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         Dickinson Emily:     more books (100)
  1. Emily Dickinson: A Poet's Grammar by Cristanne Miller, 1989-10-15
  2. Essential Dickinson (Essential Poets) by Emily Dickinson, 2006-03-01
  3. Emily Dickinson and the Problem of Others by Christopher Benfey, 1984-10
  4. The Cambridge Companion to Emily Dickinson (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
  5. The Cambridge Introduction to EmilyDickinson (Cambridge Introductions to Literature) by Wendy Martin, 2007-03-19
  6. Emily Dickinson (Radcliffe Biography Series) by Cynthia Griffin Wolff, 1988-01-22
  7. Emily Dickinson's Gardens: A Celebration of a Poet and Gardener by Marta McDowell, 2004-10-20
  8. My Emily Dickinson (New Directions Paperbook) by Susan Howe, 2007-11-15
  9. Emily Dickinson, Woman of Letters: Poems and Centos from Lines in Emily Dickinson's Letters
  10. Emily Dickinson: A Biography (American Literary Greats) by Milton Meltzer, 2005-12-15
  11. Rowing in Eden: Rereading Emily Dickinson by Martha Nell Smith, 1992
  12. A Voice of Her Own: Becoming Emily Dickinson by Barbara Dana, 2009-03-01
  13. Lyric Contingencies: Emily Dickinson and Wallace Stevens by Margaret Dickie, 1991-04
  14. The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson (Modern Library) by Emily Dickinson, 1996-06-03

41. AbsoluteFacts.nl - Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Emily Dickinson. De Amerikaanse dichteres Emily Dickinson (18301886) wordtbeschouwd tot als één van de belangrijkste Amerikaanse schrijfsters.
http://www.absofacts.com/literatuur/data/dickinsonemily.shtml
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Emily Dickinson
De Amerikaanse dichteres Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) wordt beschouwd tot als één van de belangrijkste Amerikaanse schrijfsters. Daarnaast werden ook veel brieven van Dickinson gepubliceerd. Dickinson werd geboren in Amherst in Massachusetts de plaats, waar zij haar hele leven zou blijven wonen en werken. Emily Dickinson studeerde aan de Amherst Academy en bezocht een jaar lang een seminarie voor vrouwen in het nabij gelegen South Hadley. De dichteres leed een kluizenaarsbestaan en trouwde nooit, maar onderhield een uitvoerige correspondentie met een kleine groep mensen. Hoewel ze als eenling door het leven ging, bracht zij veel tijd buitenshuis door. De schoonheid en de rust van het landschap waren dan ook belangrijke thema's in haar werk, maar ook de liefde en vooral de dood zijn belangrijke thema's. Emily Dickinson schreef ongeveer 1800 gedichten, waarvan er zes tijdens haar leven tegen haar zin werden gepubliceerd. Haar zuster Lavinia verzorgde de uitgave van het werk van de grote dichteres na haar dood.

42. The Emily Dickinson Stamp
Artcraft FDC front First day of issue Emily Dickinson 18301886 American Poet . EmilyDickinson 1830-1886 American Poet Series Bazaar 32 First Day of Issue .
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~dalbino/fdcs/emily.html
The Emily Dickinson Stamp
History
In 1971, an Emily Dickinson stamp was issued by the US Postal service. On the first day of issue, several kinds of envelopes were stamped and postmarked with the new stamp. All are postmarked Aug 28, 1971 in Amherst, MA and are stamped with an 8-cent Emily Dickinson stamp with a "First Day of Issue" postmark unless otherwise noted.
The Images
In most cases, only front scans of the covers are available because the back side of the covers was unadorned. Comments about what is written on the front or back by the publisher are included below.
Bow Wow Local Post FDC
front
Colonial Cachet
front "Emily Dickinson" "The pedigree of honey Does not concern the bee A clover, anytime, to him Is aristocracy." Colonial Cachet. Stamped with an 8-cent Emily Dickinson stamp, plus a 3c "100 years of progress of women" stamp, a 5c Shakespeare stamp, a 3c Edgar Allan Poe stamp, a 3c Joel Chandler Harris stamp, and a 3c William Allen White stamp.
Artopages FDC
front "Honoring the American Poets Second in a Series Emily Dickinson Famous for Letters and Verses to Friends A Woman's Walt Whitman 1830-1886"
Artcraft FDC
front "First day of issue" "Emily Dickinson 1830-1886 American Poet"
Sarzin FDC
front Sarzin metallic first day cover.

43. Project Gutenberg Author Record
Project Gutenberg Author record. Dickinson, Emily, 18301886. Titles.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/dickinson__emily__1830-18.html
Project Gutenberg Author record
Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886
Titles
Poems Of Emily Dickinson, Series One Poems Of Emily Dickinson, Series Two
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

44. Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson (18301886). Emily Dickinson, the belle of Amherst (theMassachusetts town where she spent her entire life), is almost
http://www.ibiblio.org/cheryb/women/Emily-Dickinson.html
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Emily Dickinson,"the belle of Amherst"(the Massachusetts town where she spent her entire life), is almost as famous for her mysteriously secluded life as for her poetry, which ranks her with Walt Whitman as one of the most gifted poets in American literature. She never married, and after age 30 she almost never saw anyone outside of her immediate family. Some scholars believe that this was her response to the narrow literary establishment of her time, which expected female writers to limit their subjects to the domestic and the sentimental. Author of over 1700 poems, only 10 were published in her lifetime, and these without her permission. After her death, however, her sister found and published the body of her work.

45. EMILY DICKINSON (1830-1886)
Emily Dickinson (18301886). New England Romantic or 1st American ModernistAn American Original . Emily Dickinson (1830-1886). An American Original .
http://webpages.shepherd.edu/sshurbut/204notes/Dickinson.htm
EMILY DICKINSON (1830-1886) "New England Romantic or 1st American Modernist: An American Original" Critics have always had difficulty encapsulating, categorizing, labeling ED; they have tended to think her isolated, cut off from the Romantic mainstream of New England, or simply a frustrated spinster who wrote cryptic poetry. Oddly, Thoreau is never interpreted as a frustrated bachelor! Those virtues we've admired in her male contemporaries (individualism, eccentricity, uniqueness) have somehow deemed Dickinson a sort of half-woman in the eyes of some criticscertainly in the years before feminist criticism began to flourish in the past two decades. Dickinson herself might have accepted the label of DAISY, but she wouldn't have been very interested in the scholars' arguments about where she belongs in the literary canon or who the famous "lover" might have been. Certainly, if we study her as one of the New England Romantics, many of the biographical problems are cleared away. Yet she transcends even this interpretation.

46. Neurotic Poets: Emily Dickinson
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. (18301886). nly about a dozen of herown poems were published during Emily Dickinson's lifetime, most
http://www.neuroticpoets.com/dickinson/
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
nly about a dozen of her own poems were published during Emily Dickinson's lifetime, most of them anonymously and without her permission. Emily enjoyed word-play and riddles, and fittingly so since she herself is something of a riddle and a mystery. Her life is very much open to speculation, legend and myth simply because little is known about it. The single existing photograph of her was taken when she was seventeen years old. Her over 1700 short poems were created without any apparent pattern or progression, and they contain no titles or dates. Dickinson was born on December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts. Her mother was Emily Norcross, and her father, Edward Dickinson, was a prominent lawyer and businessman, and later a Representative in Congress. Emily had an older brother named Austin and a younger sister, Lavinia. The Dickinson family were firm believers in education, for women as well as men. Emily's grandfather had helped found Amherst College. Therefore, her parents made sure she was educated in excellent schools such as the Amherst Academy and later Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. Dickinson has been described during her adolescent years as a shy, demure, neatly dressed young woman often wearing or bearing flowers. For unknown reasons, she left Holyoke after only one year, and soon began restricting most of her social interaction to members of her own family. Amherst at that time was a small town greatly influenced by the railroad, the college, and by religion. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, this area had the most ministers per capita in all of the U.S. As for Emily's own thoughts on religion, it is said that although she sometimes expressed doubts and seemed skeptical, she truly had strong religious feelings.

47. How Happy Is The Little Stone - Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Associates or glows alone Fulfilling absolute Decree In casual simplicity. Emily Dickinson (18301886) Return to Poems Home.
http://www.sfu.ca/~nsiu/poems/little_stone.htm
Return to Poems Home
How Happy is
the Little Stone
How happy is the little Stone
That rambles in the Road alone,
And doesn't care about Careers
And Exigencies never fears
Whose Coat of elemental Brown
A passing Universe put on,
And independent as the Sun
Associates or glows alone
Fulfilling absolute Decree
In casual simplicity
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) Return to Poems Home

48. Emily Dickinson [1830-1886] - INDIAN SUMMER
Poems by Women. INDIAN SUMMER. Emily Dickinson 18301886. These are the dayswhen birds come back, A very few, a bird or two, To take a backward look.
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/etext/poem1/blp_dickinson_indian_summer.h
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Poems by Women
INDIAN SUMMER
Emily Dickinson These are the days when birds come back,
A very few, a bird or two, To take a backward look. These are the days when skies put on The old, old sophistries of June, - A blue and gold mistake. Oh, fraud that cannot cheat the bee, Almost thy plausibility Induces my belief, Till ranks of seeds their witness bear, And softly through the altered air Hurries a timid leaf! Oh, sacrament of summer days, Oh, last communion in the haze

49. Biography Of Emily Dickinson
Biography of Emily Dickinson (18301886). from Michael Myers,Thinkingand Writing About Literature, 138-42 Emily Dickinson grew up
http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/eng384/emilybio.htm
Biography of Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
from Michael Myers, Thinking and Writing About Literature The Dickinsons were well known in Massachusetts. Her father ws a lawyer and served as the treasurer of Amherst College (a position Austin eventually took up as well), and her grandfather was one of the college's founders. Although nineteenth-century politics, economics, and social issues do not appear in the foreground of her poetry, Dickinson lived in a family environment that was steeped in them: her father was an active town official and served in the General Court of Massachusetts, the State Senate, and the United States House of Representatives. Dickinson, however, withdrew not only from her father's public world but also from almost all social life in Amherst. She refused to see most people, and aside from a single year at South Hadley Female Seminary (now Mount Holyoke College), one excursion to Philadelphia and Washington, and several brief trips to Boston to see a doctor about eye problems, she lived all her life in her father's house. She dressed only in white and developed a reputation as a reclusive eccentric. Dickinson selected her own society carefully and frugally. Like her poetry, her relationship to the world was intensely reticent. Indeed, during the last twenty years of her life she rarely left the house. Though Dickinson never married, she had significant relationships with several men who were friends, confidantes, and mentors. She also enjoyed an intimate relationship with her friend Susan Huntington Gilbert, who became her sister-in-law by marrying Austin. Susan and her husband lived next door and were extremely close with Dickinson. Biographers have attempted to find in a number of her relationships the source for the passion of some of her love poems and letters, but no biographer has been able to identify definitely the object of Dickinson's love. What matters, of course, is not with whom she was in loveif, in fact, there was any single personbut that she wrote about such passions so intensely and convincingly in her poetry.

50. New Page 1
Shurr. Author Dickinson, Emily, 18301886. Holdings Subject Heading(s) Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886Criticism, Textual. Dickinson
http://www.learning2write.com/Research_Book/samplepage.htm
Authority Record HitList Brief Record Hitlist Full Record Hitlist Refine Search ... Download Full Citation for Record Previous Record Next Record Record # 1 Title : Author : Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886. Holdings : Location Call Number Volume Material Status LIBRARY MAIN STACKS BOOK Available Publisher : Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, c1993. Subject Heading(s) : Dickinson, Emily, Criticism, Textual.
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51. Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) At Famous Creative Women
. . Emily Dickinson (18301886) born on Dec 10 US poet. She was a reclusivestylist who combined spare lyricism with unorthodox diction.
http://www.famouscreativewomen.com/one/396.htm
FCW Home Browse by Month Lookup Indexes Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative Famous Creative Women presents. . . Emily Dickinson
(1830-1886) born on Dec 10 US poet. She was a reclusive stylist who combined spare lyricism with unorthodox diction.
Previous Set of Quotes
Next Set of Quotes The brain is wider than the sky;/ For put them side by side/ The one the other will contain with ease -/ And you beside.
To make a prairie/ It takes clover and one bee/ One clover, and a bee, and revery./ The revery alone will do,/ If bees are few. A word is dead when it is said, some say./ I say it just begins to live that day. Nature is what we know -/ Yet have not art to say -/ So impotent our wisdom is/ To her simplicity. How dreary to be somebody!/ How public, like a frog/ To tell your name the livelong day/ To an admiring bog.
The World's Largest Poster and Print Store All Categories Books ISBN (best) Title Author Clearance Movies DVD VHS Merchandise Sell Texts: Enter an ISBN The most comprehensive image search on the web.
Published Sources for the Quotations Shown Above: F: "The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson," no. 632, ed. Thomas H. Johnson, 1955.

52. IHAS Poet
Previous Next Emily Dickinson (18301886). The Soul selects her own SocietyThenshuts the Door To her divine MajorityPresent no more.
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/ihas/poet/dickinson.html
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EMILY DICKINSON
The Soul selects her own Society
Thenshuts the Door
To her divine MajorityPresent no more
Unmovedshe notes the Chariotspausing
At her low Gate
Unmovedan Emperor be kneeling
Upon her Mat
I've known herfrom an ample nation
Choose One
Thenclose the Valves of her attention Like Stone. E mily Dickinson selected her own society, and it was rarely that of other people. She preferred the solitude of her white-washed poet's room, or the birds, bees, and flowers of her garden to the visitations of family and friends. But for three occasions in her life she never left her native Amherst, MA; for the last twenty of her fifty-six years, she rarely left her house. And yet her reclusive existence in no way restricted her abundant life of the imagination. Her letters and poems, all except seven published posthumously, revealed her to be an inspired visionary and true original of American literature. Belle of Amhurst Emily Dickinson's austere bedroom, with her writing desk, at the family homestead in Amherst, MA.

53. Poetry Archives @ EMule.com
Emily Dickinson. (18301886). On December 10, 1830, Emily Dickinson was bornto Edward Dickinson, a lawyer, and his wife Emily in Amherst Massachussetts.
http://www.emule.com/poetry/?page=overview&author=38

54. MetaCrawler Results | Search Query = Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Dickinson, Emily Elizabeth (18301886), America's best-known femalepoet and one of the foremost authors in American literature.
http://search.metacrawler.com/texis/search?q=Emily Elizabeth Dickinson&brand=met

55. MetaCrawler Results | Search Query = Dickenson, Emily
Re Emily Dickenson Emily Dickinson 18301886 - Emily Dickinson 1830-1886 Re Emily Dickenson http//jollyroger.snap.com/zz/yclassicpoetryd
http://search.metacrawler.com/texis/search?q=Dickenson, Emily

56. EMILY ELIZABETH DICKINSON (1830-1886)
While I was fearing it, it came, But came with less of fear, Becausethat fearing it so long Has almost made it dear. There is a
http://homepage.tinet.ie/~colmmcd/emily.htm
While I was fearing it, it came, But came with less of fear, Because that fearing it so long Has almost made it dear. There is a fitting a dismay, A fitting a despair. 'Tis harder knowing it is due, Than knowing it is here. The trying on the utmost, The morning it is new, Is terribler than wearing it A whole existence through NIAMH ............thank you BOOKSHOPS IN DUBLIN- New and Second-hand WEBPAGES with Where to find Them in Dublin City... ...
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  • 57. Dickinson
    Emily Dickinson (18301886). Biographical Information. Main Works. FeaturedWorks The Poetry of Emily Dickinson. Contexts. Selected Quotations. Links.
    http://fajardo-acosta.com/worldlit/dickinson/
    Dr. Fidel Fajardo-Acosta's World Literature Website HOME INDEX CONTACT INFO
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    Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
    Biographical Information Main Works Featured Works: The Poetry of Emily Dickinson Contexts ... Links Biographical Information
    • Emily Elizabeth Dickinson (1830-1886) , American poet, known as "the New England mystic"; innovator in the use of poetic language, forms, and rhythms; author of 1,775 poems, most published posthumously
      Born December 10, 1830 in Amherst, MA; her grandfather was founder of Amherst College; her father was treasurer of the college and U.S. Congressman; both of her parents were cold, distant, severe people
      attended Amherst Academy, spent one year (1847-1848) at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley; she resisted Christian indoctrination and returned to the family home in Amherst
      1855, visits to Washington and Philadelphia while her father was in Congress; met and was befriended by Rev. Charles Wadsworth, an orthodox Calvinist preacher

    58. Dickinson, Emily
    Dickinson, Emily. (18301886), poet In Her Own Words. Born on December10, 1830, in Amherst, Massachusetts, Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
    http://search.eb.com/women/articles/Dickinson_Emily_Elizabeth.html
    Dickinson, Emily
    (1830-1886), poet In Her Own Words On April 15, 1862, Dickinson wrote a letter, enclosing four poems, to a literary man, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, asking whether her poems were "alive." Higginson, although he advised Emily not to publish, recognized the originality of her poems and remained her "preceptor" for the rest of her life. After 1862 Dickinson resisted all efforts by her friends to put her poems before the public. As a result, only seven poems were published during her lifetime, five of them in the Springfield Republican. The years of Dickinson's greatest poetic output, about 800 poems, coincide with the Civil War. Although she looked inward and not to the war for the substance of her poetry, the tense atmosphere of the war years may have contributed to the urgency of her writing. The year of greatest stress was 1862, when distance and danger threatened her friendsSamuel Bowles, in Europe for his health; Charles Wadsworth, who had moved to a new pastorate at the Calvary Church in San Francisco; and T.W. Higginson, serving as an officer in the Union Army. Dickinson also had persistent eye trouble, which led her, in 1864 and 1865, to spend several months in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for treatment. Once back in Amherst she never traveled again and after the late 1860s never left the boundaries of the family's property. The poet's father died in 1874, and the next year her mother became an invalid. Dickinson kept more and more to herself, but she maintained correspondence with a few intimates until her death in Amherst, Massachusetts, on May 15, 1886. Her sister Lavinia subsequently discovered hundreds of poems neatly bundled and tucked away. She prevailed upon Mabel Loomis Todd and the still dubious Higginson to help prepare a slender volume

    59. Poetry: Emily Dickinson
    BIOGRAPHY Emily Dickinson (18301886), one of three children, was bornin Amherst, Massachusetts. Her father was a prominent lawyer.
    http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/poetry/dickinson.htm
    MM_preloadImages('../images/m_research_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_related_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_literary_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_critical_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_essays_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_poetry_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_drama_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_fiction_o.gif');
    Emily Dickinson
    LINKS
    The Emily Dickinson International Society (EDIS)

    http://www.cwru.edu/affil/edis/edisindex.html
    Emily Dickinson Bulletin and the Emily Dickinson Journal (1992 to 1996). It is an excellent place to look at recent examinations of Dickinson and her poetry: the table of contents of both publications can be searched online, and you can read (and print out) articles from the Journal . To make library research easier, there are links to bibliographies of literary criticism. This site also takes you through the steps of joining the EMWEB, a serious discussion list for students and teachers interested in Dickinson scholarship in which you can ask questions and start conversations on Dickinson with experts on her work. To find and read past exchanges on the EMWEB that relate specifically to your own interests, see the Emily Dickinson Discussion List (EMWEB) Archives at http://lal.cs.byu.edu/mlists/emweb/emweb.html

    60. Heterodox Heroines
    Emily Dickinson (18301886). On Celebration of Women Writers Selected poetry of EmilyDickinson (1830-1886) Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) On The Poetry Archives.
    http://privat.ub.uib.no/bubsy/BAKOM1C.HTM
    Heterodox Heroines
    Aspasia Karen Blixen Karin Boye Maria Callas ... Yim Wing Chun
      Aspasia. Born in the city of Miletus between 460-455 B.C., Aspasia worked in Athens as a hetaira and became the mistress of Pericles. Freed from the social restraints that tied married women to their homes and restricted their behavior, she was able to participate more freely in public life. She operated a house of courtesans where she trained young women who accompanied upper-class men to the symposiums. She was considered a leader of rhetoric, and took part in the intellectual discussions of the elite in Athens, including Socrates. Strong evidence that Aspasia's role in Athens went beyond that of mistress to Pericles is given by Plato in the Menexenus. She was one of the most influential women in the ancient Greek world. Top Of Page Karen Blixen aka Isak Dinesen (1885-1962). One of Denmark's greatest writers, or story-teller as she called herself. Mzuri sana! With Seven Gothic Tales and her fantastic autobiography Out of Africa she achieved fame in USA and eventually throughout most of the world. "Man bringer ikke børnevogn med når man tager ud for at søge den hellige gral!" ("You don't bring along a baby carriage when you go searching for the Holy Grail!")

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