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Other Courtesies have been - Other Courtesy may be - We commend ourselves to thee Paragon of Chivalry.
Emily Dickinson
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Emily Dickinson
Age: 55 †
Born: 1830
Born: December 10
Died: 1886
Died: May 15
Poet
Writer
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Ai-mi-li Ti-chin-sen
Emilia Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Courtesies
Paragon
Commend
Chivalry
Courtesy
Thee
May
More quotes by Emily Dickinson
Where thou art, that is home.
Emily Dickinson
My business is circumference.
Emily Dickinson
To see her is a picture- To hear her is a tune- To know her an Intemperance As innocent as June- To know her not-Affliction- To own her for a Friend A warmth as near as if the the Sun Were shining in your Hand.
Emily Dickinson
I think Heaven will not be as good as earth, unless it bring with it that sweet power to remember, which is the staple of Heaven here.
Emily Dickinson
Angels in the early morning may be seen the dews among. Stooping, plucking, smiling, flying. Do the buds to them belong?
Emily Dickinson
The last of Summer is Delight - Deterred by Retrospect. 'Tis Ecstasy's revealed Review - Enchantment's Syndicate. To meet it - nameless as it is - Without celestial Mail - Audacious as without a Knock To walk within the Veil.
Emily Dickinson
To be alive is power existence in itself without a further function omnipotence.
Emily Dickinson
And you dropt, lost, When something broke-- And let you from a Dream
Emily Dickinson
THE soul should always stand ajar, That if the heaven inquire, He will not be obliged to wait, Or shy of troubling her. Depart, before the host has slid The bolt upon the door, To seek for the accomplished guest, -- Her visitor no more.
Emily Dickinson
Tis not that dieing hurts us so- tis living- hurts us more.
Emily Dickinson
A narrow Fellow in the Grass Occasionally rides
Emily Dickinson
To lose what we have never owned might seem an eccentric bereavement, but Presumption has its own affliction as well as claim.
Emily Dickinson
His Cheek is his Biographer- As long as he can blush.
Emily Dickinson
I dwell in Possibility A fairer House than Prose More numerous of Windows Superior--for Doors Of Chambers as the Cedars Impregnable of Eye And for an Everlasting Roof The Gambrels of the Sky Of Visitors--the fairest For Occupation--This The spreading wide my narrow Hands To gather Paradise
Emily Dickinson
Beauty is not the cause of something, it is what it is.
Emily Dickinson
Life is so rotatory that the wilderness falls to each, sometime.
Emily Dickinson
An altered look about the hills A Tyrian light the village fills A wider sunrise in the dawn A deeper twilight on the lawn A print of a vermilion foot A purple finger on the slope A flippant fly upon the pane A spider at his trade again An added strut in chanticleer A flower expected everywhere.
Emily Dickinson
The things of which we want the proof are those we know the best.
Emily Dickinson
I felt it shelter to speak to you.
Emily Dickinson
Mirth is the Mail of Anguish --
Emily Dickinson