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         Dickinson Emily:     more books (100)
  1. A Student's Guide To Emily Dickinson (Understanding Literature) by Audrey Borus, 2005-06
  2. Emily Dickinson and the Life of Language: A Study in Symbolic Poetics by Emily Miller Budick, 1986-01
  3. Selected Poetry of Emily Dickinson (New York Public Library Collector's Editions) by Emily Dickinson, 1997-04-14
  4. A Companion to Emily Dickinson (Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture)
  5. The Passion of Emily Dickinson by Judith Farr, 1998-07-15
  6. The Diary of Emily Dickinson by Jamie Fuller, 2000-10-01
  7. Emily Dickinson: Selected Poems: Oxford Student Texts by Steven Croft, 2008-07-15
  8. Poetry for Young People: Emily Dickinson
  9. Emily Dickinson's Open Folios: Scenes of Reading, Surfaces of Writing (Editorial Theory and Literary Criticism) by Marta L. Werner, 1996-02-15
  10. Emily Dickinson's Vision: Illness and Identity in Her Poetry by JAMES R. GUTHRIE, 1998-02-01
  11. Emily Dickinson: Daughter of Prophecy by Beth MacLay Doriani, 1996-01
  12. Emily Dickinson: A User's Guide (Blackwell Introductions to Literature) by Martha Smith, 2011-01-14
  13. Open Me Carefully: Emily Dickinson's Intimate Letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson
  14. The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson: A Novel by Jerome Charyn, 2010-02-22

61. Emily Dickinson Bibliography
www.cwru.edu. PAL Emily Dickinson (18301886) English 413/513 English462/562 Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) American Literature Sites Foley
http://www.linkfinding.com/cgi-bin/search/smartsearch.cgi?keywords=emily dickins

62. Emily Dickinson
adult. Poetry Archives Emily Dickinson 18301886; Poetry of EmilyDickinson - sheds some light on whether she was a lesbian. Poetry
http://www.bookchannel.com/Dickinson.htm
Emily Dickinson Hope is the thing with feathers The wind tapped like a tired man I years had been from home It dropped so low in my regard ... Faith
Dickinson Links

63. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Emily Dickinson
A brief biography of Dickinson, as well as three of her poems and a selection of related reading material Category Arts Literature Poetry Poets D Dickinson, Emily......Emily Dickinson 18301886. Emily Dickinson, one of America's mostfamous poets, was born in Amherst to a prominent family. She was
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/e_dickin.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson, one of America's most famous poets, was born in Amherst to a prominent family. She was educated at Amerherst Academy, the institution her grandfather helped found. She spent a year at the Mt. Holyoke Female Seminary, but left because she didn't like the religious environment and because her parents asked her home. In her twenties, Emily led a busy social life, but she became more reclusive with each passing year. By her thirties, she stayed to her home and withdrew when visitors arrived. She developed a reputation as a myth, because almost never seen and, when people did catch sight of her, she was always wearing white. But while she withdrew from physical contact with people, she did not withdraw from them mentally. Emily was an avid letter-writer who corresponded with a great number of friends and relatives. 1000 of these letters (a portion of what she wrote) survived her death, and they show her letter writing to be very similar to her poetic styleenigmatic and abstract, sometimes fragmented, and often forcefully sudden in emotion. Emily often included poetry with her letters to friends. Her friends encouraged her to publish, but after an attempt to do so in 1860 (when the publisher suggested she hold off) Emily did not appear to try again. The eight poems that were published in her lifetime were primarily poems submitted by her friends without her permission. Her death revealed 1768 more poems.

64. Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson (18301886). Access Indiana Teaching and Learning Center(AITLC) Guide to Emily Dickinson This well-organized, attractive
http://library.marist.edu/diglib/english/americanliterature/19thc-american poets
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) Access Indiana Teaching and Learning Center (AITLC): Guide to Emily Dickinson : This well-organized, attractive site includes a collection of various Dickinson web biographies, a number of links to Dickinson criticism, and a fine collection of her writing, including audio versions of her work. It's hard to think of a better Dickinson site.-MJM Alabaster: Archive of Emily Dickinson's Fascicle 26 constructed by Brian Varrieur, Barbara Kopeloff, and Jessica Botta, University of Virginia: Includes several different versions of the twenty-one poems collected in this fascicle. One of the more famous poems in this collection is "I heard Fly buzz - when I died."-MJM Humanities Text Initiative American Verse Collection : One good feature of this site, apart from the poetry collection, is its ability to make boolean searches of Dickinson' work. The poems are organized thematically.-MJM Emily Dickinson: 1830-1886 , Gonzaga University: Aside from a solid collection of links to Dickinson various verse collection on the web, this site also includes a collection of essays about Dickinson. "Emily Dickinson's Letters" by Thomas Wentworth Higginson Atlantic Monthly 68.4 (October 1891):

65. Analysis Of Emily Dickinson Poem
American Career Poet If I Descriptive Notes on Emily Dickinson books withlinks and reviews Emily Dickinson 18301886 CLASSICAL POETS POETRY
http://www.drummerstuff.com/packaging-supplier.htm

66. LookFor.gr: Arts : Artists : Poets
Dickinson, Emily (18301886) - Creates a forum for scholarship on Dickinson andher relation to the tradition of American poetry and women's literature.
http://dir.lookfor.gr/Arts/Artists/Poets/

LookFor Home
Arts Artists > Poets
1-May-2002
all of LookFor : just this Category : Home Add a Site Email Updates Propose a Category ... Help
See Also: A brief look at related categories Web Sites / Pages (20)
  • Angelou, Maya
  • Contains a chronicle of Dr. Angelou's life and a list of her works.
    Validation Date: 10-Jul-1999 Hits: 49 URL: http://www.mayaangelou.com/ [ Spider it!
  • Chaucer, Geoffrey (1340-1400)
  • Offered in Middle and Modern English, with illustrations.
    Validation Date: 10-Jul-1999 Hits: 20 URL: http://www.canterburytales.org/ [ Spider it!
  • Chaucer, Geoffrey (1340-1400)
  • Categorized links for background, bibliography, biography, commentary, images, language tools, outlines, teaching resources, and online texts.
    Validation Date: 10-Jul-1999 Hits: 18 URL: http://geoffreychaucer.org/ [ Spider it!
  • Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)
  • Creates a forum for scholarship on Dickinson and her relation to the tradition of American poetry and women's literature.
    Validation Date: 10-Jul-1999 Hits: 8 URL: http://www.cwru.edu/affil/edis/edisindex.html [ Spider it!

    67. Creative Quotations From Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
    Emily Dickinson Previous Set of Quotes Random Quotes - Next Set of Quotes, F The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, no. 632, ed. Thomas H. Johnson, 1955.
    http://www.creativequotations.com/two/396s00.htm
    CQ Home Search CQ Random CQ Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative
    A Special Collection of Creative Quotations from . . . Emily Dickinson
    Previous Set of Quotes
    Random Quotes Next Set of Quotes The brain is wider than the sky;/ For put them side by side/ The one the other will contain with ease -/ And you beside.
    To make a prairie/ It takes clover and one bee/ One clover, and a bee, and revery./ The revery alone will do,/ If bees are few. A word is dead when it is said, some say./ I say it just begins to live that day. Nature is what we know -/ Yet have not art to say -/ So impotent our wisdom is/ To her simplicity. How dreary to be somebody!/ How public, like a frog/ To tell your name the livelong day/ To an admiring bog.
    Click here for more search engines and links to biographical websites The World's Largest Poster and Print Store All Categories Books ISBN (best) Title Author Clearance Movies DVD VHS Merchandise Sell Texts: Enter an ISBN The most comprehensive image search on the web.
    Published Sources for the Quotations Shown Above: F: "The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson," no. 632, ed. Thomas H. Johnson, 1955.

    68. Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
    A Clock Stopped ( 287). Emily Dickinson (18301886).
    http://www.brunswickschool.org/wicknet/english/Poetry-1/dickinson/A Clock Stoppe
    A Clock Stopped
    Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) Poetry Page English 9 Dickinson page A clock stopped Not the Mantel’s Geneva’s farthest skill Cant put the puppet bowing That just now dangled still An awe came on the Trinket! The Figures hunched, with pain Then quivered out of Decimals Into Degreeless Noon It will not stir for Doctor’s This Pendulum of snow The Shopman importunes it While cool – concernless No Nods from the Gilded pointers Nods from the Seconds slim Decades of arrogance between The Dial life And Him
    Dickinson Index

    69. Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
    The Soul Selects Her Own Society ( 303). Emily Dickinson (18301886).The soul selects her own Society ¾ Then ¾ shuts the Door ¾ To
    http://www.brunswickschool.org/wicknet/english/Poetry-1/dickinson/The Soul Selec
    The Soul Selects Her Own Society
    Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) The soul selects her own Society
    Then shuts the Door
    To her divine Majority
    Present no more
    Unmoved – she notes the Chariots - pausing
    At her low Gate
    Unmoved – an Emperor be kneeling
    Upon her Mat
    I’ve known her – from an ample nation
    Choose One Then – close the Valves of her attention Like Stone
    Poetry Page English 9 Dickinson page

    70. Emily Dickinson International Society
    "The Society creates a forum for scholarship on Dickinson and her relation to the tradition of Category Arts Literature Poetry Poets D Dickinson, Emily......The Emily Dickinson International Society. The literature. About the EmilyDickinson International Society; Announcements and Calendar of events;
    http://www.cwru.edu/affil/edis/edisindex.html

    The Emily Dickinson International Society
    The Society creates a forum for appreciation of Emily Dickinson's life and writings and for scholarly research on Dickinson and on her relation to the tradition of American poetry and women's literature.
    CALL FOR PAPERS
    EDIS International Conference "Emily Dickinson: Realms of Amplitude"
    University of Hawaii at Hilo
    July 30-August 1, 2004 You are invited to participate in the 2004 International Conference, "Emily Dickinson: Realms of Amplitude," to be held at the University of Hawaii at Hilo. Located on the island of Hawaii, the university is a modern American campus whose classrooms open out on a tropical landscape of flowers, palms, banyans, and giant tree ferns. Thirty miles away is Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, a starkly beautiful zone of black rock, white steam, and the lava that Dickinson envisioned as "hissing corals." We will hold our meetings on the campus, take a tour of the volcanoes, and sleep in the Hilo Hawaiian Hotel on the beach at Hilo Bay. Plenary sessions will introduce major realms of amplitude in her work: the body; nature; the erotic; spirituality; and language. Another realm is our relationship, as critics, biographers, and readers to the excessive and extravagant, the exotic, and the ample in Dickinson's writing, and this aspect of amplitude will also be considered in a plenary session. The conference will offer a series of paper sessions associated with the plenary themes. Three signature poems addressing amplitude and Dickinson's volcanic imagination have been chosen: Fr1446, "Water makes many Beds," Fr757, "I think To LiveMay be a Bliss," and Fr517, "A stillVolcano-Life." The conference will also offer sessions focused specifically on these poems to include short presentations of readings of each poem and discussion. In addition, there will be a series of sessions on the more general theme of New Areas in Dickinson Studies.

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    72. Emily Dickinson
    Emily Dickinson. (1830 1886). Wild nights. Experiment to me
    http://members.tripod.de/beschka/inhalt/dickinson.htm
    Inhalt vor Emily Dickinson
    Wild nights

    Experiment to me

    I died for Beauty

    Because I could not stop for Death
    ...
    If you were coming in the Fall

    Wild Nights - Wild Nights!
    Where I with thee
    Wild Nights should be
    Our luxury! Futile - the Winds -
    To a heart in port - Done with the Compass - Done with the Chart! Rowing in Eden - Ah, the Sea! Might I but moor - Tonight - In Thee! Uns Elixier! Was will - der Wind noch - das Herz liegt im Hafen - Fort mit den Karten! Landen in Eden - Ach, das Meer! In Dir! Experiment to me Is every one I meet If it contain a Kernel? The Figure of a Nut Presents upon a Tree Equally plausibly. But Meat within, is requisite To Squirrels, and to Me. Ist jeder Gast Ob er einen Kern besitzt? Macht sich auf dem Baum Auch ganz ansehlich, Doch etwas Mark - ist essentiell I died for Beauty - but was scarce Adjusted in the Tomb When One who died for Truth, was lain In an adjoining Room - He questioned softly "Why I failed"? "For Beauty", I replied - "And I - for Truth - Themselves are One - We Brethren, are", He said - An so, as Kinsman, met at Night -

    73. µÒ½ðÉ­Ê«Ñ¡
    (Emily Dickinson)(18301886)
    http://www.shuku.net/novels/foreignpeom/qtoyqqqqsssdjs/djs.html
    °¬×Àò¡¤µÒ½ðÉ­(Emily Dickinson)(1830¡«1886)ÊÇÀ¹úÒþʿŮʫÈË£¬Ð´¹ýÒ» ǧÆß°Ù¶àÊ×ÁîÈ˶úĿһеĶÌÊ«¡£Ê«·ç¶ÀÌØ£¬ÒÔÎÄ×ÖϸÄå¡¢¹Û²ìôÈñ¡¢ÒâÏóÍ»³öÖø ³Æ¡£Ìâ²Ä·½æ¶à°ëÊÇ×ÔÈ»¡¢ËÀÍö¡¢ºÍÓÀÉú¡£ Òà·²¹«ÒæͼÊé¹Ý(shuku.net)

    74. Emily Dickinson
    Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, to a family wellknown for educational and political activity. Her father, an
    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/emilydic.htm
    Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
    A
    B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) American lyrical poet, an obsessively private writer - only seven of her some 1800 poems were published during her lifetime, five of them in the Springfield Republican . Dickinson withdrew from social contact at the age of 23 and devoted herself in secret into writing. I felt a Cleaving in my Mind -
    As if my Brain had split -
    I tried to match it - Seam by Seam -
    But could not make them fit. The thought behind, I strove to join
    Unto the thought before -
    But Sequence ravelled out of Sound
    Like Balls - upon a Floor.
    Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, to a family well known for educational and political activity. Her father, an orthodox Calvinist, was a lawyer and treasurer of Amherst College, and also served in Congress. She was educated at Amherst Academy (1834-47) and Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (1847-48). Around 1850 Dickinson started to write poems, first in fairly conventional style, but after ten years of practice she began to give room for experiments. Often written in the metre of hymns, her poems dealt not only with issues of death, faith and immortality, but with nature, domesticity, and the power and limits of language in transferring the feelings of ecstasy and terror into written text. From c. 1858 she assembled many of her poems in packets of 'fascicles', which she bound herself with needle and thread. A selection of these poems appeared in 1890.

    75. Emily Dickinson
    09 September 2001 Emily Dickinson 1830 1886. I'm Nobody. I'm nobody! Whoare you? Are you nobody, too? Then there's a pair of us don't tell!
    http://www.geocities.com/abcolombo/sep01/090901.htm
    09 September 2001 Emily Dickinson
    I'm Nobody
    I'm nobody! Who are you?
    Are you nobody, too?
    Then there's a pair of us
    don't tell!
    They'd banish us, you know. How dreary to be somebody!
    How public like a frog
    To tell your name the livelong
    June.
    To an admiring bog!

    Emily Dickinson
    Poor Once More
    I never lost as much but twice,
    And that was in the sod; Twice have I stood a beggar Before the door of God! Angels, twice decending, Reimbursed my store. Burglar, banker, father, I am poor once more!
    Emily Dickinson
    Definition of Success
    Success is counted sweetest By those who ne'er succeed. To comprehend a nectar Requires sorest need. Not one of all the purple host Who took the flag to-day Can tell the definition, So clear, of victory, As he, defeated, dying, On whose forbidden ear The distant strains of triumph Burst agonized and clear! Emily Dickinson Editor's Note: The opinions expressed in today's commentary are that of the author and not necessarily that of Al Colombo or others who appear in this publication. Thank you. Editor's Note:
    Permission is granted to reproduce this or any of the other articles and commentaries that appear on this web site, providing they appear in their entirety with the

    76. Author : Emily Dickinson @ Alto Poetry
    poetry. 'Tis Not That Dying Hurts Us So (by Emily Dickinson (1830 1886)) 'Tisnot Tis So Much Joy! (by Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886)) 'Tis so much joy!
    http://www.altopoetry.com/author/emily-dickinson/index-1.html
    our network: entertainment jokes clean jokes recipes ... rings also: shopping posters online dating search Alto Entertainment for: - or - pick your destination here: Browse All Poems By Authors Browse All Poems On Friendship Browse All Poems On Life Browse All Poems On Love Browse All Poems On Time Browse All Poems On Occasion Browse All Poems On Religious - Spirituality main author : emily dickinson download movies online. details here... free: wallpapers and screensavers @ webshots! Click here for more POETRY on the Web! absolutely poetry
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    poetry 'Tis Not That Dying Hurts Us So
    (by: Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886))
    'Tis not that Dying hurts us so
    'Tis Living hurts us more
    But Dying is a different way A Kind behind the Door. continue reading 'Tis So Appalling It Exhilarates (by: Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886)) The Truth, is Bald, and Cold But that will hold If any are not sure We show them prayer continue reading 'Tis So Much Joy! 'Tis So Much Joy!

    77. Author : Emily Dickinson @ Alto Poetry
    poetry. Glowing Is Her Bonnet (by Emily Dickinson (1830 1886)) Glowing is herBonnet, Glowing is her Cheek, Glowing is her Kirtle, Yet she cannot speak.
    http://www.altopoetry.com/author/emily-dickinson/index-2.html
    our network: entertainment jokes clean jokes recipes ... rings also: shopping posters online dating search Alto Entertainment for: - or - pick your destination here: Browse All Poems By Authors Browse All Poems On Friendship Browse All Poems On Life Browse All Poems On Love Browse All Poems On Time Browse All Poems On Occasion Browse All Poems On Religious - Spirituality main author : emily dickinson download movies online. details here... free: wallpapers and screensavers @ webshots! Click here for more POETRY on the Web! absolutely poetry
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    poetry Glowing Is Her Bonnet
    (by: Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886))
    Glowing is her Bonnet,
    Glowing is her Cheek,
    Glowing is her Kirtle, Yet she cannot speak. continue reading Have You Got A Brook In Your Little Heart (by: Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886)) Have you got a Brook in your little heart, Where bashful flowers blow, And blushing birds go down to drink, And shadows tremble so...

    78. Emily Dickinson In HOLLIS
    METHOD MEANING 2 oberhaus dorothy huff/ 1995 bks Emily Dickinson S OPEN FOLIOS 3werner marta l/ 1995 bks 100 KVAEDI 4 Dickinson Emily 1830 1886/ 1994 bks JUST
    http://acadprojwww.wlu.edu/vol4/BlackmerH/public_html/xliberty/eng301/edhollis.h
    HU INDEX: LIST OF ITEMS RETRIEVED 422 items retrieved by your search: FIND KW EMILY DICKINSON - WORDS REMEMBERED TEXTS RENEWED ESSAYS IN HONOUR OF JOHN F A SAWYER 1 sawyer john f a/ 1995 bks EMILY DICKINSONS FASCICLES METHOD MEANING 2 oberhaus dorothy huff/ 1995 bks EMILY DICKINSON S OPEN FOLIOS 3 werner marta l/ 1995 bks 100 KVAEDI 4 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1994 bks JUST THE DOOR AJAR RETHINKING RETREAT IN THE POETRY OF EMILY DICKINSON 5 gettelman debra/ 1994 bks EMILY DICKINSON ET LA GRAMMAIRE DU SECRET 6 savinel christine/ 1993 bks I LOST A WORLD THE OTHER DAY 7 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1993 bks SIX AMERICAN POETS AN ANTHOLOGY 8 conarroe joel 1934/ 1993 bks DIETRO LA PORTA 9 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1993 bks ZO IGARTI LA OLAM 10 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1993 bks CHORAL MUSIC OF ROBERT STARER 11 starer robert/ 1993 sco SUMMITS IN THE GOLDEN LIGHT AMERICAN POETRY IN THE 19TH CENTURY 12 american poetry the nineteenth century selections/ 1993 vis 13 american poetry the nineteenth century selections/ 1993 rec DIARY OF EMILY DICKINSON 14 fuller jamie 1945/ 1993 bks PUBLIC LIKE A FROG ENTERING THE LIVES OF THREE GREAT AMERICANS 15 houston jean/ 1993 bks NEW POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON 16 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1993 bks SPLINTERED WORLDS FRAGMENTATION AND THE IDEAL OF DIVERSITY IN THE WORK OF EMERSON MELVILLE WHITMAN AND DICKINSON 17 greenberg robert m 1943/ 1993 bks POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON AN ANNOTATED GUIDE TO COMMENTARY PUBLISHED IN ENGLISH 1978 1989 18 duchac joseph/ 1993 bks AARON COPLAND 81ST BIRTHDAY CONCERT AT THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 19 copland aaron 1900/ 1993 rec OUT OF DARKNESS 20 little geraldine clinton/ 1993 bks EMILY DICKINSON WOMAN OF LETTERS POEMS AND CENTOS FROM LINES IN EMILY DICKINSONS LETTERS 21 turco lewis/ 1993 bks LANGUAGE S OF POETRY WALT WHITMAN EMILY DICKINSON GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS 22 olney james/ 1993 bks COMIC POWER IN EMILY DICKINSON 23 juhasz suzanne 1942/ 1993 bks BIRTH MARK UNSETTLING THE WILDERNESS IN AMERICAN LITERARY HISTORY 24 howe susan/ 1993 bks TOUCHING LIBERTY ABOLITION FEMINISM AND THE POLITICS OF THE BODY 25 sanchez eppler karen/ 1993 bks COMPLETE POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON 26 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1993 bks JUAN RAMON JIMENEZ Y LA POESIA ANGLOSAJONA 27 perez romero carmen/ 1992 bks DANCE PANELS EIGHT POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON SHORT SYMPHONY 28 copland aaron 1900/ 1992 rec ROWING IN EDEN REREADING EMILY DICKINSON 29 smith martha nell 1953/ 1992 bks CHOOSING NOT CHOOSING DICKINSONS FASCICLES 30 cameron sharon/ 1992 bks POETRY READING AND SONGS 31 kennedy x j/ 1992 rec 32 kennedy x j/ 1992 vis MUSICIANS WRESTLE EVERYWHERE EMILY DICKINSON MUSIC 33 lowenberg carlton/ 1992 bks DEATH IN THE POETRY OF EMILY DICKINSON 34 ernst katharina/ 1992 bks EMILY DICKINSON JOURNAL 35 (niwot co university press of colorado)/ 1992+ ser PASSION OF EMILY DICKINSON 36 farr judith/ 1992 bks EMILY DICKINSON AND THE LIMITS OF EXPRESSION AMERICAN WOMENS VERSE IN ITS PUBLISHING CONTEXT 1820 1880 37 petrino elizabeth anne/ 1991 bks LIRIKA 38 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1991 bks IN THE MIDDLE VOICE PHILOLOGIES OF POESIS IN DICKINSON WHITMAN AND HOPKINS 39 hodder harbour fraser/ 1991 bks SIX AMERICAN POETS AN ANTHOLOGY 40 conarroe joel 1934/ 1991 bks EMILY DICKINSON SONGS 41 glickman sylvia/ 1991 sco THIS BRIEF TRAGEDY UNRAVELING THE TODD DICKINSON AFFAIR 42 walsh john evangelist 1927/ 1991 bks NEITHER BALLOTS NOR BULLETS WOMEN ABOLITIONISTS AND THE CIVIL WAR 43 venet wendy hamand/ 1991 bks LYRIC CONTINGENCIES EMILY DICKINSON AND WALLACE STEVENS 44 dickie margaret 1935/ 1991 bks SONGS 7 EARLY SONGS 12 POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON OLD AMERICAN SONGS 45 copland aaron 1900/ 1991 rec DICKINSON AND THE BOUNDARIES OF FEMINIST THEORY 46 loeffelholz mary 1958/ 1991 bks EMILY DICKINSON 47 kirkby joan/ 1991 bks PAUL SPERRY SINGS ROMANTIC AMERICAN SONGS 48 sperry paul/ 1990 rec EMILY DICKINSON VISITS BOSTON 49 uno hiroko/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSON WOMAN POET 50 bennett paula/ 1990 bks 100 WIERSZY 51 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1990 bks WORLD OF EMILY DICKINSON 52 longsworth polly/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSON 53 kirby joan/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSON THE SCATTERED SELF 54 tolk jennifer/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSON 55 olsen victoria/ 1990 bks POSITIVE AS SOUND EMILY DICKINSONS RHYME 56 small judy jo/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSONS READINGS OF MEN AND BOOKS SACRED SOUNDINGS 57 lease benjamin/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSON WOMAN POET 58 bennett paula/ 1990 bks SEXUAL PERSONAE ART AND DECADENCE FROM NEFERTITI TO EMILY DICKINSON 59 paglia camille 1947/ 1990 bks ON DICKINSON 60 cady edwin harrison/ 1990 bks EMILY DICKINSONS READINGS OF MEN AND BOOKS SACRED SOUNDINGS 61 lease benjamin/ 1990 bks DICKINSON SUBLIME 62 stonum gary lee/ 1990 bks GENDER MATTERS WOMENS STUDIES FOR THE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY 63 hagen june steffensen/ 1990 bks VIVRE AVANT LEVEIL 64 dickinson emily 1830 1886/ 1989 bks TOWARD ETERNITY FOR WOMENS CHORUS 65 kyr robert harry 1952/ 1989 sco EMILY DICKINSON A CELEBRATION FOR READERS PROCEEDINGS OF THE CONFERENCE HELD ON SEPTEMBER 19 21 1986 AT THE CLAREMONT COLLEGES 66 juhasz suzanne 1942/ 1989 bks ....

    79. Love Poem
    Emily Dickinson (1830 1886). Come Slowly, The Power of Love. Emily Dickinson(1830 - 1886). For Each Ecstatic Instant, The Pains of Love.
    http://www.lovepoetry.com/poems/classicdate5.html
    Submitted Poems Featured Poems Classic Poems List Randomly ... List Newest Search classic poems by: Author's last name , Poem title or Poem ID#.
    You may type fewer letters if you are not sure of the exact spelling Below is a list of most recent classic love poems.
    Warning! Poems on this list can move down the list very rapidly!
    A poem may move a page or more in a single day. Heart, We Will Forget Him Love and Parting Emily Dickinson Come Slowly The Power of Love Emily Dickinson For Each Ecstatic Instant The Pains of Love Emily Dickinson I Have No Life But This The Power of Love Emily Dickinson I Never Lost As Much Love and Death Emily Dickinson My River Love Declared Emily Dickinson I Lost A World The Power of Love Emily Dickinson My Friend Love and Death Emily Dickinson The Heart Asks The Pains of Love Emily Dickinson What If I Say Love and Death Emily Dickinson Hope is a Thing With Feathers The Power of Love Emily Dickinson If I May Have It Love and Death Emily Dickinson I had Been Hungry The Need to be Loved Emily Dickinson You Left Me The Power of Love Emily Dickinson A Charm Invests a Face Future Love Emily Dickinson To lose Thee Love and Doubt Emily Dickinson Proud of my Broken Heart The Pains of Love Emily Dickinson I Should Not Dare Love and Death Emily Dickinson I Sing Love Apart Emily Dickinson For some we loved Love Described Omar Khayyam Never Blows So Red Misc.

    80. List By Title
    Emily Dickinson (1830 1886). I had Been Hungry, The Need to be Loved. EmilyDickinson (1830 - 1886). I Have No Life But This, The Power of Love.
    http://www.lovepoetry.com/titlepoems.asp?x_list=classic&d_1=I

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