Collected poems of Emily Dickinson
(Book)
A selection of poems by nineteenth-century American writer Emily Dickinson, arranged chronologically, with illustrations from the special collections of the New York Public Library.
Notes
Dickinson, E., Todd, M. L., & Higginson, T. W. (1982). Collected poems of Emily Dickinson. New York : Avenel, N.J., Gramercy Books.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886, Mabel Loomis Todd and Thomas Wentworth Higginson. 1982. Collected Poems of Emily Dickinson. New York : Avenel, N.J., Gramercy Books.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886, Mabel Loomis Todd and Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Collected Poems of Emily Dickinson. New York : Avenel, N.J., Gramercy Books, 1982.
MLA Citation (style guide)Dickinson, Emily, et al. Collected Poems of Emily Dickinson. New York : Avenel, N.J., Gramercy Books, 1982.
Record Information
Last Sierra Extract Time | Apr 18, 2024 04:28:47 PM |
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Last File Modification Time | Apr 18, 2024 04:29:02 PM |
Last Grouped Work Modification Time | Apr 25, 2024 03:50:11 PM |
MARC Record
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003 | OCoLC | ||
005 | 20161003132500.0 | ||
008 | 970910s1982 nyua 000 0 eng d | ||
010 | |z 81022776 | ||
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035 | |a (OCoLC)37600215 | ||
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100 | 1 | |a Dickinson, Emily,|d 1830-1886.|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79054166 | |
240 | 1 | 0 | |a Dickinson, Emily.|k Selections |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Collected poems of Emily Dickinson /|c original editions edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and T.W. Higginson ; introduction by George Gesner. |
264 | 1 | |a New York :|b Gramercy Books ;|a Avenel, N.J. :|b Distributed by Outlet Book Co.,|c [1982] | |
264 | 4 | |c ©1982 | |
300 | |a xxx, 256 pages :|b illustrations ;|c 22 cm | ||
336 | |a text|b txt|2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |a unmediated|b n|2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |a volume|b nc|2 rdacarrier | ||
505 | 0 | |a Book I. Life. Success -- Real Riches -- I'm nobody! Who are you? -- A thought went up my mind to-day -- Glee! the great storm is over! -- If I can stop one heart from breaking -- Almost! -- A wounded deer leaps highest -- In a Library -- The heart asks pleasure first -- Much madness is divinest sense -- I asked no other thing -- Exclusion -- The Secret -- The Mystery of Pain -- The Lonely House -- The Book of Martyrs -- The Show -- Experiment to me -- The thought beneath so slight a film -- Unreturning -- The Return -- I had no time to hate, because -- Belshazzar had a letter -- The brain within its groove -- Rouge Gagne -- Rouge et Noir -- To fight aloud is very brave -- Reticence -- The nearest dream recedes, unrealized -- Whether my bark went down at sea -- I bring an unaccustomed wine -- Hope (1) -- Hope (2) -- Fire -- I found the phrase to every thought -- We play at paste -- The Test -- Escape -- Forbidden Fruit (1) -- Forbidden Fruit (2) -- A Word -- The White Heat -- Compensation -- Triumph -- Aspiration -- The Inevitable -- Superiority to Fate -- Experience -- Thanksgiving Day -- I taste a liquor never brewed -- Disenchantment -- If the foolish call them "flowers" -- A Syllable -- Drowning is not so pitiful -- To venerate the simple days -- How still the bells in steeples stand -- The Past -- Remembrance -- Philosophy -- Griefs -- Childish Griefs -- Life's Trades -- A Book (1) -- A Book (2) -- A Portrait -- The Lost Thought -- With Flowers -- Who has not found the heaven below -- Shipwreck -- Saturday Afternoon -- The farthest thunder that I heard -- Power -- Our share of night to bear -- Few get enough, enough is one -- Friends -- Desire -- A Man -- Ventures -- I have a king who does not speak -- Life, and Death, and Giants -- The bone that has no marrow -- The Brain -- Alpine Glow -- Contrast -- Lost Faith -- Lost Joy -- Faith is a fine invention -- A Prayer -- Hunger -- Surgeons must be very careful -- Called Back -- Is Heaven a physician? -- The Goal -- I many times thought peace had come -- Melodies Unheard -- On the bleakness of my lot -- Returning -- Too Much -- Sight -- Heart not so heavy as mine -- Portraits are to daily faces -- The Preacher -- Prayer -- To help our bleaker parts -- Enough -- Parting -- The Duel -- A modest lot, a fame petite -- The soul unto itself -- Time's Lesson -- The Railway Train -- I know that he exists -- The Shelter -- Good night! which put the candle out? -- The Martyrs -- To learn the transport by the pain -- Deed -- A poor torn heart, a tattered heart -- What soft, cherubic creatures -- Unto my books so good to turn -- Is bliss, then, such abyss -- Victory comes late -- Delight becomes pictorial -- Upon the gallows hung a wretch -- Remorse -- A shady friend for torrid days -- My Country's Wardrobe -- I gained it so -- Talk with prudence to a beggar -- Undue significance a starving man attaches -- I worked for chaff, and earning wheat -- When I hoped I feared -- Except the heaven had come so near -- To hang our head ostensibly -- This merit hath the worst -- Dawn -- I Had a Guinea Golden. | |
505 | 0 | |a Book II. Love. Choice -- Mine -- Love -- Suspense -- Consecration -- If you were coming in the fall -- I have no life but this -- Surrender -- Bequest -- Your riches taught me poverty -- In Vain -- We outgrow love like other things -- Renunciation -- Love's Baptism -- A charm invests a face -- At Home -- The Letter -- Apotheosis -- Proof -- Transplanted -- The Master -- Forgotten -- Dreams -- Satisfied -- Resurrection -- Heart, we will forget him! -- Have you got a brook in your little heart -- Father, I bring thee not myself -- With a Flower (1) -- With a Flower (2) -- The way I read a letter's this: -- Song -- The Lovers -- Alter? When the hills do -- The Lost Jewel -- Numen Lumen -- The Contract -- Wedded -- Poor little heart! -- The Outlet -- Longing -- The Wife -- Possession -- Wild nights! Wild nights! -- The moon is distant from the sea -- He put the belt around my life -- Loyalty -- To lose thee, sweeter than to gain -- I've got an arrow here -- In lands I never saw, they say -- Love's Humility -- What if I say I shall not wait? -- He touched me, so I live to know -- Not with a club the heart is broken -- Apocalypse -- Who? | |
505 | 0 | |a Book III. Nature. Summer Shower -- The Sea of Sunset -- Why? -- The bee is not afraid of me -- Summer's Armies -- A Service of Song -- As children bid the guest good-night -- A Day -- New feet within my garden go -- A little road not made of man -- This butterfly's assumption-gown -- The pedigree of honey -- Mother Nature -- Psalm of the day -- The Bee -- Purple Clover -- The Grass -- There's a certain slant of light -- Death and Life -- Two Worlds -- The Mountain -- May-Flower -- Perhaps you'd like to buy a flower? -- Day's Parlor -- Angels in the early morning -- 'Twas later when the summer went -- Two Voyagers -- Indian Summer -- Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn -- The Hemlock -- Morning is the place for dew -- The Wind's Visit -- In the Garden -- The Wind (1) -- The Mushroom -- The Storm -- Storm -- The Butterfly's Day -- By the Sea -- The Sleeping Flowers -- My Rose -- The Tulip -- At half-past three a single bird -- The Robin -- The Sun's Wooing -- Sunset -- The Snake -- Old-Fashioned -- April -- With Flowers -- Nature's Changes -- Nature rarer uses yellow -- The Oriole -- The Oriole's Secret -- A Rose -- To March -- March -- The Wind (2) -- A light exists in spring -- To make a prairie it takes a clover -- In Shadow -- High from the earth I heard a bird -- The Woodpecker -- A Well -- Cocoon -- The Moon -- The Sea -- A murmur in the trees to note -- So bashful when I spied her -- Beclouded -- Could I but ride indefinite -- To my quick ear the leaves conferred -- The Balloon -- Evening -- The Humming-Bird -- The Blue Jay -- Aurora -- Dawn -- Problems -- As imperceptibly as grief -- Sunset -- Out of the Morning -- Simplicity -- The Waking Year -- Aftermath -- Secrets -- Gossip -- A Thunder-Storm -- The Snow -- She sweeps with many-colored brooms -- Like mighty footlight burned the red -- The Bat -- Cobwebs -- The Rat -- The Spider -- My Cricket -- The one that could repeat the summer day -- Summer's Obsequies -- November -- It can't be summer, that got through -- A Tempest -- The Juggler of Day -- Frequently the woods are pink -- Autumn -- I know a place where summer strives -- A Snake -- Who robbed the woods -- The Bluebird -- Fringed Gentian -- A dew sufficed itself -- The Coming of Night. | |
505 | 0 | |a Book IV. Time and Eternity. This world is not conclusion -- Immortality -- There's been a death in the opposite house -- Safe in their alabaster chambers -- Morns like these we parted -- Memorials -- Charlotte Bronte's Grave -- Each that we lose take part of us -- One dignity delays for all -- I noticed people disappeared -- Troubled About Many Things -- Real -- Going to heaven! -- Sleep is supposed to be -- I've seen a dying eye -- Pompless no life can pass away -- I read my sentence steadily -- Triumph -- The bustle in a house -- The last night that she lived -- If anybody's friend be dead -- Too Late -- A death-blow is a life-blow to some -- Going -- I died for beauty, but was scarce -- Essential oils are wrung -- The Chariot -- I have not told my garden yet -- We learn in the retreating -- Following -- Vanished -- Dead -- Gone -- The daisy follows soft the sun -- I went to heaven -- It was not death, for I stood up -- Emancipation -- As by the dead we love to sit -- The Battle-Field -- Afraid? Of whom am I afraid? -- Ghosts -- The only ghost I ever saw -- I wish I knew that woman's name -- We cover thee, sweet face -- How dare the robins sing -- Dying (1) -- I breathed enough to learn the trick -- Retrospect -- Dying (2) -- Let down the bars, O Death! -- The Forgotten Grave -- Void -- Thirst -- Eternity -- The Soul's Storm -- Far from love the Heavenly Father -- A clock stopped, not the mantel's -- A Country Burial -- To know just how he suffered would be clear -- The First Lesson -- Ending -- On this long storm the rainbow rose -- Setting Sail -- Epitaph -- Some, too fragile for winter winds -- Their height in heaven comforts not -- She went as quiet as the dew -- At Length -- Resurgam -- Bless god, he went as soldiers -- I think just how my shape will rise --Asleep -- Immortal is an ample word -- If I may have it when it's dead -- Three weeks passed since I had seen her -- Unwarned -- Astra Castra -- If I should die -- Sleeping -- Except to heaven, she is nought -- I meant to find her when I came -- I felt a funeral in my brain -- The Funeral -- Superfluous were the sun -- Requiem -- Lost -- From the Chrysalis -- Precedence -- The Soul should always stand ajar -- I never lost as much but twice -- They say that "time assuages" -- I wonder if the sepulchre -- Joy in Death -- Death -- Before the ice is in the pools -- Where every bird is bold to go -- Given in marriage unto thee -- Two swimmers wrestled on the spar -- We never know we go, when we are going -- Saved! -- The distance that the dead have gone -- The Spirit -- At least to pray is left, is left -- Trying to Forget -- A train went through a burial gate -- Refuge -- Adrift! A little boat adrift! -- Playmates -- So proud she was to die -- Sweet hours have perished here -- They won't frown always, some sweet day -- The Journey -- I reason, earth is short -- I went to thank her -- A toad can die of light! -- There is a shame of nobleness -- Water is taught by thirst -- Along the Potomac -- This was in the white of the year -- Me! Come! My dazzled face -- Death is a dialogue between -- Waiting -- A sickness of this world it most occasions -- What inn is this -- The stimulus, beyond the grave -- Not any higher stands the grave -- I never saw a moor -- That such have died enables us -- I shall know why, when time is over -- The Monument -- Lay this laurel on the one -- It was too late for man -- The grave my little cottage is -- Invisible -- I lived on dread, to those who know -- A throe upon the features -- If I shouldn't be alive -- The dying need but little, dear -- Till the End -- Look back on time with kindly eyes -- Farewell. | |
520 | |a A selection of poems by nineteenth-century American writer Emily Dickinson, arranged chronologically, with illustrations from the special collections of the New York Public Library. | ||
600 | 1 | 0 | |a Dickinson, Emily,|d 1830-1886|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79054166|v Poetry.|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh99001678 |
600 | 1 | 7 | |a Dickinson, Emily,|d 1830-1886.|2 fast|0 (OCoLC)fst00035276 |
650 | 0 | |a American poetry.|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85004382 | |
650 | 7 | |a American poetry.|2 fast|0 (OCoLC)fst00807348 | |
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655 | 7 | |a Poetry.|2 lcgft|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/genreForms/gf2014026481 | |
700 | 1 | |a Todd, Mabel Loomis,|d 1856-1932.|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82001507 | |
700 | 1 | |a Higginson, Thomas Wentworth,|d 1823-1911.|0 https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n50034600 | |
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