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         Dickinson Emily:     more books (100)
  1. The Emily Dickinson Handbook
  2. Poetry for Young People: Emily Dickinson
  3. The Passion of Emily Dickinson by Judith Farr, 1998-07-15
  4. Poems by Emily Dickinson, 2010-01-11
  5. Emily Dickinsons Poems by Emily Dickinson, 1962
  6. The Diary of Emily Dickinson by Jamie Fuller, 2000-10-01
  7. The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson (2 Volume Set) by Emily Dickinson, 1981-12-22
  8. Letters From the Emily Dickinson Room (White Pine Press Poetry Prize) by Kelli Russell Agodon, 2010-10-19
  9. The Last Face: Emily Dickinson's Manuscripts by Edith Wylder, 1971
  10. Selected Poems & Letters of Emily Dickinson by Emily Dickinson, 1959-09-01
  11. Letters of Emily Dickinson by Emily Dickinson, 2010-06-24
  12. Emily Dickinson (Radcliffe Biography Series) by Cynthia Griffin Wolff, 1988-01-22
  13. A Voice of Her Own: Becoming Emily Dickinson by Barbara Dana, 2009-03-01
  14. Rowing in Eden: Rereading Emily Dickinson by Martha Nell Smith, 1992

21. Emily Dickinson Biography
emily dickinson, regarded as one of America’s greatest poets, is also well known for her unusual life of self imposed social seclusion.
http://www.biographyonline.net/poets/emily_dickinson.html
Enter your search terms Submit search form Web Biography Online Emily Dickinson at Amazon.com
Short Biography Emily Dickinson
View: Popular Poems of Emily Dickinson
General Summary Emily Dickinson
Early Life Emily Dickinson
As a young child, Emily proved to be a bright and conscientious student. She
Religious Influence on the Poetry of Emily Dickinson
Religious Belief - Emily Dickinson
Emily was a bright conscientious student. At Amherst College she was able to study a range of subjects from Latin to English Literature. However, her studies were often interrupted by ill health. After a persistent cough developed, her father decided to remove her from college and bring her back home. Thus she left without any formal qualifications, but she had at least been able to broaden her education and vocabulary.
On returning home from college, Emily Dickinson learnt much of the domestic chores, helping her mother with cleaning, sewing and entertaining. She sought as much as possible to maintain the ideals of the early American travellers following principles of honesty, simplicity and high minded morals. Emily was said to be beautiful, with a soft voice and dark eyes. She dressed in a relatively simple way and surviving photos show she kept her hair in a simple straightened style (somewhat like the Puritan style). Emily herself often thought of herself like a child; even tomboy and she referred to this in many of her poems. In this frame of mind, she portrayed a degree of vulnerability looking to others for protection. This was particularly marked in her relationship with her authoritarian father, whom she was eager to defer to.

22. Emily Dickinson Museum
Consists of two historic houses in the center of Amherst, Massachusetts, closely associated with the poet emily dickinson and members of her family.
http://www.emilydickinsonmuseum.org/

23. Emily Dickinson: An Oerview
Almost unknown as a poet in her lifetime, emily dickinson is now recognized as one of our greatest poets and, in the view of some, one of the greatest lyric
http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/english/melani/cs6/dickinson.html
Topics on this Page
Dickinson's Life
Dickinson's Poems

My Approach to Dickinson

General Comments
...
Syllabus for Dickinson

Almost unknown as a poet in her lifetime, Emily Dickinson is now recognized as one of our greatest poets and, in the view of some, one of the greatest lyric poets of all time. The past fifty years or so have seen an outpouring of books and essays attempting to explain her poetry and her life. Some critics have used her life to try to explain her poetry, and others have tried to explain her life by referring to her poems, which they assume are autobiographical. Psychologically-oriented readers have subjected her to psychoanalytical diagnoses and labels, such as "a helpless agoraphobic trapped in her father's house"; her poetry has been interpreted as the last gasp of New England Puritanism; feminist critics see her as a victim of patriarchy in general or her father in particular; gender critics find homosexuality in her life and writings. These are just a few examples of the theorizing which Emily Dickinson and her poetry have inspired. The large number of poems she wrote (over 1700 of them) makes it easy for critics to find support for their theories. And the fact that her life, her poems, and her letters are often difficult, if not impossible to understand invites speculation.

24. Poems By Emily Dickinson
A large selection of dickinson s poems archived online at the Women s Studies Database Reading Room from the University of Maryland.
http://www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/ReadingRoom/Poetry/Dickinson/
Emily Dickinson
README
a-bird-came-down
a-clock-stopped
a-door-just-opened ...
wild-nights

25. Dickinson Electronic Archives
The dickinson Electronic Archives is dedicated to the development of electronic resources by emily dickinson, about emily dickinson, and about emily
http://www.emilydickinson.org/

about us
about the archives writings teaching ... search the archives
The Dickinson Electronic Archives will soon be Web 2.0, expanding our interactive learning community committed to knowledge building.
WWW Server Martha Nell Smith
rnmooney@umd.edu

26. Emily Dickinson's Letters - 1891.10
Few events in American literary history have been more curious than the sudden rise of emily dickinson into a posthumous fame only more accentuated by the
http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/emilyd/edletter.htm
October 1891
Emily Dickinson's Letters
by Thomas Wentworth Higginson
F ew events in American literary history have been more curious than the sudden rise of Emily Dickinson into a posthumous fame only more accentuated by the utterly recluse character of her life and by her aversion to even a literary publicity. The lines which form a prelude to the published volume of her poems are the only ones that have come to light indicating even a temporary desire to come in contact with the great world of readers; she seems to have had no reference, in all the rest, to anything but her own thought and a few friends. But for her only sister it is very doubtful if her poems would ever have been printed at all; and when published, they were launched quietly and without any expectation of a wide audience; yet the outcome of it is that six editions of the volume have been sold within six months, a suddenness of success almost without a parallel in American literature. One result of this glare of publicity has been a constant and earnest demand by her readers for further information in regard to her; and I have decided with much reluctance to give some extracts from her early correspondence with one whom she always persisted in regardingwith very little ground for itas a literary counselor and confidant. It seems to be the opinion of those who have examined her accessible correspondence most widely, that no other letters bring us quite so intimately near to the peculiar quality and aroma of her nature; and it has been urged upon me very strongly that her readers have the right to know something more of this gifted and most interesting woman.

27. PAL: Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Acts of light, emily dickinson poems by emily dickinson; paintings by Nancy Ekholm Burkert; appreciation by Jane Langton. Boston New York Graphic Society,
http://web.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap4/dickinson.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben (To send an email, please click on my name above.) Chapter 4: Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) Outside Links: Concordance to ED Poems Dickinson Electronic Archives ED Bibliography The Homestead/Museum ... ED:Online Page Links: Primary Works Her Poetry ED and the Civil War ED Poems Set to Music Selected Bibliography Biographical 1980-1999 Biographical 2000-Present Critical 1980-1999 Critical 2000-Present ... MLA Style Citation of this Web Page Johnson Edition Poems Site Links: Chap 4: Index Authors Alphabetical List Table Of Contents Home Page March 27, 2006 Amherst College Library with permission from
the Columbia Bartleby Library (E-Mail from John Lancaster, Curator of Special Collections, Amherst College Library: " ... the lower photo, which is actually our image, retouched to add ruffles and curl ED's hair, ... the original of the retouched image is in the Houghton Library at Harvard University." 6/11/98) "Could you believe mewithout? I had no portrait, now, but am small, like the Wren, and my Hair is bold, like the Chestnut Burand my eyes, like the Sherry in the Glass, that the Guest leavesWould this do just as well?" - ED to Thomas Wentworth Higginson, July, 1862, Letter 268 (Johnson)

28. Emily Dickinson - Continuing Enigma - Emily Dickinson And Her Poetry
emily dickinson, American poet Information and resources about emily dickinson.
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa041299.htm
zGCID=" test0" zGCID=" test0 test14" zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') You are here: About Education Women's History Art, Music, Writers, Media ... Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson - Continuing Enigma - Emily Dickinson and Her Poetry Women's History Education Women's History Essentials ... Help Emily Dickinson : Continuing Enigma Introduction
An article by your Women's History Guide, Jone Johnson Lewis Emily
Dickinson
Image © 1999-2002 www.arttoday.com
Used with permission
More of This Feature
Her Life

A Young Contributor and Her Friend

Editing Emily

Related Resources Emily Dickinson Quotations
Dickinson Poems
Dickinson's Letters Dickinson Biographies ... Thomas Wentworth Higginson: Woman and Her Wishes From Other Guides About Poetry Guides Emily Dickinson, whose odd and inventive poems helped to initiate modern poetry, is an enigma, a mystery, a paradox. Only ten of her poems were published in her lifetime. We know of her work only because her sister and two of her long-time friends brought them to public attention. Most of the poems we have were written in just six years, between 1858 and 1864. She bound them into small volumes she called fascicles, and forty of these were found in her room at her death.

29. Emily Dickinson Quotes - The Quotations Page
emily dickinson; Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul. emily dickinson; I hope you love birds too. It is economical.
http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Emily_Dickinson/
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Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886)
US poet [more author details]
Showing quotations 1 to 14 of 14 total
Anger as soon as fed is dead - 'Tis starving makes it fat.
Emily Dickinson
Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul.
Emily Dickinson
Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul.

And sings the tune

Without the words,
...
and never stops at all.
Emily Dickinson - More quotations on: [ Hope
I dwell in possibility...
Emily Dickinson
I hope you love birds too. It is economical. It saves going to heaven.
Emily Dickinson - More quotations on: [ Birds
My friends are my estate.
Emily Dickinson
My life closed twice before its' close- It yet remains to see If Immortality unveil A third event to me. So huge, so hopeless to concieve As these that twice befell. Parting is all we know of heaven, And all we need of hell.
Emily Dickinson
One need not be a chamber to be haunted; One need not be a house; The brain has corridors surpassing Material place.
Emily Dickinson - More quotations on: [ Fear
Success is counted sweetest by those who ne'er succeed.

30. The Emily Dickinson Journal, Volume 16, 2007 - Table Of Contents
Journal showcases the dickinson, providing an ongoing examination of the poet and her relation to the tradition of American poetry and women s literature.
http://muse.jhu.edu/demo/emily_dickinson_journal/
The Emily Dickinson Journal
Volume 16, Number 1, Spring 2007
C ONTENTS
    White, Melissa.
  • Letter to the Light: Discoveries in Dickinson's Correspondence
    [Access article in HTML]
    [Access article in PDF]
    Subject Headings:
    • Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886 Correspondence.
    Abstract:
      Sometime around 1900 Elizabeth Gilman made a copy of a letter Emily Dickinson wrote to her Norcross cousins in 1882. A study of this copy not only brings to light new Dickinson text and, with it, new information about her biography, but, perhaps just as importantly, offers a chance to examine how her texts circulated semi-privately in manuscript just as they were coming in to print. This examination also leads to a reconsideration of Dickinson editing, both past and present. Brantley, Richard E.
    • Dickinson's Signature Conundrum
      [Access article in HTML]
      [Access article in PDF]
      Subject Headings:
      • Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886 Criticism and interpretation. Emotions in literature. Experience in literature.
      Abstract:
        Emily Dickinson's recurring pessimism contains the seed of her perennial resilience. As distinct from merely lamenting a lost beloved, for example, her poetry of aftermath defines new bounds of love. Her postexperiential perspective contributes, therefore, to the psychobiographical dimension of her art; it also overlaps, paradoxically, Romantic Anglo-America's reliance on natural and spiritual experience. Thus, however counterintuitively and however much against the odds, Dickinson's aftermath does more than just signal a Victorian-American morbidity or just shore fragments against a pre-Modern ruin. In addition, her signature conundrum of "sumptuous Destitution - " saturates her sorrow with her joy, epitomizing, thereby, her Late-Romantic hope.

31. Dickinson, Emily | Authors | Guardian Unlimited Books
Though known as something of a poet to her friends and family, circulating poems in letters and handsewn manuscript books, emily dickinson had only a
http://books.guardian.co.uk/authors/author/0,,-225,00.html
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EMILY DICKINSON
"God keep me from what they call households" Birthplace

Amherst, Massachusetts

32. Poems By Emily Dickinson, Three Series, Complete By Emily Dickinson - Project Gu
Download the free eBook Poems by emily dickinson, Three Series, Complete by emily dickinson.
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/12242
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Poems by Emily Dickinson, Three Series, Complete by Emily Dickinson
Help Read online Bibliographic Record Creator Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886 Title Poems by Emily Dickinson, Three Series, Complete Language English LoC Class PS: Language and Literatures: American literature Subject American poetry EText-No. Release Date Base Directory /files/12242/
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33. Emily Dickinson's Poetry — Poet Seers
In her lifetime emily dickinson led a secluded and quiet life but her poetry reveals her great inner spontaneity and creativity. The poetry of emily
http://www.poetseers.org/early_american_poets/emily_dickinson/emily_dickinsons_p
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Photo Credit: Arpan The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson available at Amazon
Poetry of Emily Dickinson
In her lifetime Emily Dickinson led a secluded and quiet life but her poetry reveals her great inner spontaneity and creativity. The poetry of Emily Dickinson is not easily categorized as Emily uses forms such as rhyme and meter in unconventional ways. However her poetry lucidly expresses thought provoking themes with a style that is delightful to read. Today her poetry is rightly appreciated for its immense depth and unique style and Emily Dickinson is widely regarded as one of the greatest

34. Emily Dickinson | Poet
emily dickinson was born on December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts. She is recognized as one of the greatest American poets of the 19th century.
http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/95dec/dickinson.html
Resources Menu Categorical Index Library Gallery
Amherst College Library
Emily Dickinson
Poet
Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door. Emily Dickinson was born on December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts. She is recognized as one of the greatest American poets of the 19th century.
Dickinson's life was outwardly simple, but behind scenes worked a prolific and talented poet. Her work was influenced by the metaphysical poets of seventeenth-century England, and by her Puritan upbringing. She admired the poetry of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning and John Keats. Dickinson never married, finding in her poetry, reading, gardening and close friendships a rich, fulfilling life.
After Dickinson's death in Cambridge on May 15, 1886 over 1700 poems, bound into booklets, were discovered in her bureau. Only ten of Dickinson's peoms were published during her lifetime, and those without her consent. The first volume of her work was published posthumously in 1890.
If you are aware of books, movies, databases, web sites or other information sources about Emily Dickinson or related subjects, or if you would like to submit comments

35. Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Searchable lexicon of language used in dickinson s Poems.
http://edl.byu.edu/
Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Searches
Welcome to the Emily Dickinson Lexicon Website
(Note: The EDL website has received the Albert J. Colton Fellowship for Projects of National or International Scope from the Utah Humanities Council. The fellowship facilitates three presentations of the Dickinson lexicon: at the Pleasant Grove Library (7:00 pm, Th, March 13, 2008), at the Delta Public Library (7:30 pm, W, March 19), and at the BYU library auditorium (5:30 pm, W, March 26). The website allows users to access existing material while we proof-read and revise the data. We invite visitors and registered users to provide feedback at cynthia_hallen@byu.edu . Drafts of the Dickinson lexicon files A - Z are available for use under the EDLexicon tab. The Webster 1844 dictionary files A, G, J, K, N, O, Q, V, W, X, Y, and Z are available under the Webster tab, as well as OCR-scanned rough drafts of the other letters under the Resources tab.) Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) wrote approximately 1,789 lyric poems in nineteenth-century American English. She composed most of the verse in her hometown of Amherst, Massachusetts, during the noon of New England’s philological renaissance. Her “loved Philology” (J1651/Fr1715) presents a close-knit diction that she crafted with allusions, ambiguity, antithesis, circumlocution, definitions, figures, idioms, kennings, metaphors, polysemy, puns, symbols, and synonymy. Her handiwork includes webplay : lexical correspondences to Noah

36. Emily Dickinson
Since her death of Bright s disease, emily dickinson has come to be hailed as perhaps the greatest female poet since Sappho. After her death, her bureau was
http://www.uic.edu/depts/quic/history/emily_dickinson.html

Emily Dickinson
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born Dec. 10, 1830 in Amherst, Mass. and died May 15, 1886. She was, with Walt Whitman, one of the two foremost American poets of the 19th century. Her grandfather founded Amherst College. Her father, Edward, and her older brother Austin served as treasurers of Amherst College and in many other civic positions. Dickinson graduated from Amherst Academy in 1847 and attended nearby Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (now known as Mount Holyoke College) for one year, returning home shaken by the attempts to persuade her to join the Congregational church. Despite a longing for a secure faith, Dickinson was nevertheless unable to make a profession of faith.
Dickinson was introduced to Ralph Waldo Emerson's transcendentalism by pastor Charles Wadworth. He was her dearest friend from 1855 - 1862 until he moved to California. By 1858, Dickinson had begun to copy poems into little packets. In the early 1860s she underwent a profound psychological and emotional disturbance, which biographers have tried to connect with a tragic, unrequited love. Samuel Bowles (editor of the Springfield Republican), Charles Wadsworth, and others have been suggested as the beloved, but the evidence is inconclusive. Whatever its source, the crisis stirred her imagination and brought her to poetic maturity. During the years 1862-66 she wrote more than a third of her total output of poems.
In April 1862 she wrote to Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a popular critic, asking for advice about her poems. Their originality in form and contentirregular rhythms adapted from hymn meters, slant rhymes, eccentric phrasing and syntax, and emotional intensity and candorled him to advise against publication. Though keeping Higginson as a correspondent, she continued to write poems in the same style. By the late 1860s, increasingly withdrawn from contacts beyond the family circle, Dickinson had become a recluse, dressing always in white. She apparently never left the family property after the late 1860's and became known as the "nun of Amherst." The sentimental stereotype of Dickinson as a frail, injured spinster has given way to the recognition that her seclusion was a deliberate choice made to secure independence for her vocation: living out her inner life unflinchingly in her tightly packed poems.

37. Susan Howe's "My Emily Dickinson" (excerpt)
Excerpts of the book by Susan Howe placing dickinson in relation to Gertrude Stein and William Carlos Williams.
http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88/my-emily.html
Susan Howe, My Emily Dickinson
(excerpts)
Emily Dickinson once wrote to Thomas Wentworth Higginson; "Candormy Preceptoris the only wile." This is the right way to put it. In his Introduction to In the American Grain [1925], William Carlos Williams said he had tried to rename things seen. I regret the false configurationunder the old misappellationof Emily Dickinson. But I love his book. The ambiguous paths of kinship pull me in opposite ways at once. As a poet I feel closer to Williams' writing about writing, even when he goes haywire in "Jacataqua," than I do to most critical studies of Dickinson's work by professional scholars. When Williams writes: "Never a woman, never a poet.... Never a poet saw sun here," I think that he says one thing and means another. A poet is never just a woman or a man. Every poet is salted with fire. A poet is a mirror, a transcriber. Here "we have salt in ourselves and peace one with the other." When Thoreau wrote his Introduction to A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers , he ended by remembering how he had often stood on the banks of the Musketaquid, or Grass-ground River English settlers had re-named Concord. The Concord's current followed the same law in a system of time and all that is known. He liked to watch this current that was for him an emblem of all progress. Weeds under the surface bent gently downstream shaken by watery wind. Chips, sticks, logs, and even tree stems drifted past. There came a day at the end of the summer or the beginning of autumn, when he resolved to launch a boat from shore and let the river carry him.

38. Emily Dickinson Life Stories, Books, & Links
Stories about emily dickinson s life and Poems, Essays, Letters, Cambridge Companion. With links to essays literary criticism and analysis.
http://www.todayinliterature.com/biography/emily.dickinson.asp
TABLE OF CONTENTS Emily Dickinson - Life Stories, Books, and Links Biographical Information
Stories about Emily Dickinson

Selected works by this author

Selected books about / related to this author
...
Recommended links
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886) Category: American Literature Born: December 10, 1830
Amerst, Massachusetts, United States Died: May 15, 1886
Amherst, Massachusetts, United States Related authors:
No related authors found list all writers Emily Dickinson - LIFE STORIES Emily Dickinson, "Alabaster Chambers"
On this day in 1862, Emily Dickinson's "Safe in Their Alabaster Chambers" was published. This was the second of only a handful of poems published in Dickinson's lifetime, all of them anonymously and, most think, without her knowledge. Six weeks later she sent her famous letter to the critic Thomas Wentworth Higginson: "Are you too deeply occupied to say if my Verse is alive?" Emily Dickinson: "My Barefoot Rank is Better"
In a letter dated April 15, 1862, the thirty-one year old Emily Dickinson sent four poems and a short note to Thomas Higginson, the author of a recent magazine article advising young writers how to get published. His answering letter has not survived, but it contained enough discouragement to send Dickinson back into her "Barefoot Rank," and to stay there for good.

39. Emily Dickinson @Web English Teacher
Lesson plans and teaching resources for the poetry of emily dickinson.
http://www.webenglishteacher.com/dickinson.html
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Emily Dickinson
Lesson plans and teaching resources
Links at this site vary in content from background to lesson plans, but all are outstanding. Look for an exploration of Dickinson's revision process, an examination of her letters to critic Thomas Higginson, and sites about her sense of place and attitude regarding slavery. The Complete Poems
Searchable or browsable by theme, this site has 597 of Dickinson's poems. Dickinson Electronic Archives
Writing, criticism, teaching resources, and responses to Dickinson. Dickinson's Amherst
A virtual tour of Amherst, Massachusetts. Emily Dickinson
Questions to help students study a body of Dickinson's poetry from Perspectives on American Literature. Emily Dickinson
Online literary criticism from the Internet Public Library.

40. Redirect Page
The emily dickinson International Society home page has moved to. www.cwru.edu/affil/edis/edisindex.html. If you are not automatically redirected to the new
http://www.colorado.edu/EDIS/
The Emily Dickinson International Society
home page has moved to www.cwru.edu/affil/edis/edisindex.html If you are not automatically redirected to the new site in 4 seconds, click on its URL.

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