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1
Rowing in Eden: Rereading Emily Dickinson - Page 119
... listening to, and learning from others" seems much more in keeping with the Emily Dickinson who with pink thread attached clippings of The Old Curiosity Shop's Little Nell to "A poor - torn Heart - a tattered heart" to make a "cartoon" of one of ...
2
The Poems of Emily Dickinson - Page 63
A poor -torn heart -a tattered heart - That sat it down to rest- Nor noticed that the Ebbing Day Flowed silver to the West- Nor noticed Night did soft descend - Nor Constellation burn- Intent upon the vision Of latitudes unknown. The angels ...
Emily Dickinson, Thomas H. Johnson, 1998
3
Little Book of Angels - Page 174
V >- “A POOR, TORN HEART, ii A TATTERED HEART" EMILY DICKINSON (1830-1886) A poor, torn heart, a tattered heart, That sat it down to rest, I\Ior noticed that the Ebbing Day FIowed siIver to the West, I\Ior noticed Night did sott descend, ...
Nicole Masson, Christine Barrely, 2013
4
The Emily Dickinson Handbook - Page 369
The engravings attached to "A poor torn Heart — a tattered Heart" (P78), for instance, turn the seemingly sentimental poem into a veritable parody of angelic transcendence. In both the cuttings and the poems humor privileges questions over ...
Gudrun Grabher, Roland Hagenbüchle, Cristanne Miller, 1998
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The Story of Shaw's Saint Joan - Page 44
I left the farm because France had no friends there: our people might perish provided the lambs were safe. I thought France would have friends at the court of the king of France; and I found only wolves fighting for pieces of her poor torn body.
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Tracts and Miscellaneous Criticismus of the Late Richard ... - Page 377
R. P. P. 288. 1. 1g. Ruhnkenium P. 295. lv 9. dele, and P. 296. l. 12—readings". Gent. Mag. Oct. 1788, pp. 875, 6. P. 302. l. ult. add, This is the language of children and idiots; “ Who gives any thing to poor Torn? Do poor Torn some charity." etc.
Richard Porson, Thomas Kidd, 1815
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Delphi Complete Works of Emily Dickinson (Illustrated)
Emily Dickinson. A poor — torn heart — a tattered heart — A poor — torn heart — a tattered heart — That sat it down to rest — Nor noticed that the Ebbing Day Flowed silver to the West — Nor noticed Night did soft descend — Nor ...
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The Works of William Shakespeare - Volume 3 - Page 88
Fathom and half, fathom and half l poor Torn! [The F ool runs out from the hovel. FOOL. Come not in here, nuncle, here's a spirit. Help me, help me! KENT. Give me thy hand.—Wlio's there '? FooL. A spirit, a spirit; he says his name 's poor .
William Shakespeare, 1810
“It is more a case of 'How could Rhialto resist such a poor torn little wretch?'” The girl looked from one to the other, hoping to divine the sense of the interchange. Rhialto spoke out: “Now, to our business! Osherl, take the pleurmalion—” he ...
10
From the Corner of his Eye
This philosophy had workedforhim previously, but forgetting the aftermath was more difficult when the aftermath wasyour own poor, torn, severedtoe. Your own poor,torn, severed toe was infinitely more difficult to ignore thana busload ofdead ...