
Etext scanned by Jim Tinsley <jtinsley@pobox.com>
PREFACE
HELEN JACKSON.
MABEL LOOMIS TODD.
I. LIFE. - I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI. HOPE.
The second volume gathers the poems that Emily Dickinson kept tucked away in modest bundles, many of them never before heard beyond the walls of her Amherst home. Edited by two close friends who inherited her scattered manuscripts, this collection preserves the raw immediacy that made her first book so striking. Readers will meet verses that glide between quiet observation and sudden, vivid insight, often marked by her signature dashes and capitalized words. The pieces range from gentle meditations on gardens and birds to more stark reflections on mortality.
Because the poems arrive largely untitled and sometimes in multiple handwritten versions, listeners can sense the intimacy of a writer still refining her art. The lack of conventional rhyme or meter invites an almost musical cadence that rewards careful listening. As a companion to the earlier volume, this set deepens the portrait of a poet who saw the ordinary as a portal to the profound.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (72K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2001-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1830β1886
A quiet, intensely original poet, she transformed short lyrics about death, nature, faith, and inner life into some of the most unforgettable poems in American literature. Though almost unknown to the public while she lived, her voice would go on to change poetry forever.
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