Why Should We Hurry-why Indeed?
Emily Dickinson
1646 Why should we hurry—why indeed? When every way we fly We are molested equally By immortality. No respite from the inference That this which is begun, Though where its labors lie A bland uncertainty Besets the sight This mighty night—
Next 10 Poems
- Emily Dickinson : Why-do They Shut Me Out Of Heaven?
- Emily Dickinson : Wild Nights! Wild Nights!
- Emily Dickinson : Will There Really Be A 'morning'?
- Emily Dickinson : Winter Is Good-his Hoar Delights
- Emily Dickinson : Winter Under Cultivation
- Emily Dickinson : Witchcraft Has Not A Pedigree
- Emily Dickinson : Witchcraft Was Hung, In History
- Emily Dickinson : With Pinions Of Disdain
- Emily Dickinson : With Sweetness Unabated
- Emily Dickinson : With Thee, In The Desert
Previous 10 Poems
- Emily Dickinson : Why Make It Doubt-it Hurts It So
- Emily Dickinson : Why Do I Love You, Sir?
- Emily Dickinson : Whose Pink Career May Have A Close
- Emily Dickinson : Whose Cheek Is This?
- Emily Dickinson : Whose Are The Little Beds, I Asked
- Emily Dickinson : Whole Gulfs-of Red, And Fleets-of Red
- Emily Dickinson : Whoever Disenchants
- Emily Dickinson : Who Were 'the Father And The Son'
- Emily Dickinson : Who Saw No Sunrise Cannot Say
- Emily Dickinson : Who Occupies This House?