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Emily Dickinson on Death

Emily Dickinson on Death

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Number of Chapters: 22

Length: 28 minutes

Language: English

Emily Dickinson is one of the most intriguing of American poets. Since she grew increasingly reclusive, very few of her poems were published until after her death. This collection includes two letters Dickinson wrote to her friends on the occasion of the deaths of her friend, Mr. Humphrey, and her brother, Austin. The rest of collection consists of her poetry on the subject of death. (Summary by Libby Gohn)

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01 - Amherst, January 2, 1851, to Mrs. Strong (Libby Gohn)
02 - Autumn, 1876, to Dr. and Mrs. Holland (Libby Gohn)
03 - 'Let down the bars, O Death!' (Libby Gohn)
04 - 'Going to Heaven!' (Libby Gohn)
05 - 'Morns like these we parted' (Libby Gohn)
06 - 'I read my sentence steadily' (Libby Gohn)
07 - 'The only ghost I ever saw' (Libby Gohn)
08 - Memorials (Libby Gohn)
09 - The Journey (Libby Gohn)
10 - Going (Libby Gohn)
11 - 'If I should die' (Libby Gohn)
12 - Ghosts (Libby Gohn)
13 - 'What inn is this' (Libby Gohn)
14 - Till The End (Libby Gohn)
15 - The Chariot (Libby Gohn)
16 - 'Death is a dialogue' (Libby Gohn)
17 - At Length (Libby Gohn)
18 - Numen Lumen (Libby Gohn)
19 - 'I meant to find her when I came' (Libby Gohn)
20 - 'If I may have it when it's dead' (Libby Gohn)
21 - 'There's been a death in the opposite house' (Libby Gohn)
22 - 'After great pain, a formal feeling comes' (Libby Gohn)
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