A Great Hope Fell
Emily Dickinson
1123 A great Hope fell You heard no noise The Ruin was within Oh cunning wreck that told no tale And let no Witness in The mind was built for mighty Freight For dread occasion planned How often foundering at Sea Ostensibly, on Land A not admitting of the wound Until it grew so wide That all my Life had entered it And there were troughs beside A closing of the simple lid That opened to the sun Until the tender Carpenter Perpetual nail it down—
Next 10 Poems
- Emily Dickinson : A Happy Lip-breaks Sudden
- Emily Dickinson : A House Upon The Height
- Emily Dickinson : A Lady Red-amid The Hill
- Emily Dickinson : A Lane Of Yellow Led The Eye
- Emily Dickinson : A Letter Is A Joy Of Earth-
- Emily Dickinson : A Light Exists In Spring
- Emily Dickinson : A Little Bread-a Crust-a Crumb
- Emily Dickinson : A Little Dog That Wags His Tail
- Emily Dickinson : A Little East Of Jordan
- Emily Dickinson : A Little Madness In The Spring
Previous 10 Poems
- Emily Dickinson : A Fuzzy Fellow, Without Feet
- Emily Dickinson : A Full Fed Rose On Meals Of Tint
- Emily Dickinson : A Flower Will Not Trouble Her, It Has So Small A Foot
- Emily Dickinson : A First Mute Coming
- Emily Dickinson : A Field Of Stubble, Lying Sere
- Emily Dickinson : A Feather From The Whippoorwill
- Emily Dickinson : A Faded Boy-in Sallow Clothes
- Emily Dickinson : A Face Devoid Of Love Or Grace
- Emily Dickinson : A Dying Tiger-moaned For Drink
- Emily Dickinson : A Drunkard Cannot Meet A Cork