< Author:Emily Dickinson
← Emily Dickinson | 1400-1499 |
- What mystery pervades a well! -1400-
- To own a Susan of my own -1401-
- To the stanch Dust -1402-
- My Maker — let me be -1403-
- March is the Month of Expectation. -1404-
- Bees are Black, with Gilt Surcingles — -1405-
- No Passenger was known to flee — -1406-
- A Field of Stubble, lying sere -1407-
- The Fact that Earth is Heaven — -1408-
- Could mortal lip divine -1409-
- I shall not murmur if at last -1410-
- Of Paradise' existence -1411-
- Shame is the shawl of Pink -1412-
- Sweet Skepticism of the Heart — -1413-
- Unworthy of her Breast -1414-
- A wild Blue sky abreast of Winds -1415-
- Crisis is sweet and yet the Heart -1416-
- How Human Nature dotes -1417-
- How lonesome the Wind must feel Nights — -1418-
- It was a quiet seeming Day — -1419-
- One Joy of so much anguish -1420-
- Such are the inlets of the mind — -1421-
- Summer has two Beginnings — -1422-
- The fairest Home I ever knew -1423-
- The Gentian has a parched Corolla — -1424-
- The inundation of the Spring -1425-
- The pretty Rain from those sweet Eaves -1426-
- To earn it by disdaining it -1427-
- Water makes many Beds -1428-
- We shun because we prize her Face -1429-
- Who never wanted — maddest Joy -1430-
- With Pinions of Disdain -1431-
- Spurn the temerity — -1432-
- How brittle are the Piers -1433-
- Go not too near a House of Rose — -1434-
- Not that he goes — we love him more -1435-
- Than Heaven more remote, -1436-
- A Dew sufficed itself — -1437-
- Behold this little Bane — -1438-
- How ruthless are the gentle — -1439-
- The healed Heart shows its shallow scar -1440-
- These Fevered Days — to take them to the Forest -1441-
- To mend each tattered Faith -1442-
- A chilly Peace infests the Grass -1443-
- A little Snow was here and there -1444-
- Death is the supple Suitor -1445-
- His Mind like Fabrics of the East -1446-
- How good his Lava Bed, -1447-
- How soft a Caterpillar steps — -1448-
- I thought the Train would never come — -1449-
- The Road was lit with Moon and star — -1450-
- Whoever disenchants -1451-
- Your thoughts don't have words every day -1452-
- A Counterfeit — a Plated Person — -1453-
- Those not live yet -1454-
- Opinion is a flitting thing, -1455-
- So gay a Flower -1456-
- It stole along so stealthy -1457-
- Time's wily Chargers will not wait -1458-
- Belshazzar had a Letter — -1459-
- His Cheek is his Biographer — -1460-
- "Heavenly Father" — take to thee -1461-
- We knew not that we were to live — -1462-
- A Route of Evanescence -1463-
- One thing of it we borrow -1464-
- Before you thought of Spring -1465-
- One of the ones that Midas touched -1466-
- A little overflowing word -1467-
- A winged spark doth soar about — -1468-
- If wrecked upon the Shoal of Thought -1469-
- The Sweets of Pillage, can be known -1470-
- Their Barricade against the Sky -1471-
- To see the Summer Sky -1472-
- We talked with each other about each other -1473-
- Estranged from Beauty — none can be — -1474-
- Fame is the one that does not stay — -1475-
- His voice decrepit was with Joy — -1476-
- How destitute is he -1477-
- Look back on Time, with kindly eyes — -1478-
- The Devil — had he fidelity -1479-
- The fascinating chill that music leaves -1480-
- The way Hope builds his House -1481-
- 'Tis whiter than an Indian Pipe — -1482-
- The Robin is a Gabriel -1483-
- We shall find the Cube of the Rainbow. -1484-
- Love is done when Love's begun, -1485-
- Her spirit rose to such a height -1486-
- The Savior must have been -1487-
- Birthday of but a single pang -1488-
- A Dimple in the Tomb -1489-
- The Face in evanescence lain -1490-
- The Road to Paradise is plain, -1491-
- "And with what body do they come?" — -1492-
- Could that sweet Darkness where they dwell -1493-
- The competitions of the sky -1494-
- The Thrill came slowly like a Boom for -1495-
- All that I do -1496-
- Facts by our side are never sudden -1497-
- Glass was the Street — in tinsel Peril -1498-
- How firm Eternity must look -1499-
Poetry by Emily Dickinson (edit list): | |
By letter of the alphabet: | A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, Y. |
By number | 1-99, 100-199, 200-299, 300-399, 400-499, 500-599, 600-699, 700-799, 800-899, 900-999, 1000-1099, 1100-1199, 1200-1299, 1300-1399, 1400-1499, 1500-1599, 1600-1699, 1700-1775. |
This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.