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Browse alphabetically through more than 9,000 words in Dickinson’s poetry, as defined in the Emily Dickinson Lexicon, based in part on her dictionary, Webster's 1844 American Dictionary of the English Language.
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The Grass so little has
to do -
A Sphere of simple Green -
With only Butterflies to
brood
And Bees to entertain -
And stir all day to
pretty Tunes
The Breezes fetch along -
And hold the Sunshine
in it's lap
And bow to everything -
And thread the Dews, all
night, like Pearls -
And make itself so fine
A Duchess were too
common
For such a noticing -
And even when it dies -
to pass
In Odors so divine -
Like Lowly spices, lain
to sleep -
Or Spikenards, perishing -
And then, in Sovreign
Barns to dwell -
And dream the Days away,
The Grass so little has
to do
I wish I were a
Hay -
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