“Sic transit gloria mundi,” “How doth the busy bee,” “Dum vivimus vivamus,” I stay mine enemy! Oh “veni, vidi, vici!”… Read more St. Valentine’s 1852 by Emily Dickinson — The Bard on the Hill
Category: Emily Dickinson
Poem-A-Day: Emily Dickinson (again) — Sappho’s Torque
If there has been one constant refrain in our most recent history, it’s that we must not lose hope. In… Read more Poem-A-Day: Emily Dickinson (again) — Sappho’s Torque
A Short Analysis of Emily Dickinson’s ‘The Night was wide, and furnished scant’ — Interesting Literature
‘The Night was wide, and furnished scant’: not one of Emily Dickinson’s most memorable opening lines, but it opens a… Read more A Short Analysis of Emily Dickinson’s ‘The Night was wide, and furnished scant’ — Interesting Literature
Poets Loved: Fame is a fickle food. By Emily Dickinson — Steve Still Standing
Fame is a fickle food. By Emily Dickinson Fame is a fickle food Upon a shifting plate Whose table once… Read more Poets Loved: Fame is a fickle food. By Emily Dickinson — Steve Still Standing