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PREFACE TO SECOND SERIES
The eagerness with which the first volume of Emily Dickinson's poems has been read shows very clearly that all our alleged modern artificiality does not prevent a prompt appreciation of the qualities of directness and simplicity in approaching the greatest themes,--life and love and death. That "irresistible needle-touch," as one of her best critics has called it, piercing at once the very core of a thought, has found a response as wide and sympathetic as it has been unexpected even to those who knew best her compelling power. This second volume, while open to the same criticism as to form with its predecessor, shows also the same shining beauties. Although Emily Dickinson had been in the habit of sending occasional poems to friends and correspondents, the full extent of her writing was by no means imagined by them. Her friend "H.H." must at least have suspected it, for in a letter dated 5th September, 1884, she wrote:-- MY DEAR FRIEND,-- What portfolios full of verses you must have! It is a cruel wrong to your "day and generation" that you will not give them light. If such a thing should happen as that I should outlive you, I wish you would make me your literary legatee and executor. Surely after you are what is called "dead" you will be willing that the poor ghosts you have left behind should be cheered and pleased by your verses, will you not? You ought to be. I do not think we have a right to withhold from the world a word or a thought any more than a deed which might help a single soul. . . . Truly yours, HELEN JACKSON. The "portfolios" were found, shortly after Emily Dickinson's death, by her sister and only surviving housemate. Most of the poems had been carefully copied on sheets of note-paper, and tied in little fascicules, each of six or eight sheets. While many of them bear evidence of having been thrown off at white heat, still more had received thoughtful revision. There is the frequent addition of rather perplexing foot-notes, affording large choice of words and phrases. And in the copies which she sent to friends, sometimes one form, sometimes another, is found to have been used. Without important exception, her friends have generously placed at the disposal of the Editors any poems they had received from her; and these have given the obvious advantage of comparison among several renderings of the same verse. To what further rigorous pruning her verses would have been subjected had she published them herself, we cannot know. They should be regarded in many cases as merely the first strong and suggestive sketches of an artist, intended to be embodied at some time in the finished picture. Emily Dickinson appears to have written her first poems in the winter of 1862. In a letter to oone of the present Editors the April following, she says, "I made no verse, but one or two, until this winter." The handwriting was at first somewhat like the delicate, running Italian hand of our elder gentlewomen; but as she advanced in breadth of thought, it grew bolder and more abrupt, until in her latest years each letter stood distinct and separate from its fellows. In most of her poems, particularly the later ones, everything by way of punctuation was discarded, except numerous dashes; and all important words began with capitals. The effect of a page of her more recent manuscript is exceedingly quaint and strong. The fac-simile given in the present volume is from one of the earlier transition periods. Although there is nowhere a date, the handwriting makes it possible to arrange the poems with general chronologic accuracy. As a rule, the verses were without titles; but "A Country Burial," "A Thunder-Storm," "The Humming-Bird," and a few others were named by their author, frequently at the end,--sometimes only in the accompanying note, if sent to a friend. The variation of readings, with the fact that she often wrote in pencil and not always clearly, have at times thrown a good deal of responsibility upon her Editors. But all interference not absolutely inevitable has been avoided. The very roughness of her rendering is part of herself, and not lightly to be touched; for it seems in many cases that she intentionally avoided the smoother and more usual rhymes. Like impressionist pictures, or Wagner's rugged music, the very absence of conventional form challenges attention. In Emily Dickinson's exacting hands, the especial, intrinsic fitness of a particular order of words might not be sacrificed to anything virtually extrinsic; and her verses all show a strange cadence of inner rhythmical music. Lines are always daringly constructed, and the "thought-rhyme" appears frequently,--appealing, indeed, to an unrecognized sense more elusive than hearing. Emily Dickinson scrutinized everything with clear-eyed frankness. Every subject was proper ground for legitimate study, even the sombre facts of death and burial, and the unknown life beyond. She touches these themes sometimes lightly, sometimes almost humorously, more often with weird and peculiar power; but she is never by any chance frivolous or trivial. And while, as one critic has said, she may exhibit toward God "an Emersonian self-possession," it was because she looked upon all life with a candor as unprejudiced as it is rare. She had tried society and the world, and found them lacking. She was not an invalid, and she lived in seclusion from no love-disappointment. Her life was the normal blossoming of a nature introspective to a high degree, whose best thought could not exist in pretence. Storm, wind, the wild March sky, sunsets and dawns; the birds and bees, butterflies and flowers of her garden, with a few trusted human friends, were sufficient companionship. The coming of the first robin was a jubilee beyond crowning of monarch or birthday of pope; the first red leaf hurrying through "the altered air," an epoch. Immortality was close about her; and while never morbid or melancholy, she lived in its presence. MABEL LOOMIS TODD. AMHERST, MASSACHUSETTS, August, I891. My nosegays are for captives; Dim, long-expectant eyes, Fingers denied the plucking, Patient till paradise, To such, if they should whisper Of morning and the moor, They bear no other errand, And I, no other prayer.
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- PREFACE TO FIRST SERIES
- PREFACE TO SECOND SERIES
- PREFACE TO THIRD SERIES
- This is my letter to the world
- Part One: Life 1. Success is counted sweetest
- Part One: Life 2. Our share of night to bear
- Part One: Life 3. Soul, wilt thou toss again?
- Part One: Life 4. 'T is so much joy!
- Part One: Life 5. Glee! The great storm is over!
- Part One: Life 6. If I can stop one heart from breaking
- Part One: Life 7. Within my reach!
- Part One: Life 8. A wounded deer leaps highest
- Part One: Life 9. The heart asks pleasure first
- Part One: Life 10. A precious, mouldering pleasure 't is
- Part One: Life 11. Much madness is divinest sense
- Part One: Life 12. I asked no other thing
- Part One: Life 13. The soul selects her own society
- Part One: Life 14. Some things that fly there be
- Part One: Life 15. I know some lonely houses off the road
- Part One: Life 16. To fight aloud is very brave
- Part One: Life 17. When night is almost done
- Part One: Life 18. Read, sweet, how others strove
- Part One: Life 19. Pain has an element of blank
- Part One: Life 20. I taste a liquor never brewed
- Part One: Life 21. He ate and drank the precious words
- Part One: Life 22. I had no time to hate, because
- Part One: Life 23. 'T was such a little, little boat
- Part One: Life 24. Whether my bark went down at sea
- Part One: Life 25. Belshazzar had a letter
- Part One: Life 26. The brain within its groove
- Part One: Life 27. I'm nobody! Who are you?
- Part One: Life 28. I bring an unaccustomed wine
- Part One: Life 29. The nearest dream recedes, unrealized
- Part One: Life 30. We play at paste
- Part One: Life 31. I found the phrase to every thought
- Part One: Life 32. Hope is the thing with feathers
- Part One: Life 33. Dare you see a soul at the white heat?
- Part One: Life 34. Who never lost, are unprepared
- Part One: Life 35. I can wade grief
- Part One: Life 36. I never hear the word "escape"
- Part One: Life 37. For each ecstatic instant
- Part One: Life 38. Through the straight pass of suffering
- Part One: Life 39. I meant to have but modest needs
- Part One: Life 40. The thought beneath so slight a film
- Part One: Life 41. The soul unto itself
- Part One: Life 42. Surgeons must be very careful
- Part One: Life 43. I like to see it lap the miles
- Part One: Life 44. The show is not the show
- Part One: Life 45. Delight becomes pictorial
- Part One: Life 46. A thought went up my mind to-day
- Part One: Life 47. Is Heaven a physician?
- Part One: Life 48. Though I get home how late, how late!
- Part One: Life 49. A poor torn heart, a tattered heart
- Part One: Life 50. I should have been too glad, I see
- Part One: Life 51. It tossed and tossed
- Part One: Life 52. Victory comes late
- Part One: Life 53. God gave a loaf to every bird
- Part One: Life 54. Experiment to me
- Part One: Life 55. My country need not change her gown
- Part One: Life 56. Faith is a fine invention
- Part One: Life 57. Except the heaven had come so near
- Part One: Life 58. Portraits are to daily faces
- Part One: Life 59. I took my power in my hand
- Part One: Life 60. A shady friend for torrid days
- Part One: Life 61. Each life converges to some centre
- Part One: Life 62. Before I got my eye put out
- Part One: Life 63. Talk with prudence to a beggar
- Part One: Life 64. He preached upon "breadth" till it argued him narrow
- Part One: Life 65. Good night! which put the candle out?
- Part One: Life 66. When I hoped I feared
- Part One: Life 67. A deed knocks first at thought
- Part One: Life 68. Mine enemy is growing old
- Part One: Life 69. Remorse is memory awake
- Part One: Life 70. The body grows outside
- Part One: Life 71. Undue significance a starving man attaches
- Part One: Life 72. Heart not so heavy as mine
- Part One: Life 73. I many times thought peace had come
- Part One: Life 74. Unto my books so good to turn
- Part One: Life 75. This merit hath the worst
- Part One: Life 76. I had been hungry all the years
- Part One: Life 77. I gained it so
- Part One: Life 78. To learn the transport by the pain
- Part One: Life 79. I years had been from home
- Part One: Life 80. Prayer is the little implement
- Part One: Life 81. I know that he exists
- Part One: Life 82. Musicians wrestle everywhere
- Part One: Life 83. Just lost when I was saved
- Part One: Life 84. 'T is little I could care for pearls
- Part One: Life 85. Superiority to fate
- Part One: Life 86. Hope is a subtle glutton
- Part One: Life 87. Forbidden fruit a flavor has
- Part One: Life 88. Heaven is what I cannot reach!
- Part One: Life 89. A word is dead
- Part One: Life 90. To venerate the simple days
- Part One: Life 91. It's such a little thing to weep
- Part One: Life 92. Drowning is not so pitiful
- Part One: Life 93. How still the bells in steeples stand
- Part One: Life 94. If the foolish call them 'flowers'
- Part One: Life 95. Could mortal lip divine
- Part One: Life 96. My life closed twice before its close
- Part One: Life 97. We never know how high we are
- Part One: Life 98. While I was fearing it, it came
- Part One: Life 99. There is no frigate like a book
- Part One: Life 100. Who has not found the heaven below
- Part One: Life 101. A face devoid of love or grace
- Part One: Life 102. I had a guinea golden
- Part One: Life 103. From all the jails the boys and girls
- Part One: Life 104. Few get enough, - enough is one
- Part One: Life 105. Upon the gallows hung a wretch
- Part One: Life 106. I felt a clearing in my mind
- Part One: Life 107. The reticent volcano keeps
- Part One: Life 108. If recollecting were forgetting
- Part One: Life 109. The farthest thunder that I heard
- Part One: Life 110. On the bleakness of my lot
- Part One: Life 111. A door just opened on a street
- Part One: Life 112. Are friends delight or pain?
- Part One: Life 113. Ashes denote that fire was
- Part One: Life 114. Fate slew him, but he did not drop
- Part One: Life 115. Finite to fail, but infinite to venture
- Part One: Life 116. I measure every grief I meet
- Part One: Life 117. I have a king who does not speak
- Part One: Life 118. It dropped so low in my regard
- Part One: Life 119. To lose one's faith surpasses
- Part One: Life 120. I had a daily bliss
- Part One: Life 121. I worked for chaff, and earning wheat
- Part One: Life 122. Life, and Death, and Giants
- Part One: Life 123. Our lives are Swiss
- Part One: Life 124. Remembrance has a rear and front
- Part One: Life 125. To hang our head ostensibly
- Part One: Life 126. The brain is wider than the sky
- Part One: Life 127. The bone that has no marrow
- Part One: Life 128. The past is such a curious creature
- Part One: Life 129. To help our bleaker parts
- Part One: Life 130. What soft, cherubic creatures
- Part One: Life 131. Who never wanted, - maddest joy
- Part One: Life 132. It might be easier
- Part One: Life 133. You cannot put a fire out
- Part One: Life 134. A modest lot, a fame petite
- Part One: Life 135. Is bliss, then, such abyss
- Part One: Life 136. I stepped from plank to plank
- Part One: Life 137. One day is there of the series
- Part One: Life 138. Softened by Time's consummate plush
- My nosegays are for captives
- Part Two: Love 1. Mine by the right of the white election!
- Part Two: Love 2. You left me, sweet, two legacies
- Part Two: Love 3. Alter? When the hills do
- Part Two: Love 4. Elysium is as far as to
- Part Two: Love 5. Doubt me, my dim companion!
- Part Two: Love 6. If you were coming in the fall
- Part Two: Love 7. I hide myself within my flower
- Part Two: Love 8. That I did always love
- Part Two: Love 9. Have you got a brook in your little heart
- Part Two: Love 10. As if some little Arctic flower
- Part Two: Love 11. My river runs to thee
- Part Two: Love 12. I cannot live with you
- Part Two: Love 13. There came a day at summer's full
- Part Two: Love 14. I'm ceded, I've stopped being theirs
- Part Two: Love 15. 'T was a long parting, but the time
- Part Two: Love 16. I'm wife; I've finished that
- Part Two: Love 17. She rose to his requirement, dropped
- Part Two: Love 18. Come slowly, Eden!
- Part Two: Love 19. Of all the souls that stand create
- Part Two: Love 20. I have no life but this
- Part Two: Love 21. Your riches taught me poverty
- Part Two: Love 22. I gave myself to him
- Part Two: Love 23. "Going to him! Happy letter! Tell him
- Part Two: Love 24. The way I read a letter 's this
- Part Two: Love 25. Wild nights! Wild nights!
- Part Two: Love 26. The night was wide, and furnished scant
- Part Two: Love 27. Did the harebell loose her girdle
- Part Two: Love 28. A charm invests a face
- Part Two: Love 29. The rose did caper on her cheek
- Part Two: Love 30. In lands I never saw, they say
- Part Two: Love 31. The moon is distant from the sea
- Part Two: Love 32. He put the belt around my life
- Part Two: Love 33. I held a jewel in my fingers
- Part Two: Love 34. What if I say I shall not wait?
- Part Two: Love 35. Proud of my broken heart since thou didst break it
- Part Two: Love 36. My worthiness is all my doubt
- Part Two: Love 37. Love is anterior to life
- Part Two: Love 38. One blessing had I, than the rest
- Part Two: Love 39. When roses cease to bloom, dear
- Part Two: Love 40. Summer for thee grant I may be
- Part Two: Love 41. Split the lark and you'll find the music
- Part Two: Love 42. To lose thee, sweeter than to gain
- Part Two: Love 43. Poor little heart!
- Part Two: Love 44. There is a word
- Part Two: Love 45. I've got an arrow here
- Part Two: Love 46. He fumbles at your spirit
- Part Two: Love 47. Heart, we will forget him!
- Part Two: Love 48. Father, I bring thee not myself
- Part Two: Love 49. We outgrow love like other things
- Part Two: Love 50. Not with a club the heart is broken
- Part Two: Love 51. My friend must be a bird
- Part Two: Love 52. He touched me, so I live to know
- Part Two: Love 53. Let me not mar that perfect dream
- Part Two: Love 54. I live with him, I see his face
- Part Two: Love 55. I envy seas whereon he rides
- Part Two: Love 56. A solemn thing it was, I said
- It's all I have to bring to-day
- Part Three: Nature 1. Nature, the gentlest mother
- Part Three: Nature 2. Will there really be a morning?
- Part Three: Nature 3. At half-past three a single bird
- Part Three: Nature 4. The day came slow, till five o'clock
- Part Three: Nature 5. The sun just touched the morning
- Part Three: Nature 6. The robin is the one
- Part Three: Nature 7. From cocoon forth a butterfly
- Part Three: Nature 8. Before you thought of spring
- Part Three: Nature 9. An altered look about the hills
- Part Three: Nature 10. "Whose are the little beds," I asked
- Part Three: Nature 11. Pigmy seraphs gone astray
- Part Three: Nature 12. To hear an oriole sing
- Part Three: Nature 13. One of the ones that Midas touched
- Part Three: Nature 14. I dreaded that first robin so
- Part Three: Nature 15. A route of evanescence
- Part Three: Nature 16. The skies can't keep their secret!
- Part Three: Nature 17. Who robbed the woods
- Part Three: Nature 18. Two butterflies went out at noon
- Part Three: Nature 19. I started early, took my dog
- Part Three: Nature 20. Arcturus is his other name
- Part Three: Nature 21. An awful tempest mashed the air
- Part Three: Nature 22. An everywhere of silver
- Part Three: Nature 23. A bird came down the walk
- Part Three: Nature 24. A narrow fellow in the grass
- Part Three: Nature 25. The mushroom is the elf of plants
- Part Three: Nature 26. There came a wind like a bugle
- Part Three: Nature 27. A spider sewed at night
- Part Three: Nature 28. I know a place where summer strives
- Part Three: Nature 29. The one that could repeat the summer day
- Part Three: Nature 30. The wind tapped like a tired man
- Part Three: Nature 31. Nature rarer uses yellow
- Part Three: Nature 32. The leaves, like women, interchange
- Part Three: Nature 33. How happy is the little stone
- Part Three: Nature 34. It sounded as if the streets were running
- Part Three: Nature 35. The rat is the concisest tenant
- Part Three: Nature 36. Frequently the woods are pink
- Part Three: Nature 37. The wind begun to rock the grass
- Part Three: Nature 38. South winds jostle them
- Part Three: Nature 39. Where ships of purple gently toss
- Part Three: Nature 40. She sweeps with many-colored brooms
- Part Three: Nature 41. Like mighty footlights burned the red
- Part Three: Nature 42. Bring me the sunset in a cup
- Part Three: Nature 43. Blazing in gold and quenching in purple
- Part Three: Nature 44. Farther in summer than the birds
- Part Three: Nature 45. As imperceptibly as grief
- Part Three: Nature 46. It can't be summer, - that got through
- Part Three: Nature 47. The gentian weaves her fringes
- Part Three: Nature 48. God made a little gentian
- Part Three: Nature 49. Besides the autumn poets sing
- Part Three: Nature 50. It sifts from leaden sieves
- Part Three: Nature 51. No brigadier throughout the year
- Part Three: Nature 52. New feet within my garden go
- Part Three: Nature 53. Pink, small, and punctual
- Part Three: Nature 54. The murmur of a bee
- Part Three: Nature 55. Perhaps you'd like to buy a flower?
- Part Three: Nature 56. The pedigree of honey
- Part Three: Nature 57. Some keep the Sabbath going to church
- Part Three: Nature 58. The bee is not afraid of me
- Part Three: Nature 59. Some rainbow coming from the fair!
- Part Three: Nature 60. The grass so little has to do
- Part Three: Nature 61. A little road not made of man
- Part Three: Nature 62. A drop fell on the apple tree
- Part Three: Nature 63. A something in a summer's day
- Part Three: Nature 64. This is the land the sunset washes
- Part Three: Nature 65. There is a flower that bees prefer
- Part Three: Nature 66. Like trains of cars on tracks of plush
- Part Three: Nature 67. Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn
- Part Three: Nature 68. As children bid the guest good-night
- Part Three: Nature 69. Angels in the early morning
- Part Three: Nature 70. So bashful when I spied her
- Part Three: Nature 71. It makes no difference abroad
- Part Three: Nature 72. The mountain sat upon the plain
- Part Three: Nature 73. I'll tell you how the sun rose
- Part Three: Nature 74. The butterfly's assumption-gown
- Part Three: Nature 75. Of all the sounds despatched abroad
- Part Three: Nature 76. Apparently with no surprise
- Part Three: Nature 77. 'T was later when the summer went
- Part Three: Nature 78. These are the days when birds come back
- Part Three: Nature 79. The morns are meeker than they were
- Part Three: Nature 80. The sky is low, the clouds are mean
- Part Three: Nature 81. I think the hemlock likes to stand
- Part Three: Nature 82. There's a certain slant of light
- Part Three: Nature 83. The springtime's pallid landscape
- Part Three: Nature 84. She slept beneath a tree
- Part Three: Nature 85. A light exists in spring
- Part Three: Nature 86. A lady red upon the hill
- Part Three: Nature 87. Dear March, come in!
- Part Three: Nature 88. We like March, his shoes are purple
- Part Three: Nature 89. Not knowing when the dawn will come
- Part Three: Nature 90. A murmur in the trees to note
- Part Three: Nature 91. Morning is the place for dew
- Part Three: Nature 92. To my quick ear the leaves conferred
- Part Three: Nature 93. A sepal, petal, and a thorn
- Part Three: Nature 94. High from the earth I heard a bird
- Part Three: Nature 95. The spider as an artist
- Part Three: Nature 96. What mystery pervades a well!
- Part Three: Nature 97. To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee
- Part Three: Nature 98. It's like the light
- Part Three: Nature 99. A dew sufficed itself
- Part Three: Nature 100. His bill an auger is
- Part Three: Nature 101. Sweet is the swamp with its secrets
- Part Three: Nature 102. Could I but ride indefinite
- Part Three: Nature 103. The moon was but a chin of gold
- Part Three: Nature 104. The bat is dun with wrinkled wings
- Part Three: Nature 105. You've seen balloons set, haven't you?
- Part Three: Nature 106. The cricket sang
- Part Three: Nature 107. Drab habitation of whom?
- Part Three: Nature 108. A sloop of amber slips away
- Part Three: Nature 109. Of bronze and blaze
- Part Three: Nature 110. How the old mountains drip with sunset
- Part Three: Nature 111. The murmuring of bees has ceased
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 1. One dignity delays for all
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 2. Delayed till she had ceased to know
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 3. Departed to the judgment
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 4. Safe in their alabaster chambers
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 5. On this long storm the rainbow rose
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 6. My cocoon tightens, colors tease
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 7. Exultation is the going
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 8. Look back on time with kindly eyes
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 9. A train went through a burial gate
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 10. I died for beauty, but was scarce
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 11. How many times these low feet staggered
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 12. I like a look of agony
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 13. That short, potential stir
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 14. I went to thank her
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 15. I've seen a dying eye
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 16. The clouds their backs together laid
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 17. I never saw a moor
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 18. God permits industrious angels
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 19. To know just how he suffered would be dear
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 20. The last night that she lived
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 21. Not in this world to see his face
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 22. The bustle in a house
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 23. I reason, earth is short
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 24. Afraid? Of whom am I afraid?
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 25. The sun kept setting, setting still
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 26. Two swimmers wrestled on the spar
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 27. Because I could not stop for Death
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 28. She went as quiet as the dew
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 29. At last to be identified!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 30. Except to heaven, she is nought
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 31. Death is a dialogue between
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 32. It was too late for man
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 33. When I was small, a woman died
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 34. The daisy follows soft the sun
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 35. No rack can torture me
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 36. I lost a world the other day
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 37. If I shouldn't be alive
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 38. Sleep is supposed to be
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 39. I shall know why, when time is over
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 40. I never lost as much but twice
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 41. Let down the bars, O Death!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 42. Going to heaven!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 43. At least to pray is left, is left
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 44. Step lightly on this narrow spot!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 45. Morns like these we parted
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 46. A death-blow is a life-blow to some
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 47. I read my sentence steadily
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 48. I have not told my garden yet
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 49. They dropped like flakes, they dropped like stars
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 50. The only ghost I ever saw
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 51. Some, too fragile for winter winds
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 52. As by the dead we love to sit
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 53. Death sets a thing significant
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 54. I went to heaven
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 55. Their height in heaven comforts not
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 56. There is a shame of nobleness
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 57. Triumph may be of several kinds
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 58. Pompless no life can pass away
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 59. I noticed people disappeared
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 60. I had no cause to be awake
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 61. If anybody's friend be dead
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 62. Our journey had advanced
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 63. Ample make this bed
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 64. On such a night, or such a night
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 65. Essential oils are wrung
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 66. I lived on dread; to those who know
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 67. If I should die
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 68. Her final summer was it
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 69. One need not be a chamber to be haunted
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 70. She died, - this was the way she died
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 71. Wait till the majesty of Death
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 72. Went up a year this evening!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 73. Taken from men this morning
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 74. What inn is this
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 75. It was not death, for I stood up
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 76. I should not dare to leave my friend
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 77. Great streets of silence led away
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 78. A throe upon the features
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 79. Of tribulation these are they
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 80. I think just how my shape will rise
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 81. After a hundred years
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 82. Lay this laurel on the one
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 83. This world is not conclusion
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 84. We learn in the retreating
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 85. They say that 'time assuages'
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 86. We cover thee, sweet face
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 87. That is solemn we have ended
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 88. The stimulus, beyond the grave
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 89. Given in marriage unto thee
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 90. That such have died enables us
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 91. They won't frown always, - some sweet day
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 92. It is an honorable thought
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 93. The distance that the dead have gone
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 94. How dare the robins sing
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 95. Death is like the insect
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 96. 'T is sunrise, little maid, hast thou
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 97. Each that we lose takes part of us
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 98. Not any higher stands the grave
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 99. As far from pity as complaint
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 100. 'T is whiter than an Indian pipe
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 101. She laid her docile crescent down
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 102. Bless God, he went as soldiers
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 103. Immortal is an ample word
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 104. Where every bird is bold to go
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 105. The grave my little cottage is
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 106. This was in the white of the year
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 107. Sweet hours have perished here
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 108. Me! Come! My dazzled face
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 109. From us she wandered now a year
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 110. I wish I knew that woman's name
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 111. Bereaved of all, I went abroad
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 112. I felt a funeral in my brain
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 113. I meant to find her when I came
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 114. I sing to use the waiting
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 115. A sickness of this world it most occasions
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 116. Superfluous were the sun
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 117. So proud she was to die
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 118. Tie the strings to my life, my Lord
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 119. The dying need but little, dear
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 120. There's something quieter than sleep
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 121. The soul should always stand ajar
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 122. Three weeks passed since I had seen her
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 123. I breathed enough to learn the trick
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 124. I wonder if the sepulchre
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 125. If tolling bell I ask the cause
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 126. If I may have it when it's dead
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 127. Before the ice is in the pools
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 128. I heard a fly buzz when I died
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 129. Adrift! A little boat adrift!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 130. There's been a death in the opposite house
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 131. We never know we go, - when we are going
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 132. It struck me every day
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 133. Water is taught by thirst
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 134. We thirst at first, - 't is Nature's act
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 135. A clock stopped - not the mantel's
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 136. All overgrown by cunning moss
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 137. A toad can die of light!
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 138. Far from love the Heavenly Father
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 139. A long, long sleep, a famous sleep
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 140. 'T was just this time last year I died
- Part Four: Time and Eternity 141. On this wondrous sea
- Sources
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