Emily Dickinson Summer Quotations
Emily Dickinson Quotes about:
Summer Quotes from:
- All Summer Quotes
- Henry David Thoreau
- William Shakespeare
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Emily Dickinson
- George R R Martin
- Henry Rollins
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- Henry Ward Beecher
- Mark Twain
- John Keats
- Paul Dergarabedian
- Charles Dickens
- Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Maggie Stiefvater
- Nicholas Sparks
- William C Bryant
- Rick Riordan
- William Wordsworth
- Albert Camus
- Alfred Lord Tennyson
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Sweet Quotes
Love is like the wild rose-briar; Friendship like the holly-tree. The holly is dark when the rose-briar blooms, But which will bloom most constantly? The wild rose-briar is sweet in spring ,Its summer blossoms scent the air; Yet wait till winter comes again, And who will call the wild-briar fair? Then, scorn the silly rose-wreath now, And deck thee with holly's sheen, That, when December blights thy brow, He still may leave thy garland green.
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Autumn Quotes
As Summer into Autumn slips And yet we sooner say "The Summer" than "the Autumn," lest We turn the sun away, And almost count it an Affront The presence to concede Of one however lovely, not The one that we have loved - So we evade the charge of Years On one attempting shy The Circumvention of the Shaft Of Life's Declivity.
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Loneliness Quotes
Further in Summer than the Birds Pathetic from the Grass A minor Nation celebrates Its unobtrusive Mass. No Ordinance be seen So gradual the Grace A pensive Custom it becomes Enlarging Loneliness. Antiquest felt at Noon When August burning low Arise this spectral Canticle Repose to typify Remit as yet no Grace No Furrow on the Glow Yet a Druidic Difference Enhances Nature now.