Emily Dickinson Poems ...

Emily Dickinson «Poems. Second Series»


Все издания:РЕКЛАМА 18+

Poems. Second Series

авторский сборник, первое издание

Язык издания: английский

Составители: , Mabel Loomis Todd

Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1891 г.

Серия: Emily Dickinson. Poems in three Series

ISBN отсутствует

Тип обложки: твёрдая

Страниц: 232

Описание:

Стихотворения.

Содержание:

  1. Mabel Loomis Todd. Preface, стр. 3-8
  2. Contents, стр. 9-16
  3. Emily Dickinson. Prelude “My nosegays are for сaptives...” (стихотворение), стр. 17
  4. BOOK I. — LIFE
    1. Emily Dickinson. I. “Iʼm nobody! Who are you?..” (стихотворение), стр. 21
    2. Emily Dickinson. II. “I bring an unaccustomed wine...” (стихотворение), стр. 22-23
    3. Emily Dickinson. III. “The nearest dream recedes, unrealized...” (стихотворение), стр. 24
    4. Emily Dickinson. IV. “We play at paste...” (стихотворение), стр. 25
    5. Emily Dickinson. V. “I found the phrase to every thought...” (стихотворение), стр. 26
    6. Emily Dickinson. VI. Hope (“Hope is the thing with feathers...”) (стихотворение), стр. 27
    7. Emily Dickinson. VII. The White Heat (“Dare you see a soul at the white heat?..”) (стихотворение), стр. 28
    8. Emily Dickinson. VIII. Triumphant (“Who never are unprepared...”) (стихотворение), стр. 29
    9. Emily Dickinson. IX. The Test (“I can wade grief...”) (стихотворение), стр. 30
    10. Emily Dickinson. X. Escape (“I never hear the word “escape”...”) (стихотворение), стр. 31
    11. Emily Dickinson. XI. Compensation (“For each ecstatic instant...”) (стихотворение), стр. 32
    12. Emily Dickinson. XII. The Martyrs (“Through the straight pass of suffering...”) (стихотворение), стр. 33
    13. Emily Dickinson. XIII. A Prayer (“I meant to have but modest needs...”) (стихотворение), стр. 34-35
    14. Emily Dickinson. XIV. “The thought beneath so slight a film...” (стихотворение), стр. 36
    15. Emily Dickinson. XV. “The soul unto itself...” (стихотворение), стр. 37
    16. Emily Dickinson. XVI. “Surgeons must be very careful...” (стихотворение), стр. 38
    17. Emily Dickinson. XVII. The Railway Train (“I like to see it lap the miles...”) (стихотворение), стр. 39
    18. Emily Dickinson. XVIII. The Show (“The show is not the show...”) (стихотворение), стр. 40
    19. Emily Dickinson. XIX. “Delight becomes pictorial...” (стихотворение), стр. 41
    20. Emily Dickinson. XX. “A thought went up my mind to-day...” (стихотворение), стр. 42
    21. Emily Dickinson. XXI. “Is Heaven a physician?..” (стихотворение), стр. 43
    22. Emily Dickinson. XXII. The Return (“Though I get home how late, how late!..”) (стихотворение), стр. 44
    23. Emily Dickinson. XXIII. “A poor torn heart, a tattered heart...” (стихотворение), стр. 45
    24. Emily Dickinson. XXIV. Too Much (“I should have been too glad, I see...”) (стихотворение), стр. 46-47
    25. Emily Dickinson. XXV. Shipwreck (“It tossed and tossed, —...”) (стихотворение), стр. 48
    26. Emily Dickinson. XXVI. “Victory comes late...” (стихотворение), стр. 49
    27. Emily Dickinson. XXVII. Enough (“God gave a loaf to every bird...”) (стихотворение), стр. 50
    28. Emily Dickinson. XXVIII. “Experiment to me...” (стихотворение), стр. 51
    29. Emily Dickinson. XXIX. My Country's Wardrobe (“My country need not change her gown...”) (стихотворение), стр. 52
    30. Emily Dickinson. XXX. “Faith is a fine invention...” (стихотворение), стр. 53
    31. Emily Dickinson. XXXI. “Except the heaven had come so near...” (стихотворение), стр. 54
    32. Emily Dickinson. XXXII. “Portraits are to daily faces...” (стихотворение), стр. 55
    33. Emily Dickinson. XXXIII. The Duel (“I took my power in my hand...”) (стихотворение), стр. 56
    34. Emily Dickinson. XXXIV. “A shady friend for torrid days...” (стихотворение), стр. 57
    35. Emily Dickinson. XXXV. The Goal (“Each life converges to some centre...”) (стихотворение), стр. 58-59
    36. Emily Dickinson. XXXVI. Sight (“Before I got my eye put out...”) (стихотворение), стр. 60-61
    37. Emily Dickinson. XXXVII. “Talk with prudence to a beggar...” (стихотворение), стр. 62
    38. Emily Dickinson. XXXVIII. The Preacher (“He preached upon “breadth” till it argued...”) (стихотворение), стр. 63
    39. Emily Dickinson. XXXIX. “Good night! which put the candle out?..” (стихотворение), стр. 64
    40. Emily Dickinson. XL. “When I hoped I feared...” (стихотворение), стр. 65
    41. Emily Dickinson. XLI. Deed (“A deed knocks first at thought...”) (стихотворение), стр. 66
    42. Emily Dickinson. XLII. Timeʼs Lesson (“Mine enemy is growing old, —...”) (стихотворение), стр. 67
    43. Emily Dickinson. XLIII. Remorse (“Remorse is memory awake...”) (стихотворение), стр. 68
    44. Emily Dickinson. XLIV. The Shelter (“The body grows outside, —...”) (стихотворение), стр. 69
    45. Emily Dickinson. XLV. “Undue significance a starving man attaches...” (стихотворение), стр. 70
    46. Emily Dickinson. XLVI. “Heart not so heavy as mine...” (стихотворение), стр. 71-72
    47. Emily Dickinson. XLVII. “I many times thought peace had come...” (стихотворение), стр. 73
    48. Emily Dickinson. XLVIII. “Unto my books so good to turn...” (стихотворение), стр. 74
    49. Emily Dickinson. XLIX. “This merit hath the worst, —...” (стихотворение), стр. 75
    50. Emily Dickinson. L. Hunger (“I had been hungry all the years...”) (стихотворение), стр. 76-77
    51. Emily Dickinson. LI. “I gained it so...” (стихотворение), стр. 78
    52. Emily Dickinson. LII. “To learn the transport by the pain...” (стихотворение), стр. 79
    53. Emily Dickinson. LIII. Returning (“I years had been from home...”) (стихотворение), стр. 80-81
    54. Emily Dickinson. LIV. Prayer (“Prayer is the little implement...”) (стихотворение), стр. 82
    55. Emily Dickinson. LV. “I know that he exists...” (стихотворение), стр. 83
    56. Emily Dickinson. LVI. Melodies Unheard (“Musicians wrestle everywhere...”) (стихотворение), стр. 84
    57. Emily Dickinson. LVII. Called Back (“Just lost when I was saved!..”) (стихотворение), стр. 85-86
  5. BOOK II. — LOVE
    1. Emily Dickinson. I. Choice (“Of all the souls that stand create...”) (стихотворение), стр. 89
    2. Emily Dickinson. II. “I have no life but this...” (стихотворение), стр. 90
    3. Emily Dickinson. III. “Your riches taught me poverty...” (стихотворение), стр. 91-92
    4. Emily Dickinson. IV. The Contract (“I gave myself to him...”) (стихотворение), стр. 93
    5. Emily Dickinson. V. The Letter (“Going to him! Happy letter! Tell him —...”) (стихотворение), стр. 94-95
    6. Emily Dickinson. VI. “The way I read a letter 's this...” (стихотворение), стр. 96
    7. Emily Dickinson. VII. “Wild nights! Wild nights!..” (стихотворение), стр. 97
    8. Emily Dickinson. VIII. At Home (“The night was wide, and furnished scant...”) (стихотворение), стр. 98-99
    9. Emily Dickinson. IX. Possession (“Did the harebell loose her girdle...”) (стихотворение), стр. 100
    10. Emily Dickinson. X. “A charm invests a face...” (стихотворение), стр. 101
    11. Emily Dickinson. XI. The Lovers (“The rose did caper on her cheek...”) (стихотворение), стр. 102
    12. Emily Dickinson. XII. “In lands I never saw, they say...” (стихотворение), стр. 103
    13. Emily Dickinson. XIII. “The moon is distant from the sea...” (стихотворение), стр. 104
    14. Emily Dickinson. XIV. “He put the belt around my life, —...” (стихотворение), стр. 105
    15. Emily Dickinson. XV. The Lost Jewel (“I held a jewel in my fingers...”) (стихотворение), стр. 106
    16. Emily Dickinson. XVI. “What if I say I shall not wait?..” (стихотворение), стр. 107
  6. BOOK III. — NATURE
    1. Emily Dickinson. I. Mother Nature (“Nature, the gentlest mother...”) (стихотворение), стр. 111-112
    2. Emily Dickinson. II. Out of the Morning (“Will there really be a morning?..”) (стихотворение), стр. 113
    3. Emily Dickinson. III. “At half-past three a single bird...” (стихотворение), стр. 114
    4. Emily Dickinson. IV. Dayʼs Parlor (“The day came slow, till five o'clock...”) (стихотворение), стр. 115
    5. Emily Dickinson. V. The Sunʼs Wooing (“The sun just touched the morning...”) (стихотворение), стр. 116
    6. Emily Dickinson. VI. The Robin (“The robin is the one...”) (стихотворение), стр. 117
    7. Emily Dickinson. VII. The Butterflyʼs Day (“From cocoon forth a butterfly...”) (стихотворение), стр. 118-119
    8. Emily Dickinson. VIII. The Bluebird (“Before you thought of spring...”) (стихотворение), стр. 120
    9. Emily Dickinson. IX. April (“An altered look about the hills...”) (стихотворение), стр. 121
    10. Emily Dickinson. X. The Sleeping Flowers (“Whose are the little beds” I asked,...”) (стихотворение), стр. 122-123
    11. Emily Dickinson. XI. My Rose (“Pigmy seraphs gone astray...”) (стихотворение), стр. 124
    12. Emily Dickinson. XII. The Orioleʼs Secret (“To hear an oriole sing...”) (стихотворение), стр. 125
    13. Emily Dickinson. XIII. The Oriole (“One of the ones that Midas touched...”) (стихотворение), стр. 126-127
    14. Emily Dickinson. XIV. In Shadow (“I dreaded that first robin so...”) (стихотворение), стр. 128-129
    15. Emily Dickinson. XV. The Humming-Bird (“A route of evanescence...”) (стихотворение), стр. 130
    16. Emily Dickinson. XVI. Secrets (“The skies canʼt keep their secret!..”) (стихотворение), стр. 131
    17. Emily Dickinson. XVII. “Who robbed the woods...” (стихотворение), стр. 132
    18. Emily Dickinson. XVIII. Two Voyagers (“Two butterflies went out at noon...”) (стихотворение), стр. 133
    19. Emily Dickinson. XIX. By the Sea (“I started early, took my dog...”) (стихотворение), стр. 134-135
    20. Emily Dickinson. XX. Old-Fashioned (“Arcturus is his other name...”) (стихотворение), стр. 136-137
    21. Emily Dickinson. XXI. A Tempest (“An awful tempest mashed the air...”) (стихотворение), стр. 138
    22. Emily Dickinson. XXII. The Sea (“An everywhere of silver...”) (стихотворение), стр. 139
    23. Emily Dickinson. XXIII. In the Garden (“A bird came down the walk...”) (стихотворение), стр. 140-141
    24. Emily Dickinson. XXIV. The Snake (“A narrow fellow in the grass...”) (стихотворение), стр. 142-143
    25. Emily Dickinson. XXV. The Mushroom (“The mushroom is the elf of plants...”) (стихотворение), стр. 144-145
    26. Emily Dickinson. XXVI. The Storm (“There came a wind like a bugle...”) (стихотворение), стр. 146
    27. Emily Dickinson. XXVII. The Spider (“A spider sewed at night...”) (стихотворение), стр. 147
    28. Emily Dickinson. XXVIII. “I know a place where summer strives...” (стихотворение), стр. 148
    29. Emily Dickinson. XXIX. “The one that could repeat the summer day...” (стихотворение), стр. 149
    30. Emily Dickinson. XXX. The Windʼs Visit (“The wind tapped like a tired man...”) (стихотворение), стр. 150-151
    31. Emily Dickinson. XXXI. “Nature rarer uses yellow...” (стихотворение), стр. 152
    32. Emily Dickinson. XXXII. Gossip (“The leaves, like women, interchange...”) (стихотворение), стр. 153
    33. Emily Dickinson. XXXIII. Simplicity (“How happy is the little stone...”) (стихотворение), стр. 154
    34. Emily Dickinson. XXXIV. Storm (“It sounded as if the streets were running...”) (стихотворение), стр. 155
    35. Emily Dickinson. XXXV. The Rat (“The rat is the concisest tenant...”) (стихотворение), стр. 156
    36. Emily Dickinson. XXXVI. “Frequently the woods are pink...” (стихотворение), стр. 157
    37. Emily Dickinson. XXXVII. A Thunder-Storm (“The wind begun to rock the grass...”) (стихотворение), стр. 158-159
    38. Emily Dickinson. XXXVIII. With Flowers (“South Winds jostle them...”) (стихотворение), стр. 160
    39. Emily Dickinson. XXXIX. Sunset (“Where ships of purple gently toss...”) (стихотворение), стр. 161
    40. Emily Dickinson. XL. “She sweeps with many-colored brooms...” (стихотворение), стр. 162
    41. Emily Dickinson. XLI. “Like mighty footlights burned the red...” (стихотворение), стр. 163
    42. Emily Dickinson. XLII. Problems (“Bring me the sunset in a cup...”) (стихотворение), стр. 164-165
    43. Emily Dickinson. XLIII. The Juggler of Day (“Blazing in gold and quenching in purple...”) (стихотворение), стр. 166
    44. Emily Dickinson. XLIV. My Cricket (“Farther in summer than the birds...”) (стихотворение), стр. 167
    45. Emily Dickinson. XLV. “As imperceptibly as grief...” (стихотворение), стр. 168
    46. Emily Dickinson. XLVI. “It can't be summer, — that got through...” (стихотворение), стр. 169
    47. Emily Dickinson. XLVII. Summerʼs Obsequies (“The gentian weaves her fringes...”) (стихотворение), стр. 170-171
    48. Emily Dickinson. XLVIII. Fringed Gentian (“God made a little gentian...”) (стихотворение), стр. 172
    49. Emily Dickinson. XLIX. November (“Besides the autumn poets sing...”) (стихотворение), стр. 173
    50. Emily Dickinson. L. The Snow (“It sifts from leaden sieves...”) (стихотворение), стр. 174-175
    51. Emily Dickinson. LI. The Blue Jay (“No brigadier throughout the year...”) (стихотворение), стр. 176
  7. BOOK IV. — TIME AND ETERNITY
    1. Emily Dickinson. I. “Let down the bars, O Death!..” (стихотворение), стр. 181
    2. Emily Dickinson. II. “Going to heaven!..” (стихотворение), стр. 182-183
    3. Emily Dickinson. III. “At least to pray is left, is left...” (стихотворение), стр. 184
    4. Emily Dickinson. IV. Epitaph (“Step lightly on this narrow spot!..”) (стихотворение), стр. 185
    5. Emily Dickinson. V. “Morns like these we parted...” (стихотворение), стр. 186
    6. Emily Dickinson. VI. “A death-blow is a life-blow to some...” (стихотворение), стр. 187
    7. Emily Dickinson. VII. “I read my sentence steadily...” (стихотворение), стр. 188
    8. Emily Dickinson. VIII. “I have not told my garden yet...” (стихотворение), стр. 189
    9. Emily Dickinson. IX. The Battle-Field (“They dropped like flakes, they dropped like stars...”) (стихотворение), стр. 190
    10. Emily Dickinson. X. “The only ghost I ever saw...” (стихотворение), стр. 191
    11. Emily Dickinson. XI. “Some, too fragile for winter winds...” (стихотворение), стр. 192
    12. Emily Dickinson. XII. “As by the dead we love to sit...” (стихотворение), стр. 193
    13. Emily Dickinson. XIII. Memorials (“Death sets a thing significant...”) (стихотворение), стр. 194-195
    14. Emily Dickinson. XIV. “I went to heaven, —...” (стихотворение), стр. 196
    15. Emily Dickinson. XV. “Their height in heaven comforts not...” (стихотворение), стр. 197
    16. Emily Dickinson. XVI. “There is a shame of nobleness...” (стихотворение), стр. 198
    17. Emily Dickinson. XVII. Triumph (“Triumph may be of several kinds...”) (стихотворение), стр. 199
    18. Emily Dickinson. XVIII. “Pompless no life can pass away...” (стихотворение), стр. 200
    19. Emily Dickinson. XIX. “I noticed people disappeared...” (стихотворение), стр. 201
    20. Emily Dickinson. XX. Following (“I had no cause to be awake...”) (стихотворение), стр. 202-203
    21. Emily Dickinson. XXI. “If anybodyʼs friend be dead...” (стихотворение), стр. 204-205
    22. Emily Dickinson. XXII. The Journey (“Our journey had advanced...”) (стихотворение), стр. 206
    23. Emily Dickinson. XXIII. A Country Burial (“Ample make this bed...”) (стихотворение), стр. 207
    24. Emily Dickinson. XXIV. Going (“On such a night, or such a night...”) (стихотворение), стр. 208-209
    25. Emily Dickinson. XXV. “Essential oils are wrung...” (стихотворение), стр. 210
    26. Emily Dickinson. XXVI. “I lived on dread; to those who know...” (стихотворение), стр. 211
    27. Emily Dickinson. XXVII. “If I should die...” (стихотворение), стр. 212
    28. Emily Dickinson. XVIII. At Length (“Her final summer was it,...”) (стихотворение), стр. 213
    29. Emily Dickinson. XXIX. Ghosts (“One need not be a chamber to be haunted...”) (стихотворение), стр. 214-215
    30. Emily Dickinson. XXX. Vanished (“She died, — this was the way she died...”) (стихотворение), стр. 216
    31. Emily Dickinson. XXXI. Precedence (“Wai’t the majesty of Death...”) (стихотворение), стр. 217
    32. Emily Dickinson. XXXII. Gone (“Went up a year this evening!..”) (стихотворение), стр. 218-219
    33. Emily Dickinson. XXIII. Requiem (“Taken from men this morning...”) (стихотворение), стр. 220
    34. Emily Dickinson. XXIV. “What inn is this...” (стихотворение), стр. 221
    35. Emily Dickinson. XXXV. “It was not death, for I stood up...” (стихотворение), стр. 222-223
    36. Emily Dickinson. XXXVI. Till the End (“I should not dare to leave my friend...”) (стихотворение), стр. 224
    37. Emily Dickinson. XXXVII. Void (“Great streets of silence led away...”) (стихотворение), стр. 225
    38. Emily Dickinson. XXXVIII. “A throe upon the features...” (стихотворение), стр. 226
    39. Emily Dickinson. XXXIX. Saved! (“Of tribulation these are they...”) (стихотворение), стр. 227
    40. Emily Dickinson. XL. “I think just how my shape will rise...” (стихотворение), стр. 228
    41. Emily Dickinson. XLI. The Forgotten Grave (“After a hundred years...”) (стихотворение), стр. 229
    42. Emily Dickinson. XLII. “Lay this laurel on the one...” (стихотворение), стр. 230

Примечание:

Фронтиспис — факсимиле Эмили Дикинсон стихотворения “There came a Day at Summerʼs full...”.

Названия стихов (там где они не по первой строке) придуманы составительницей и редактором Mabel Loomis Todd. Иногда и первая строчка незначительно отличается от авторского оригинала.

Во всём, кроме обложки, настоящее издание идентично одноимённому изданию 1901 года издательства «Little, Brown, and Company».



Информация об издании предоставлена: Magnus






⇑ Наверх