< Author:Emily Dickinson
← Emily Dickinson | H |
- Had I known that the first was the last -1720-
- Had I not seen the Sun -1233-
- Had I not This, or This, I said, -904-
- Had I presumed to hope — -522-
- Had this one Day not been. -1253-
- Had we known the Ton she bore -1124-
- Had we our senses -1284-
- Have any like Myself -736-
- Have you got a Brook in your little heart, -136-
- He ate and drank the precious Words — -1587-
- He forgot — and I — remembered — -203-
- He fought like those Who've nought to lose — -759-
- He found my Being — set it up — -603-
- He fumbles at your Soul -315-
- He gave away his Life — -567-
- He is alive, this morning — -1160-
- He lived the Life of Ambush -1525-
- He outstripped Time with but a Bout, -865-
- He parts Himself — like Leaves — -517-
- He preached upon "Breadth" till it argued him narrow — -1207-
- He put the Belt around my life -273-
- He scanned it — staggered — -1062-
- He strained my faith — -497-
- He told a homely tale -763-
- He touched me, so I live to know -506-
- He was my host — he was my guest, -1721-
- He was weak, and I was strong — then — -190-
- He went by sleep that drowsy route -1662-
- He who in Himself believes — -969-
- Heart! We will forget him! -47-
- Heart, not so heavy as mine -83-
- "Heaven" has different Signs — to me — -575-
- Heaven is so far of the Mind -370-
- "Heaven" — is what I cannot reach! -239-
- "Heavenly Father" — take to thee -1461-
- Her — "last Poems" — -312-
- Her breast is fit for pearls, -84-
- Her face was in a bed of hair, -1722-
- Her final Summer was it — -795-
- Her Grace is all she has — -810-
- Her little Parasol to lift -1038-
- Her Losses make our Gains ashamed — -1562-
- Her smile was shaped like other smiles — -514-
- Her sovereign People -1139-
- Her spirit rose to such a height -1486-
- Her Sweet turn to leave the Homestead -649-
- Her sweet Weight on my Heart a Night -518-
- Here, where the Daisies fit my Head -1037-
- Herein a Blossom lies — -899-
- High from the earth I heard a bird, -1723-
- His Bill an Auger is -1034-
- His Bill is clasped — his Eye forsook — -1102-
- His Cheek is his Biographer — -1460-
- His Feet are shod with Gauze — -916-
- His Heart was darker than the starless night -1378-
- His little Hearse like Figure -1522-
- His Mansion in the Pool -1379-
- His Mind like Fabrics of the East -1446-
- His mind of man, a secret makes -1663-
- His oriental heresies -1526-
- His voice decrepit was with Joy — -1476-
- Hope is a strange invention — -1392-
- Hope is a subtle Glutton — -1547-
- "Hope" is the thing with feathers — -254-
- "Houses" — so the Wise Men tell me — -127-
- How brittle are the Piers -1433-
- How dare the robins sing, -1724-
- How destitute is he -1477-
- How far is it to Heaven? -929-
- How firm Eternity must look -1499-
- How fits his Umber Coat -1371-
- How fleet — how indiscreet an one — -1771-
- How fortunate the Grave — -897-
- How good his Lava Bed, -1447-
- How happy I was if I could forget -898-
- How happy is the little Stone -1510-
- How Human Nature dotes -1417-
- How know it from a Summer's Day? -1364-
- How lonesome the Wind must feel Nights — -1418-
- How many Flowers fail in Wood — -404-
- How many schemes may die -1150-
- How many times these low feet staggered — -187-
- How much of Source escapes with thee — -1517-
- How much the present moment means -1380-
- How News must feel when travelling -1319-
- How noteless Men, and Pleiads, stand, -282-
- How ruthless are the gentle — -1439-
- How sick — to wait — in any place — but thine — -368-
- How slow the Wind — -1571-
- How soft a Caterpillar steps — -1448-
- How soft this Prison is -1334-
- How still the Bells in Steeples stand -1008-
- How the old Mountains drip with Sunset -291-
- How the Waters closed above Him -923-
- How well I knew Her not -837-
Poetry by Emily Dickinson (edit list): | |
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