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Early American Poets » Emily Dickinson » Emily Dickinson’s Poetry » Xvi

Xvi

TO fight aloud is very brave,
But gallanter, I know,
Who charge within the bosom,
The cavalry of woe.
 
Who win, and nations do not see,
Who fall, and none observe,
Whose dying eyes no country
Regards with patriot love.

We trust, in plumed procession,
For such the angels go,
Rank after rank, with even feet
And uniforms of snow.

By: Emily Dickinson (1830 – 86).  Complete Poems. Part One: Life  1924.

 

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  • A Book
  • A Precious Mouldering
  • A train went through a burial gate
  • A Wounded Deer
  • Because I Could Not Stop For Death
  • Behind me dips Eternity
  • Bustle In A House
  • Come Slowly Eden
  • Dare You See A Soul
  • Empty My Heart of Thee
  • Faith Is A Fine Invention
  • For Each Ecstatic Moment
  • Going to Heaven
  • Hope Is The Thing With Feathers
  • I Can Wade Grief
  • I Died for Beauty
  • I Felt A Funeral In My Brain
  • I know that he exists
  • I Read My Sentence Steadily
  • I Shall Keep Singing
  • I Shall Know why
  • I Taste A Liqour
  • I Went to Heaven
  • If I Can Stop
  • It Was Not Death
  • Let Down the Bars, O Death
  • Let us Play Yesterday
  • Much Madness
  • My Life Closed
  • Poems On Nature
  • Poems Series One
  • Success Is Counted Sweetest
  • T’is So Much Joy
  • The Chariot (Because I Could Not Stop For Death)
  • They Dropped like Flakes
  • Who Never Lost
  • Wild Nights
  • Xvi