Authors: Jerome Charyn
164
   Â
“the spectacular commotion and turbulence”
: ibid., p. 1.
169
   Â
“is about not just whether there is a God”
: Faust, p. 208.
170
   Â
“infantry engagements, even as they grew”
: ibid., p. 41.
171
   Â
“it's not clear that God won”
: Hirschorn, Interview.
173
   Â
“the book is in a single word”
: James, p. 209.
173
   Â
“elaborately and massively dreary”
: ibid., p. 210.
173
   Â
“He traveled”
: Flaubert, p. 455.
E
IGHT
: Nothing
175
   Â
“synesthesia of sight and sound”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 200.
176
   Â
“perhaps even pinned close”
: ibid., p. 200.
176
   Â
The first act of flight
: ibid., p. 207.
176
   Â
“the isolate, piercing notes of a bird”
: ibid., p. 215.
176
   Â
“a whir of words”
: ibid., p. 200.
177
   Â
“We have to think of such fragments”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 8.
177
   Â
“When we say
small,
we often mean”
: ibid..
177
   Â
“These envelopes have been opened”
: ibid., p. 9.
177
   Â
“A message enclosed in an envelope”
: ibid., p. 212.
177
   Â
“Her own life was
reportless
”
: Werner, Interview.
178
   Â
“The envelope is the repository”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 213.
178
   Â
“The inaudible
whirring
of the envelopes”
: ibid., p. 213.
178
   Â
“My father first read”
: Werner, Interview.
182
   Â
“have dared to show us the ways”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 6.
182
   Â
“Viewing these âenvelopes' as visual objects”
: ibid., p. 7.
183
   Â
“regular irregularities”
: “Emily Dickinson's Visual Language,” Farr, p. 250.
183
   Â
“an unrhymed shard of verse”
: ibid., p. 256.
183
   Â
“astonishing recklessness . . . by the snapping”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 205.
183
   Â
“promotes a curiously hypnotic effect”
: Werner, Interview.
183
   Â
“âNothing' . . . was a totemicâand defiantâword”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 6.
184
   Â
“worked away from the audience”
: Howe, Interview.
184
   Â
“I was about nine”
: Thomas Gardner, p. 2.
185
   Â
“my father and I were undemonstrative shy”
: ibid., p. 140.
185
   Â
“I felt vividly how tiny and birdlike”
: ibid., p. 142.
185
   Â
“not only was he a lawyer”
: ibid., p. 144.
186
   Â
“I'm slightly agoraphobic”
: Howe, Interview.
186
   Â
“Noah Webster's pages bristle”
: Thomas Gardner, p. 157.
186
   Â
“Did she simply grab something at hand?”
ibid., p. 159.
186
   Â
“Every mark on a page is acoustic”
: Howe, Interview.
186
   Â
“The sound of what you say sings”
: Thomas Gardner, p. 141.
187
   Â
“Emily Dickinson in sense had a happy life”
: Howe, Interview.
187
   Â
“with ink on her hands”
: Thomas Gardner, p. 147.
187
   Â
“They're erotic”
: Howe, Interview.
N
INE
: Cleopatra's Company
188
   Â
“daughters of Erin”
: Beecher and Stowe, p. 311.
188
   Â
“excessive exercise of the intellect”
: ibid., p. 258.
189
   Â
“It was at his dying bed”
: Stowe,
Annotated Uncle Tom's Cabin,
p. xxxv.
190
   Â
“Her writings flowed onto the paper”
: Wilson,
Patriotic Gore
p. 34.
190
   Â
“They come before us arguing and struggling”
: ibid., p. 6.
191
   Â
“Emily Dickinson was born to her talent”
: Emily Dickinson,
Poems of
. . . (1955), vol. 1, p. vii.
191
   Â
“like forty locked doors”
: Werner,
Open Folios,
p. 36.
191
   Â
“The primary project of the fascicles”
: Smith,
Rowing in Eden,
p. 92.
191
   Â
“The handwriting is fierce”
: ibid., p. 17.
191
   Â
“expectations created by typeface”
: ibid., p. 83.
192
   Â
“the trajectory of her desire”
: Werner,
Open Folios,
p. 4.
192
   Â
“If you follow the word”
: Howe,
The Birth-Mark,
p. 170.
192
   Â
“I think she may have chosen to enter”
: ibid.
193
   Â
“a dart that returns immediately”
: Bervin and Werner, p. 25.
193
   Â
“Freedom to roam poetically”
: Howe,
My Emily Dickinson,
p. 80.
193
   Â
“The poet is an intermediary hunting form”
: ibid., pp. 79â80.
193
   Â
“the aggression in God's yellow eye”
: ibid., p. 136.
193
   Â
“in holograph Dickinson's poems”
: Smith,
Rowing in Eden,
p. 80.
194
   Â
“into the blank and unfeeling”
: Vendler, 291.
194
   Â
“Writing traces the way”
: Werner,
Open Folios,
p. 22.
194
   Â
“Noticable change of appearance”
: Emily Dickinson,
Poems of . . .
(1955), vol. 1, pp. livâlix
195
   Â
“word-paintings”
: Werner,
Open Folios,
p. 23.
195
   Â
“dangerous misssion”
: Shapiro, Letter.
195
   Â
“the spaces between the words”
: Shapiro, “Secrets of the Pen,” p. 231.
196
   Â
“She was like a wounded animal”
: ibid.
196
   Â
“The cometary pace of her thought”
: Werner,
Open Folios,
p. 21.
197
   Â
“Since Cleopatra died”
: Shakespeare,
Antony and Cleopatra,
act 4, scene 14.
198
   Â
“a dead spot
: Benfey, Interview.
198
   Â
“and vanished into thin air”
: Benfey,
Summer of Hummingbirds,
p. 59.
198
   Â
“I remember her distinctly”
: Susan Dickinson.
199
   Â
“I knew she was taciturn”
: ibid.
199
   Â
“Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote”
: Smith,
Rowing in Eden,
p. 144.
201
   Â
“Why don't we talk”
: Benfey, Interview.
T
EN
: The Witch's Hour
203
   Â
“For motherhood . . . is the great mesh”
: Rich, p. 260.
203
   Â
“within the mothering role”
: ibid., p. 263.
204
   Â
“Talent hits a target”
: Andrew Solomon, p. 412.
204
   Â
“Every number has a kind of taste”
: Benfey, Interview.
204
   Â
“
HAMLET
: Do you see yonder”
: Shakespeare,
Hamlet,
act 3, scene 2.
204
   Â
“and for Dickinson”
: Benfey, Interview.
205
   Â
“the tiniest visual details”
: Sacks, pp. 195â197.
205
   Â
“absolute pitch”
: ibid., p. 199.
205
   Â
“Numbers for them are holy”
: ibid., p. 298.
205
   Â
“thought-scape”
: ibid., p. 211.
206
   Â
“There is no danger”
: Tanenhaus.
207
   Â
“Letters are scrawls, turnabouts”
: Howe,
The Birth-mark,
p. 141.
207
   Â
“Spaces between letters, dashes”
: ibid., p. 143.
208
   Â
“the brain begins by
disorganizing
”
: Andreasen, p. 78.
208
   Â
“associative links run wild”
: ibid.
209
   Â
“the cosmic microwave afterglow”
: Angier.
209
   Â
“If I ask, will there be a planet”
: ibid.
211
   Â
“It is the moral luck of making”
: Gopnik, “Van Gogh's Ear,” p. 55.
C
ODA
: Sam Carlo
216
   Â
“disappoinment in a much-too-loved woman friend”
: Emily Dickinson,
Bolts of Melody,
p. 4.
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