Produktbild: The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson
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The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

8483

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.04.2022

Verlag

Quarto

Seitenzahl

236

Maße (L/B/H)

24,2/16,9/1,8 cm

Gewicht

500 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-63106-841-6

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

8483

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.04.2022

Verlag

Quarto

Seitenzahl

236

Maße (L/B/H)

24,2/16,9/1,8 cm

Gewicht

500 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-63106-841-6

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: [email protected]

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  • Produktbild: The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson
  • Contents
    introduction xxvii
    poems.
    1890.
    prelude
    book i.
    life.
    success 
    “our share of the night to bear. . .” 
    rouge et noir 
    rouge gagne 
    “glee! the great storm is over. . .” 
    “if i can stop one heart from
    breaking. . .” 
    almost! 
    “a wounded dear leaps highest. . .” 
    “the heart asks pleasure first. . .” 
    in a library 
    “much madness is divinest sense. . .” 
    “i asked no other thing. . .” 
    exclusion 
    the secret 
    the lonely house 
    “to fight aloud is very brave. . .” 
    dawn 
    the book of martyrs 
    the mystery of pain 
    “i taste a liquor never brewed. . .” 
    a book 
    “i had no time to hate, because. . .” 
    unreturning 
    “whether my bark went down at sea. . .” 
    “belshazzar had a letter. . .” 
    “the brain within its groove. . .” 
    book ii.
    love.
    mine 
    bequest 
    “alter? when the hills do. . .” 
    suspense 
    surrender 
    “if you were coming in the fall. . .” 
    with a flower
    proof 
    “have you got a brook in your
    little heart?” 
    transplanted 
    the outlet 
    in vain 
    renunciation 
    love’s baptism 
    resurrection 
    apocalypse 
    the wife 
    apotheosis 
    book iii.
    nature.
    “new feet within my garden go. . .” 
    may-flower 
    why? 
    “perhaps you’d like to buy a flower. . .” 
    “the pedigree of honey. . .” 
    a service of song 
    “the bee is not afraid of me. . .” 
    summer’s armies 
    the grass 
    “a little road not made of man. . .” 
    summer shower 
    psalm of the day 
    the sea of sunset 
    purple clover 
    the bee 
    “presentiment is that long shadow on
    the lawn. . .” 
    “as children bid the guest good-night. . .” 
    “angels in the early morning. . .” 
    “so bashful when i spied her. . .” 
    two worlds 
    the mountain 
    a day 
    “the butterfly’s assumption-gown. . .” 
    the wind 
    death and life 
    “’twas later when the summer went. . .” 
    indian summer 
    autumn 
    beclouded 
    the hemlock 
    “there’s a certain slant of light. . .” 
    book iv.
    time and eternity.
    “one dignity delays for all. . .” 
    too late
    astra castra 
    “safe in their alabaster chambers. . .” 
    “on this long storm the
    rainbow rose. . .” 
    from the chrysalis 
    setting sail 
    “look back on time with kindly eyes. . .” 
    “a train went through a burial gate. . .” 
    “i died for beauty, but was scarce. . .” 
    troubled about many things 
    real 
    the funeral 
    “i went to thank her. . .” 
    “i’ve seen a dying eye. . .” 
    refuge 
    “i never saw a moor. . .” 
    playmates 
    “to know just how he suffered would
    be dear. . .” 
    “the last night that she lived. . .” 
    the first lesson 
    “the bustle in a house. . .”
    “i reason, earth is short. . .” 
    “afraid? of whom am i afraid?” 
    dying 
    “two swimmers wrestled on the spar. . .” 
    the chariot 
    “she went as quiet as the dew. . .” 
    resurgam 
    “except to heaven she is nought. . .” 
    “death is a dialogue between. . .” 
    “it was too late for man. . .” 
    along the potomac 
    “the daisy follows soft the sun. . .” 
    emancipation 
    lost 
    “if i shouldn’t be alive. . .” 
    “sleep is supposed to be. . .” 
    “i shall know why when time is over. . .” 
    “i never lost as much but twice. . .” 
    poems.
    1891.
    “my nosegays are for captives. . .” 
    book i.
    life.
    “i’m nobody! who are you?” 
    “i bring an unaccustomed wine. . .” 
    “the nearest dream recedes,
    unrealized. . .” 
    “we play at paste. . .”
    “i found the phrase to every thought. . .” 
    hope 
    the white heat 
    triumph 
    the test 
    escape 
    compensation 
    the martyrs 
    a prayer 
    “the thought beneath so slight a film. . .” 
    “the soul unto itself. . .” 
    “surgeons must be very careful. . .” 
    the railway train 
    the show 
    “delight becomes pictorial. . .” 
    “a thought went up my mind today. . .” 
    “is heaven a physician?” 
    the return 
    “a poor torn heart, a tattered heart. . .” 
    too much 
    shipwreck 
    “victory comes late. . .” 
    enough 
    “experiment to me. . .” 
    my country’s wardrobe
    “faith is fine invention. . .” 
    “except the heaven had come so near. . .” 
    “portraits are to daily faces. . .” 
    the duel 
    “a shady friend for torrid days. . .” 
    the goal 
    sight 
    “talk with prudence to a beggar. . .” 
    the preacher
    “good night! which put the candle out?” 
    “when i hoped i feared. . .” 
    deed 
    time’s lesson 
    remorse 
    the shelter 
    “undue significance a starving
    man attaches. . .” 
    “heart not so heavy as mine. . .” 
    “i many times thought peace had come. . .” 
    “unto my books so good to turn. . .” 
    “this merit hath the worst. . .” 
    hunger 
    “i gained it so. . .”
    “to learn the transport by the pain. . .” 
    returning 
    prayer 
    “i know that he exists. . .” 
    melodies unheard 
    called back 
    book ii.
    love.
    choice 
    “i have no life but this. . .” 
    “your riches taught me poverty. . .” 
    the contract 
    the letter 
    “the way i read a letter’s this. . .” 
    “wild nights! wild nights!” 
    at home 89
    possession 
    “a charm invests a face. . .” 
    the lovers 
    “in lands i never saw, they say. . .” 
    “the moon is distant from the sea. . .” 
    “he put the belt around my life. . .” 
    the lost jewel 
    “what if i say i shall not wait?” 
    book iii.
    nature.
    mother nature 
    out of the morning 
    “at half-past three a single bird. . .” 
    day’s parlor 
    the sun’s wooing 
    the robin 
    the butterfly’s day 
    the bluebird 
    april 
    the sleeping flowers 
    my rose 
    the oriole’s secret 
    the oriole 
    in shadow 
    the humming-bird 
    secrets 
    “who robbed the woods. . .” 
    two voyagers 
    by the sea 
    old-fashioned 
    a tempest 
    the sea
    in the garden 
    the snake 
    the mushroom 
    the storm 
    the spider 
    “i know a place where summer strives. . .” 
    “the one that could repeat the
    summer day. . .” 
    the wind’s visit 
    “nature, rarer uses yellow. . .” 
    gossip 
    simplicity 
    storm 
    the rat 
    “frequently the woods are pink. . .” 
    a thunder-storm 
    with flowers 
    sunset 
    “she sweeps with many-colored brooms. . .” 
    “like mighty footlights burned the red. . .” 
    problems 
    the juggler of day 
    my cricket 
    “as imperceptibly as grief. . .” 
    “it can’t be summer,—that got through. . .” 
    summer’s obsequies 
    fringed gentian 
    november 
    the snow 
    the bluejay 
    book iv.
    time and eternity.
    “let down the bars, o death!” 
    “going to heaven!” 
    “at least to pray is left, is left. . .” 
    epitaph 
    “morns like these we parted. . .” 
    “a death-blow is a life-blow to some. . .” 
    “i read my sentence steadily. . .” 
    “i have not told my garden yet. . .” 
    the battle-field 
    “the only ghost i ever saw. . .” 
    “some, too fragile for winter winds. . .” 
    “as by the dead we love to sit. . .” 
    memorials 
    “i went to heaven. . .” 
    “their height in heaven comforts not. . .” 
    “there is a shame of nobleness. . .” 
    triumph 
    “pompless no life can pass away. . .” 
    “i noticed people disappeared. . .” 
    following 
    “if anybody’s friend be dead. . .” 
    the journey 
    a country burial 
    going 
    “essential oils are wrung. . .” 
    “i lived on dread; to those who know. . .” 
    “if i should die. . .” 
    at length 
    ghosts 
    vanished 
    precedence 
    gone 
    requiem 
    “what inn is this. . .” 
    “it was not death, for i stood up. . .” 
    till the end 
    void 
    “a throe upon the features. . .” 
    saved! 
    “i think just how my shape will rise. . .” 
    the forgotten grave 
    “lay this laurel on the one. . .” 
    poems.
    1896.
    “’tis all i have to bring today. . .” 
    book i.
    life.
    real riches 
    superiority to fate 
    hope 
    forbidden fruit (i) 
    forbidden fruit (ii) 
    a word 
    “to venerate the simple days. . .” 
    life’s trades 
    “drowning is not so pitiful. . .” 
    “how still the bells in steeples stand. . .” 
    “if the foolish call them ‘flowers’. . .” 
    a syllable 
    parting 
    aspiration 
    the inevitable 
    a book 
    “who has not found the heaven below. . .” 
    a portrait 
    i had a guinea golden 
    saturday afternoon 
    “few get enough,—enough is one. . .” 
    “upon the gallows hung a wretch. . .” 
    the lost thought 
    reticence 
    with flowers 
    “the farthest thunder that i heard. . .” 
    “on the bleakness of my lot. . .” 
    contrast 
    friends 
    fire 
    a man 
    ventures 
    griefs 
    “i have a king who does not speak. . .” 
    disenchantment 
    lost faith 
    lost joy 
    “i worked for chaff, and earning wheat. . .” 
    “life, and death, and giants. . .” 
    alpine glow 
    remembrance 
    “to hang our head ostensibly. . .” 
    the brain 
    “the bone that has no marrow. . .” 
    the past 
    “to help our bleaker parts. . .” 
    “what soft, cherubic creatures. . .” 
    desire 
    philosophy 
    power 
    “a modest lot, a fame petite. . .” 
    “in bliss, then, such abyss. . .” 
    experience 
    thanksgiving day 
    childish griefs 
    book ii.
    love.
    consecration 
    love’s humility 
    love 
    satisfied 
    with a flower 
    song 
    loyalty 
    “to lose thee, sweeter than to gain. . .” 
    “poor little heart!” 
    forgotten 
    “i’ve got an arrow here. . .” 
    the master 
    “heart, we will forget him!” 
    “father, i bring thee not myself. . .” 
    “we outgrow love like other things. . .” 
    “not with a club the heart is broken. . .” 
    who? 
    “he touched me, so i live to know. . .” 
    dreams 
    numen lumen 
    longing 
    wedded 
    book iii.
    nature.
    nature’s changes 
    the tulip 
    “a light exists in spring. . .” 
    the waking year 
    to march 
    march 
    dawn 
    “a murmur in the trees to note. . .” 
    “morning is the place for dew. . .” 
    “to my quick ear the leaves conferred. . .” 
    a rose 
    “high from the earth i heard a bird. . .” 
    cobwebs 
    a well 
    “to make a prairie it takes a clover. . .” 
    the wind 
    “a dew sufficed itself. . .” 
    the woodpecker 
    a snake 
    “could i but ride indefinite. . .” 
    the moon 
    the bat 
    the balloon 
    evening 
    cocoon 
    sunset 
    aurora 
    the coming of night 
    aftermath 
    book iv.
    time and eternity.
    “this world is not conclusion. . .” 
    “we learn in the retreating. . .” 
    “they say that ‘time assuages’. . .” 
    “we cover thee, sweet face. . .” 
    “that is solemn we have ended. . .” 
    “the stimulus, beyond the grave. . .” 
    “given in marriage unto thee. . .” 
    “that such have died enables us. . .” 
    “they won’t frown always,—some
    sweet day. . .” 
    immortality 
    “the distance that the dead have gone. . .” 
    “how dare the robins sing. . .” 
    death 
    unwarned 
    “each that we lose takes part of us. . .” 
    “not any higher stands the grave. . .” 
    asleep 
    the spirit 
    the monument 
    “bless god, he went as soldiers. . .” 
    “immortal is an ample word. . .” 
    “where every bird is bold to go. . .” 
    “the grave my little cottage is. . .” 
    “this was in the white of the year. . .” 
    “sweet hours have perished here. . .” 
    “me! come! my dazzled face. . .” 
    invisible 
    “i wish i knew that woman’s name. . .” 
    trying to forget 
    “i felt a funeral in my brain. . .” 
    “i meant to find her when i came. . .” 
    waiting 
    “a sickness of this world it most
    occasions. . .” 
    “superfluous were the sun. . .” 
    “so proud she was to die. . .” 
    farewell 
    “the dying need but little, dear. . .” 
    dead 
    “the soul should always stand ajar. . .” 
    “three weeks passed since i had
    seen her. . . 
    “i breathed enough to learn
    the trick. . .” 
    “i wonder if the sepulchre. . .” 
    joy in death 
    “if i may have it when it’s dead. . .” 
    “before the ice is in the pools. . .” 
    dying 
    “adrift! a little boat adrift!” 
    “there’s been a death in the opposite
    house. . .” 
    “we never know we go,—when we are
    going. . .” 
    the soul’s storm 
    “water is taught by thirst. . .” 
    thirst 
    “a clock stopped—not the mantel’s. . .” 
    charlotte brontë’s grave 
    “a toad can die of light. . .” 
    “far from love the heavenly father. . .” 
    sleeping 
    retrospect 
    eternity