They called me to the window, for
Amherst College Digital Collections > Archives & Special Collections
Amherst College Digital Collections > Emily Dickinson Collection
Creator | Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886 |
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First Line | They called me to the window, for |
First Line | No romance sold unto |
First Line | I heard a fly buzz - when I died |
First Line | The soul that hath a guest |
First Line | I watched the moon around the house |
First Line | When I hoped - I feared |
First Line | The lightning playeth, all the while |
First Line | Ourselves were wed one summer-dear |
First Line | ' Tis little I could care for pearls |
First Line | The brain - is wider than the sky |
First Line | We do not play on graves |
First Line | Her - last poems - poets ended |
First Line | When bells stop ringing, church begins |
First Line | The manner of it's death |
First Line | The red - blaze - is the morning |
First Line | You'll know her by her foot |
First Line | I am alive - I guess |
First Line | Except the smaller size |
First Line | I think the longest hour of all |
First Line | So glad we are, a stranger'd deem |
First Line | A night - there lay the days between |
Identifier | Amherst Manuscript #fascicle 84 |
Identifier | Franklin #589; 590; 591; 592; 593; 594; 595; 596; 597; 598; 599; 600; 601; 602; 603; 604; 605; 606; 607; 608; 609 |
Identifier | Johnson Poems #312; 329; 465; 466; 467; 468; 469; 470; 471; 628; 629; 630; 631; 632; 633; 634; 635; 669; 674; 1067; 1181 |
Physical Description | 6 sheets (12 leaves), Tied with string. |
Languages | English |
Place of Creation | Amherst (Mass.) |
Genre | Poems |
Subject | American poetry – 19th century |
Subject | Women poets, American – 19th century |
Part of | Emily Dickinson Collection |
Repository | Amherst College Archives & Special Collections |
Shelf Location | Box 2 Folder 6 |
Rights | Amherst College provides this item to support research and scholarship. Amherst College can neither grant nor deny permission to publish or quote from materials in its collections. Neither titles nor facts can be copyrighted; therefore, permission is not required to cite a collection as a source or to use facts from it. |