< Page:Emily Dickinson Poems (1890).djvu
This page has been validated.
viii
CONTENTS
| XIII. | Exclusion | 26 |
| XIV. | The Secret | 27 |
| XV. | The Lonely House | 28 |
| XVI. | "To fight aloud is very brave" | 30 |
| XVII. | Dawn | 31 |
| XVIII. | The Book of Martyrs | 32 |
| XIX. | The Mystery of Pain | 33 |
| XX. | "I taste a liquor never brewed" | 34 |
| XXI. | A Book | 35 |
| XXII. | "I had no time to hate, because" | 36 |
| XXIII. | Unreturning | 37 |
| XXIV. | "Whether my bark went down at sea" | 38 |
| XXV. | "Belshazzar had a letter" | 39 |
| XXVI. | "The brain within its groove" | 40 |
| BOOK II.—LOVE. | ||
| I. | Mine | 43 |
| II. | Bequest | 44 |
| III. | "Alter? When the hills do" | 45 |
| IV. | Suspense | 46 |
| V. | Surrender | 47 |
| VI. | "If you were coming in the fall" | 48 |
| VII. | With a Flower | 50 |
This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.