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QUOTE COLLECTIONS OF Emily Dickinson
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Quotes By author - Starting with E - Emily Dickinson
There are 56 quotes for the author Emily Dickinson
Quotations 21 to 40 of 56
Results Page:   1   2   3
Finite to fail, but infinite to venture.

Tell the truth, but tell it slant.

The possible's slow fuse is lit, by the Imagination.

Find ecstasy in life; the mere sense of living is joy enough.

Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul - and sings the tunes without the words - and never stops at all.

Fortune befriends the bold.

A wounded deer leaps the highest.

Truth is so rare that it is delightful to tell it.

I hope you love birds too. It is economical. It saves going to heaven.

Remember if you marry for beauty, thou bindest thyself all thy life for that which perchance, will neither last nor please thee one year: and when thou hast it, it will be to thee of no price at all.

Old age comes on suddenly, and not gradually as is thought.

His Labor is a Chant - his Idleness - a Tune - oh, for a Bee's experience of Clovers, and of Noon!

To whom the mornings are like nights, What must the midnights be!

Where thou art, that is home.

To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee, One clover, and a bee, And revery. The revery alone will do, If bees are few.

A word is dead when it is said, some say. I say it just begins to live that day.

'Tis so much joy! 'Tis so much joy! If I should fail, what poverty! And yet, as poor as I Have ventured all upon a throw; Have gained! Yes! Hesitated so this side the victory!

To live is so startling it leaves little time for anything else.

People need hard times and oppression to develop psychic muscles.

They might not need me; but they might. I'll let my head be just in sight; a smile as small as mine might be precisely their necessity.

Quotations 21 to 40 of 56
Results Page:   1   2   3

   
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