< Page:Emily Dickinson Poems (1890).djvu
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CONTENTS.
| XXI. | The First Lesson | 132 |
| XXII. | "The bustle in the house" | 133 |
| XXIII. | "I reason, earth is short" | 134 |
| XXIV. | "Afraid? Of whom am I afraid?" | 135 |
| XXV. | Dying | 136 |
| XXVI. | "Two swimmers wrestled on a spar" | 137 |
| XXVII. | The Chariot | 138 |
| XXVIII. | "She went as quiet as the dew" | 140 |
| XXIX. | Resurgam | 141 |
| XXX. | "Except to heave she is nought" | 142 |
| XXXI. | "Death is a dialogue between" | 143 |
| XXXII. | "It was too late for man" | 144 |
| XXXIII. | Along the Potomac | 145 |
| XXXIV. | "The daisy follows soft the Sun" | 146 |
| XXXV. | Emancipation | 147 |
| XXXVI. | Lost | 148 |
| XXXVII. | "If I shouldn't be alive" | 149 |
| XXXVIII. | "Sleep is supposed to be" | 150 |
| XXXIX. | "I shall know why when time is over" | 151 |
| XL. | "I never lost as much but twice" | 152 |
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