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The Complete Poems by Emily Dickinson
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The Complete Poems by Emily Dickinson The Complete Poems
of Emily Dickinson

Nearly everyone who's had a brush with American lit knows the story of Emily Dickinson - her poetry unpublished in her lifetime, and then even after her death, her verses seeing the light of day only after having been "improved" on by an editor who found her rhymes imperfect and her meter "spasmodic." He even went so far as to make her metaphors "sensible." The fact is, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, to whom Dickinson had sent her poems, was a representative of the poetic establishment, and as with all artistic establishments then and now, was too rigid in his thinking and too impoverished in his imagination to comprehend a new voice of genius.

 
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History of American Literature
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History of American Literature The transcendentalist, while voicing his ecstasy over life, has put himself on record as not wishing to do anything more than once. For him God has enough new experiences, so that repetition is unnecessary. He dislikes routine. "Everything," Emerson says, "admonishes us how needlessly long life is," that is, if we walk with heroes and do not repeat. Let a machine add figures while the soul moves on. He dislikes seeing any part of a universe that he does not use. Shakespeare seemed to him to have lived a thousand years as the guest of a great universe in which most of us never pass beyond the antechamber.
 
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East o' the Sun and West o' the Moon. Norwegian Folk Tales retold by Gudrun Thorne-Thomsen
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East o' the Sun and West o' the Moon. Norwegian Folk Tales retold by Gudrun Thorne-ThomsenNorwegian Folk Tales
East O' the Sun and West O' the Moon Retold by Gudrun Thorne-Thomsen
Illustrated by Frederick Richardson
A collection of over twenty Norwegian folk tales and fairy tales. In preparing the stories for publication, the aim has been to preserve, as much as possible, in vocabulary and idiom, the original folklore language, and to retain the conversational style of the teller of tales, in order that the sympathetic young reader may, in greater or less degree, be translated into the atmosphere of the old-time story-hour.

 
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