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Read the poem: “Griefs”

by Emily Dickinson

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American LiteratureAmerican PoetryEmily Dickinson
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Griefs


I measure every grief I meet

   With analytic eyes;

I wonder if it weighs like mine,

   Or has an easier size.


I wonder if they bore it long,

   Or did it just begin?

I could not tell the date of mine,

   It feels so old a pain.


I wonder if it hurts to live,

   And if they have to try,

And whether, could they choose between,

   They would not rather die.


I wonder if when years have piled —

   Some thousands — on the cause

Of early hurt, if such a lapse

   Could give them any pause;


Or would they go on aching still

   Through centuries above,

Enlightened to a larger pain

   By contrast with the love.


The grieved are many, I am told;

   The reason deeper lies, —

Death is but one and comes but once,

   And only nails the eyes.


There’s grief of want, and grief of cold, —

   A sort they call ‘despair;’

There’s banishment from native eyes,

   In sight of native air.


And though I may not guess the kind

   Correctly, yet to me

A piercing comfort it affords

   In passing Calvary,


To note the fashions of the cross,

   Of those that stand alone,

Still fascinated to presume

   That some are like my own.



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Have you got a brook in your little heart > > >

American LiteratureAmerican PoetryEmily Dickinson



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