Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Emily Dickinson > Second Series [Series 2]
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Table of ContentPreface
I. LIFE 1. I. I'm nobody! Who are you? 2. II. I bring an unaccustomed wine 3. III. The nearest dream recedes, unrealized 4. IV. We play at paste 5. V. I found the phrase to every thought 6. VI. HOPE 7. VII. THE WHITE HEAT 8. VIII. TRIUMPHANT 9. IX. THE TEST 10. X. ESCAPE 11. XI. COMPENSATION 12. XII. THE MARTYRS 13. XIII. A PRAYER 14. XIV. The thought beneath so slight a film 15. XV. The soul unto itself 16. XVI. Surgeons must be very careful 17. XVII. THE RAILWAY TRAIN 18. XVIII. THE SHOW 19. XIX. Delight becomes pictorial 20. XX. A thought went up my mind to-day 21. XXI. Is Heaven a physician? 22. XXII. THE RETURN 23. XXIII. A poor torn heart, a tattered heart 24. XXIV. TOO MUCH 25. XXV. SHIPWRECK 26. XXVI. Victory comes late 27. XXVII. ENOUGH 28. XXVIII. Experiment to me 29. XXIX. MY COUNTRY'S WARDROBE 30. XXX. Faith is a fine invention 31. XXXI. Except the heaven had come so near 32. XXXII. Portraits are to daily faces 33. XXXIII. THE DUEL 34. XXXIV. A shady friend for torrid days 35. XXXV. THE GOAL 36. XXXVI. SIGHT 37. XXXVII. Talk with prudence to a beggar 38. XXXVIII. THE PREACHER 39. XXXIX. Good night! which put the candle out? 40. XL. When I hoped I feared 41. XLI. DEED 42. XLII. TIME'S LESSON 43. XLIII. REMORSE 44. XLIV. THE SHELTER 45. XLV.Undue significance a starving man attaches 46. XLVI. Heart not so heavy as mine 47. XLVII. I many times thought peace had come 48. XLVIII. Unto my books so good to turn 49. XLIX. This merit hath the worst 50. L. HUNGER 51. LI. I gained it so 52. LII. To learn the transport by the pain 53. LIII. RETURNING 54. LIV. PRAYER 55. LV. I know that he exists 56. LVI. MELODIES UNHEARD 57. LVII. CALLED BACK
II. LOVE 1. I. CHOICE 2. II. I have no life but this 3. III. Your riches taught me poverty 4. IV. THE CONTRACT 5. V. THE LETTER 6. VI. The way I read a letter 's this 7. VII. Wild nights! Wild nights! 8. VIII. AT HOME 9. IX. POSSESSION 10. X. A charm invests a face 11. XI. THE LOVERS 12. XII. In lands I never saw, they say 13. XIII. The moon is distant from the sea 14. XIV. He put the belt around my life 15. XV. THE LOST JEWEL 16. XVI. What if I say I shall not wait?
III. NATURE 1. I. MOTHER NATURE 2. II. OUT OF THE MORNING 3. III. At half-past three a single bird 4. IV. DAY'S PARLOR 5. V. THE SUN'S WOOING 6. VI. THE ROBIN 7. VII. THE BUTTERFLY'S DAY 8. VIII. THE BLUEBIRD 9. IX. APRIL 10. X. THE SLEEPING FLOWERS 11. XI. MY ROSE 12. XII. THE ORIOLE'S SECRET 13. XIII. THE ORIOLE 14. XIV. IN SHADOW 15. XV. THE HUMMING-BIRD 16. XVI. SECRETS 17. XVII. Who robbed the woods, The trusting woods? 18. XVIII. TWO VOYAGERS 19. XIX. BY THE SEA 20. XX. OLD-FASHIONED 21. XXI. A TEMPEST 22. XXII. THE SEA 23. XXIII. IN THE GARDEN 24. XXIV. THE SNAKE 25. XXV. THE MUSHROOM 26. XXVI. THE STORM 27. XXVII. THE SPIDER 28. XXVIII. I know a place where summer strives 29. XXIX. The one that could repeat the summer day 30. XXX. THE WlND'S VISIT 31. XXXI. Nature rarer uses yellow 32. XXXII. GOSSIP 33. XXXIII. SIMPLICITY 34. XXXIV. STORM 35. XXXV. THE RAT 36. XXXVI. Frequently the woods are pink 37. XXXVII. A THUNDER-STORM 38. XXXVIII. WITH FLOWERS 39. XXXIX. SUNSET 40. XL. She sweeps with many-colored brooms 41. XLI. Like mighty footlights burned the red 42. XLII. PROBLEMS 43. XLIII. THE JUGGLER OF DAY 44. XLIV. MY CRICKET 45. XLV. As imperceptibly as grief 46. XLVI. It can't be summer, -- that got through 47. XLVII. SUMMER'S OBSEQUIES 48. XLVIII. FRINGED GENTIAN 49. XLIX. NOVEMBER 50. L. THE SNOW 51. LI. THE BLUE JAY
IV. TIME AND ETERNITY 1. I. Let down the bars, O Death! 2. II. Going to heaven! 3. III. At least to pray is left, is left 4. IV. EPITAPH 5. V. Morns like these we parted 6. VI. A death-blow is a life-blow to some 7. VII. I read my sentence steadily 8. VIII. I have not told my garden yet 9. IX. THE BATTLE-FIELD 10. X. The only ghost I ever saw 11. XI. Some, too fragile for winter winds 12. XII. As by the dead we love to sit 13. XIII. MEMORIALS 14. XIV. I went to heaven 15. XV. Their height in heaven comforts not 16. XVI. There is a shame of nobleness 17. XVII. TRIUMPH 18. XVIII. Pompless no life can pass away 19. XIX. I noticed people disappeared 20. XX. FOLLOWING 21. XXI. If anybody's friend be dead 22. XXII. THE JOURNEY 23. XXIII. A COUNTRY BURIAL 24. XXIV. GOING 25. XXV. Essential oils are wrung 26. XXVI. I lived on dread; to those who know 27. XXVII. If I should die 28. XXVIII. AT LENGTH 29. XXIX. GHOSTS 30. XXX. VANISHED 31. XXXI. PRECEDENCE 32. XXXII. GONE 33. XXXIII. REQUIEM 34. XXXIV. What inn is this 35. XXXV. It was not death, for I stood up 36. XXXVI. TILL THE END 37. XXXVII. VOID 38. XXXVIII. A throe upon the features 39. XXXIX. SAVED! 40. XL. I think just how my shape will rise 41. XLI. THE FORGOTTEN GRAVE 42. XLII. Lay this laurel on the one
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Name: _____ [Date: 3/13/07] Title: Subject: Review/comment: In the poems that you have by emily Dickinson, you should include the capitalization of the words that are not usually capitalized. Dickinson obviously did this for some reason, and omiting it can lead to misunderstanding of the poem.
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