Authors: Jerome Charyn
91
     Â
“a cage-bird life”
: Leyda,
Years and Hours,
vol. 2, p. 388.
91
     Â
“The works of women are symbolical”
: ibid.
94
     Â
“and is one of the oddest”
: Benfey,
Summer of Hummingbirds,
p. 244.
94
     Â
“a bird with wings outstretched”
: ibid., p. 245.
95
     Â
“streaming from its pyramidal smokestack”
: ibid., p. 247.
95
     Â
“suprising poems”
: Leyda, “Miss Emily's Maggie,” p. 150.
96
     Â
“Every fence was employed to isolate”
: ibid., p. 164.
96
     Â
“Maggie's brother is killed in the mines”
: ibid., p. 160.
97
     Â
“I don't know whether it is day or night”
: ibid., pp. 156â57.
97
     Â
“The Dickinsons didn't like strangers”
: ibid., p. 153.
97
     Â
“Mr. Dicksom said he would”
: ibid., p. 157.
98
     Â
“the North Wind of the family”
: ibid., p. 160.
98
     Â
“There was an invisible story”
: Murray, p. 18.
98
     Â
“a cacophonous tumbling kitchen”
: ibid.
98
     Â
“the most creative room in the house”
: ibid., p. 99.
98
     Â
“architecture of the unseen”
: ibid., p. 153.
98
     Â
“a seamlessness between the motions”
: ibid., p. 120.
99
     Â
“provide a halting”
: ibid., p. 123.
102
   Â
“balloons embody her imagination's pilgrimages”
: Snively, “Myself endued Balloon,”, p. 1.
102
   Â
“Vehicles of beauty and danger”
: ibid.
102
   Â
“Surely Emily intuited that her maid would”
: Murray, p. 203.
102
   Â
“muse, lookout, and beckoner”
: ibid., p. 218.
103
   Â
“like the Wren”
: ibid.
103
   Â
“most interesting & most startling”
: Bingham,
Ancestors' Brocades,
p. 225.
103
   Â
“She had a Boston miniaturist create”
: Bernhard, p. 600.
103
   Â
“your unworth but true Maggie”
: Murray, p. 213.
104
   Â
“with aplomb”
: ibid.
104
   Â
“Little hussy”
: Gordon, p. 160.
104
   Â
“the most dangerous type of alien”
: Leyda, “Miss Emily's Maggie,” p. 159.
104
   Â
“madness was one of the gentler”
: ibid.
105
   Â
“one grate trouble that I have”
: ibid., p. 158.
F
IVE
: Ballerinas in a Box
107
   Â
“Most of us are half in love”
: Sewall,
Life of Emily Dickinson,
p. 150.
107
   Â
“spinsterly angularity”
: ibid., p. 15.
107
   Â
“wasted in the desert of her crudities”
: ibid., p. 40.
108
   Â
“Her life was one of the richest”
: Tate, pp. 19â20.
108
   Â
“probably the worst book on Emily”
: Porter, p. 200.
109
   Â
“Dear, dear Sue, I have loved you”
: Patterson, p. 49.
109
   Â
“On a day of early March”
: ibid., p. 116.
109
   Â
“Upon the dead, and somewhat desolate”
: ibid., p. 57.
110
   Â
“Having spent her entire capital”
: ibid., p. 395.
111
   Â
“stirred to poetry”
: ibid., p. 395.
112
   Â
“She was no happier than Emily”
: ibid., p. 332.
114
   Â
“I've never called myself an artist”
: Ashton, p. 4.
116
   Â
“The figure of the young danseuse”
: Deborah Solomon, p. 111.
117
   Â
“His greeting was joyous and happy”
: ibid., p. 351.
118
   Â
“frail teener salesgirl”
: Cornell,
Theater of the Mind,
p. 243.
118
   Â
“metaphysics of ephemera”
: ibid., p. 394.
118
   Â
“that curiously plaguing phenomenon”
: ibid., p. 417.
118
   Â
“America still waits to be discovered”
: Simic, p. 15.
119
   Â
“He adored women, but relationships weren't”
: Deborah Solomon, p. 283.
119
   Â
“He looks like Captain Ahab ashore”
: Cornell,
Theater of the Mind,
p. 15.
119
   Â
“Alexander Liberman once said”
: Deborah Solomon, p. 168.
120
   Â
“Among these pseudo-arts”
: ibid., pp. 82â83.
121
   Â
“on tiny scraps of stationary pinned together”
: Emily Dickinson,
Bolts of Melody,
pp. xiiâxvi.
121
   Â
“a transcendent moment”
: Porter, p. 203.
122
   Â
“the single most trenchant response”
: Benfey,
Summer of Hummingbirds,
p. 258.
123
   Â
“their dialogue across a hundred years”
: Porter, p. 199.
123
   Â
“artists of aloneness”
: ibid., p. 220.
124
   Â
“recurrent obsession”
: Cornell,
Theater of the Mind,
p. 256.
124
   Â
“
still-unknown
objects”
: Simic, p. 14.
124
   Â
“If her poems are like his boxes”
: ibid., p. 75.
125
   Â
“the eccentric, quivering, overstrung recluse”
: Deborah Solomon, p. 214.
125
   Â
“He would have parties where he served”
: ibid., p. 357.
126
   Â
“The stars kept winking and blinking”
: Sewall,
Life of Emily Dickinson,
p. 250.
126
   Â
“Father believed; and mother loved”
: ibid., p. 128.
127
   Â
“In a secret room in a secret house”
: Simic, p. 48.
127
   Â
“we make our sibling kin”
: ibid., p. 64.
128
   Â
“We are born originals”
: Kent,
Once a Dancer,
p. 31.
128
   Â
“Their beauty was ethereal and unearthly”
: ibid., p. 32.
128
   Â
“I wished to speak in a different way”
: ibid., p. 39.
128
   Â
“gold and ice cream”
: ibid., p. 58.
128
   Â
“the gyroscopic laws of tops”
: ibid., p. 47.
129
   Â
“I decided that more should happen”
: ibid., p. 180.
130
   Â
“His hands were kind of yellowish”
: Kent, interview.
130
   Â
“He was a little too engaged”
: ibid.
130
   Â
“My favorite form of entertainment”
: ibid.
132
   Â
“The way Mr. B communicated with me”
: Kent,
Once a Dancer,
p. 78.
132
   Â
“Some excellent technicians”
: ibid., p. 158.
S
IX
: Phantom Lady
133
   Â
“every finger in place with such energy”
: Danly, p. 35.
133
   Â
“It was too solemn, too heavy”
: Bingham,
Ancestors' Brocades,
p. 224.
133
   Â
“To capture the flow of movement”
: ibid., p. 224â225.
134
   Â
“With Dickinson the story”
: Danly, p. 40.
134
   Â
“Secure the Shadow ere the substance”
: Bernhard, p. 595.
134
   Â
“flat, itinerant work”
: ibid., p. 596.
135
   Â
“a cultural palimpsest of our emotions”
: Smith, “Iconic Power . . .”
135
   Â
“has played a role”
: Danly, p. 35.
135
   Â
“Her face is as familiar as a mask”
: ibid.
137
   Â
“Her eyes were large, dark, and oddly lashless”
: Oates, p. 46.
138
   Â
“Emily could have no idea”
: ibid., p. 48.
138
   Â
“Why amâIâ”
: ibid., p. 55.
138
   Â
“It's some sort of computer printout”
: ibid., p. 56.
139
   Â
“that looked like a bridal gown”
: ibid., p. 59.
139
   Â
“a shallow indentation”
: ibid., p. 69.
139
   Â
“where flames fluttered as in an anteroom”
: ibid., p. 70.
139
   Â
“
Accelerate,
Mistress”
: ibid., p. 71.
139
   Â
“antique”
: ibid., p. 73.
139
   Â
“Bright Knots”
: ibid.
140
   Â
“as if we were the ones who had perished”
: Vendler, p. 139.
141
   Â
“a vortex of compelling mystery”
: Danly, p. 39.
141
   Â
“Whether this picture turns out to represent”
: Smith, “A New Daguerreotype,” pp. 4â5.
142
   Â
“undeniably plain”
: Patterson, p. 75.
144
   Â
“fictitious set of sexual circumstances”
: Leyda,
Years and Hours,
vol. 1, p. lxix.
145
   Â
“Unquestioningly she was standing”
: Patterson, p. 117.
147
   Â
“erotic loss or betrayal”
: Vendler, p. 51.
149
   Â
“Nothing would be more delicious to me”
: Emily Dickinson,
Single Hound,
p.xvii.
150
   Â
“the record book of the funeral director”
: Longsworth,
World of Emily Dickinson,
p. 112.
S
EVEN
: Within a Magic Prison
153
   Â
“Except for Shakespeare”
: Bloom,
The Western Canon,
p. 272.
154
   Â
“throws several birds”
: Werner, “A Woe of Ecstasy,” p. 46.
155
   Â
“unformed, worksheet jottings”
: Emily Dickinson,
Letters of
. . ., p. 914.
156
   Â
“in that it is in the ink and in the handwriting”
: ibid., p. 929.
156
   Â
“disappeared from view”
: Werner, “A Woe of Ecstasy,” p. 27.
156
   Â
“textual borders”
: ibid., p. 28.
158
   Â
“are not so much âworks' as symptoms”
: ibid., p. 27.
158
   Â
“Homelessness is our inheritance”
: ibid., p. 28.
159
   Â
“depict the beauty”
: ibid., p. 29.
159
   Â
“as if poems, letters”
: ibid., pp. 29â30.
159
   Â
“are the latest and furthest affirmation”
: ibid., p. 31.
159
   Â
“a work in the throes”
: ibid., p. 31.
160
   Â
“as well, of course, as our own”
: ibid., p. 31.
160
   Â
“She cannot reason at all”
: Tate, p. 21.
160
   Â
“turbulence of mind”
: Werner, “Woe of Ecstacy,” p. 33.
160
   Â
“to register the progress”
: ibid., p. 38.
160
   Â
“the hand in the present tense”
: ibid., p. 41.
161
   Â
“as an autonomous lyrics throe”
: ibid., p. 44.
162
   Â
“solitary outriders”
: Werner, “Most Arrows,” p. 16.
164
   Â
“Agoraphobia was her alibi”
: Werner,
Open Folios,
p. 27.
164
   Â
“Having abandoned the institution”
: Werner, “Most Arrows,” p. 18.