

We trust, in plumed procession,

For such the angels go,

Rank after rank, with even feet

And uniforms of snow.

XVII. Dawn

Table of Contents

When night is almost done,

And sunrise grows so near

That we can touch the spaces,

It 's time to smooth the hair

And get the dimples ready,

And wonder we could care

For that old faded midnight

That frightened but an hour.

XVIII. The Book of Martyrs

Table of Contents

Read, sweet, how others strove,

Till we are stouter;

What they renounced,

Till we are less afraid;

How many times they bore

The faithful witness,

Till we are helped,

As if a kingdom cared!

Read then of faith

That shone above the fagot;

Clear strains of hymn

The river could not drown;

Brave names of men

And celestial women,

Passed out of record

Into renown!

XIX. The Mystery of Pain

Table of Contents

Pain has an element of blank;

It cannot recollect

When it began, or if there were

A day when it was not.

It has no future but itself,

Its infinite realms contain

Its past, enlightened to perceive

New periods of pain.

XX. "I taste a liquor never brewed"

Table of Contents

I taste a liquor never brewed,

From tankards scooped in pearl;

Not all the vats upon the Rhine

Yield such an alcohol!

Inebriate of air am I,

And debauchee of dew,

Reeling, through endless summer days,

From inns of molten blue.

When landlords turn the drunken bee

Out of the foxglove's door,

When butterflies renounce their drams,

I shall but drink the more!

Till seraphs swing their snowy hats,

And saints to windows run,

To see the little tippler

Leaning against the sun!

XXI. A Book

Table of Contents

He ate and drank the precious words,

His spirit grew robust;

He knew no more that he was poor,

Nor that his frame was dust.

He danced along the dingy days,

And this bequest of wings

Was but a book. What liberty

A loosened spirit brings!

XXII. "I had no time to hate, because"

Table of Contents

I had no time to hate, because

The grave would hinder me,

And life was not so ample I

Could finish enmity.

Nor had I time to love; but since

Some industry must be,

The little toil of love, I thought,

Was large enough for me.

XXIII Unreturning

Table of Contents

'T was such a little, little boat

That toddled down the bay!

'T was such a gallant, gallant sea

That beckoned it away!

'T was such a greedy, greedy wave

That licked it from the coast;

Nor ever guessed the stately sails

My little craft was lost!

XXIV. Whether my bark went down at sea"

Table of Contents

Whether my bark went down at sea,

Whether she met with gales,

Whether to isles enchanted

She bent her docile sails;

By what mystic mooring

She is held to-day, —

This is the errand of the eye

Out upon the bay.

XXV. "Belshazzar had a letter"

Table of Contents

Belshazzar had a letter, —

He never had but one;

Belshazzar's correspondent

Concluded and begun

In that immortal copy

The conscience of us all

Can read without its glasses

On revelation's wall.

XXVI. "The brain within its groove"

Table of Contents

The brain within its groove

Runs evenly and true;

But let a splinter swerve,

'T were easier for you

To put the water back

When floods have slit the hills,

And scooped a turnpike for themselves,

And blotted out the mills!

BOOK II.—LOVE.

Table of Contents

I. Mine

Table of Contents

Mine by the right of the white election!

Mine by the royal seal!

Mine by the sign in the scarlet prison

Bars cannot conceal!

Mine, here in vision and in veto!

Mine, by the grave's repeal

Titled, confirmed, — delirious charter!

Mine, while the ages steal!

II. Bequest

Table of Contents

You left me, sweet, two legacies, —

A legacy of love

A Heavenly Father would content,

Had He the offer of;

You left me boundaries of pain

Capacious as the sea,

Between eternity and time,

Your consciousness and me.

III. "Alter? When the hills do"

Table of Contents

Alter? When the hills do.

Falter? When the sun

Question if his glory

Be the perfect one.

Surfeit? When the daffodil

Doth of the dew:

Even as herself, O friend!

I will of you!

IV. Suspense

Table of Contents

Elysium is as far as to

The very nearest room,

If in that room a friend await

Felicity or doom.

What fortitude the soul contains,

That it can so endure

The accent of a coming foot,

The opening of a door!

V. Surrender

Table of Contents

Doubt me, my dim companion!

Why, God would be content

With but a fraction of the love

Poured thee without a stint.

The whole of me, forever,

What more the woman can, —

Say quick, that I may dower thee

With last delight I own!

It cannot be my spirit,

For that was thine before;

I ceded all of dust I knew, —

What opulence the more

Had I, a humble maiden,

Whose farthest of degree

Was that she might,

Some distant heaven,

Dwell timidly with thee!

VI. "If you were coming in the fall"

Table of Contents

If you were coming in the fall,

I'd brush the summer by

With half a smile and half a spurn,

As housewives do a fly.

If I could see you in a year,

I'd wind the months in balls,

And put them each in separate drawers,

Until their time befalls.

If only centuries delayed,

I'd count them on my hand,

Subtracting till my fingers dropped

Into Van Diemen's land.

If certain, when this life was out,

That yours and mine should be,

I'd toss it yonder like a rind,

And taste eternity.

But now, all ignorant of the length

Of time's uncertain wing,

It goads me, like the goblin bee,

That will not state its sting.

VII. With a Flower

Table of Contents

I hide myself within my flower,

That wearing on your breast,

You, unsuspecting, wear me too —

And angels know the rest.

I hide myself within my flower,

That, fading from your vase,

You, unsuspecting, feel for me

Almost a loneliness.

VIII. Proof

Table of Contents

That I did always love,

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