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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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Dying! To be afraid
of thee
One must to thine
Artillery
Have left exposed a
Friend -
Than thine old Arrow
is a Shot
Delivered straighter
to the Heart
The leaving Love
behind -
Not for itself, the
Dust is shy,
But, enemy, Beloved
be
Thy Batteries divorce.
Fight sternly in a
Dying eye
Two Armies, Love and
Certainty
And Love and the
Reverse -
I made slow Riches
but my Gain
Was steady as the
Sun
And every Night, it
numbered more
Than the preceding One
All Days, I did not
earn the same
But my perceiveless Gain
Inferred the less by Growing
than
The Sum that it had grown.
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