Читать книгу Dickinson: The Complete Works - Эмили Дикинсон - Страница 299
Table of Contents
ОглавлениеVII. "To venerate the simple days"
IX. "Drowning is not so pitiful"
X. "How still the bells in steeples stand"
XI. "If the foolish call them 'flowers'"
XVII. "Who has not found the heaven below"
XXI. "Few get enough, enough is one"
XXII. "Upon the gallows hung a wretch"
XXVI. "The farthest thunder that I heard"
XXVII. "On the bleakness of my lot"
XXXIV. "I have a king who does not speak"
XXXVIII. "I worked for chaff, and earning wheat"
XXXIX. "Life, and Death, and Giants"
XLII. "To hang our head ostensibly"
XLIV. "The bone that has no marrow"
XLVI. "To help our bleaker parts"
XLVII. "What soft, cherubic creatures"
LI. "A modest lot, a fame petite"
LII "Is bliss, then, such abyss "
VIII. "To lose thee, sweeter than to gain"
XIII. "Heart, we will forget him!"
XIV. "Father, I bring thee not myself"
XV. "We outgrow love, like other things"
XVI. "Not with a club the heart is broken"
XVIII. "He touched me, so I live to know"
III. "A light exists in spring"
VIII. "A murmur in the trees to note"
IX. "Morning is the place for dew"
X. "To my quick ears the leaves conferred"
XII. "High from the earth I heard a bird"
XV. "To make a prairie it takes a clover"
XX. "Could I but ride indefinite"
I. "This world is not conclusion"
II. "We learn in the retreating"
III. "They say that 'time assuages'"
IV. "We cover thee, sweet face"
VI. "The stimulus, beyond the grave"
VII. "Given in marriage unto thee"
VIII. "That such have died enables us"
IX. "They won't frown always, some sweet day"
XI. " The distance that the dead have gone"
XII. "How dare the robins sing"
XV. "Each that we lose takes part of us"
XVI. "Not any higher stands the grave"
XX. "Bless God, he went as soldiers"
XXI. "Immortal is an ample word"
XXII. "Where every bird is bold to go"
XXIII. "The grave my little cottage is"
XXIV. "This was in the white of the year"
XXV. "Sweet hours have perished here"
XXVI. "Me! Come! My dazzled face"
XXVIII. "I wish I knew that woman's name"
XXX. "I felt a funeral in my brain"
XXXI. "I meant to find her when I came"
XXXIII. "A sickness of this world it most occasions"
XXXIV. "Superfluous were the sun"
XXXV. "So proud she was to die"
XXXVII. "The dying need but little, dear"
XXXIX. "The soul should always stand ajar"
XL. "Three weeks passed since I had seen her"
XLI. "I breathed enough to learn the trick"
XLII. "I wonder if the sepulchre"
XLIV. "If I may have it when it's dead"
XLV. "Before the ice is in the poo's"
XLVII. "Adrift! A little boat adrift!"
XLVIII. "There's been a death in the opposite house"
XLIX. "We never know we go, when we are going"
LI. "Water is taught by thirst"
LIII. "A clock stopped not the mantel's"
LV. "A toad can die of light!"