Poems begining by S

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Some Days retired from the rest

© Emily Dickinson

Some Days retired from the rest
In soft distinction lie
The Day that a Companion came
Or was obliged to die

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Some Arrows slay but whom they strike --

© Emily Dickinson

Some Arrows slay but whom they strike --
But this slew all but him --
Who so appareled his Escape --
Too trackless for a Tomb --

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Soil of Flint, if steady tilled --

© Emily Dickinson

Soil of Flint, if steady tilled --
Will refund by Hand --
Seed of Palm, by Libyan Sun
Fructified in Sand --

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Softened by Time's consummate plush,

© Emily Dickinson

Softened by Time's consummate plush,
How sleek the woe appears
That threatened childhood's citadel
And undermined the years.

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Society for me my misery

© Emily Dickinson

Society for me my misery
Since Gift of Thee --

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So well that I can live without

© Emily Dickinson

So well that I can live without --
I love thee -- then How well is that?
As well as Jesus?
Prove it me
That He -- loved Men --
As I -- love thee --

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So the Eyes accost -- and sunder

© Emily Dickinson

So the Eyes accost -- and sunder
In an Audience --
Stamped -- occasionally -- forever --
So may Countenance

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So set its Sun in Thee

© Emily Dickinson

So set its Sun in Thee
What Day be dark to me --
What Distance -- far --
So I the Ships may see
That touch -- how seldomly --
Thy Shore?

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So much Summer

© Emily Dickinson

So much Summer
Me for showing
Illegitimate --
Would a Smile's minute bestowing
Too exorbitant

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So much of Heaven has gone from Earth

© Emily Dickinson

So much of Heaven has gone from Earth
That there must be a Heaven
If only to enclose the Saints
To Affidavit given.

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So large my Will

© Emily Dickinson

So large my Will
The little that I may
Embarrasses
Like gentle infamy --

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So glad we are -- a Stranger'd deem

© Emily Dickinson

'Twas sorry, that we were --
For where the Holiday should be
There publishes a Tear --
Nor how Ourselves be justified --

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So gay a Flower

© Emily Dickinson

So gay a Flower
Bereaves the Mind
As if it were a Woe --
Is Beauty an Affliction -- then?
Tradition ought to know --

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Snow beneath whose chilly softness

© Emily Dickinson

Snow beneath whose chilly softness
Some that never lay
Make their first Repose this Winter
I admonish Thee

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Smiling back from Coronation

© Emily Dickinson

Smiling back from Coronation
May be Luxury --
On the Heads that started with us --
Being's Peasantry --

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Size circumscribes -- it has no room

© Emily Dickinson

Size circumscribes -- it has no room
For petty furniture --
The Giant tolerates no Gnat
For Ease of Gianture --

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Silence is all we dread.

© Emily Dickinson

Silence is all we dread.
There's Ransom in a Voice --
But Silence is Infinity.
Himself have not a face.

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Should you but fail at -- Sea

© Emily Dickinson

Should you but fail at -- Sea --
In sight of me --
Or doomed lie --
Next Sun -- to die --

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She's happy, with a new Content --

© Emily Dickinson

She's happy, with a new Content --
That feels to her -- like Sacrament --
She's busy -- with an altered Care --
As just apprenticed to the Air --

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She staked her Feathers -- Gained an Arc --

© Emily Dickinson

She staked her Feathers -- Gained an Arc --
Debated -- Rose again --
This time -- beyond the estimate
Of Envy, or of Men --