Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: If I Should Cease to Bring a Rose
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "If I Should Cease to Bring a Rose", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Jeff Kiok and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: If Pain for Peace Prepares
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "If Pain for Peace Prepares", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Gary Bodwin and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: If Recollecting Were Forgetting
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "If Recollecting were Forgetting", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Lauren Schaffel and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: If She Had Been the Mistletoe
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "If She Had Been the Mistletoe", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Jocelyn Medawar and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Many Cross the Rhine
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Many Cross the Rhine", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Jeff Kiok and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: My River Runs to Thee
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "My River Runs to Thee--", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Mark Eckardt and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: No Rack Can Torture Me
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "No Rack Can Torture Me", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Gary Bodwin and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: On a Columnar Self
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "On a Columnar Self --", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Gary Bodwin and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Once More, My Now Bewildered Dove
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Once More, My Now Bewildered Dove", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Jeff Kiok and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Peace Is a Fiction of Our Faith
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Peace is a Fiction of our Faith--", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Ellie Wen and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Perhaps You'd Like to Buy a Flower
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Perhaps You'd Like to Buy a Flower", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Bobby Allen and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Poor Little Heart!
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Poor little Heart!", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Mark Eckardt and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Water, Is Taught by Thirst
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Water, Is Taught by Thirst", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Scott Becker and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Will There Really Be a "Morning"?
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Will There Really Be a 'Morning'?", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Scott Becker and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Remembrance
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Remembrance", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Jeff Kiok and can access a printable version of this piece.
Curated OER
Photograph:emily Dickinson, 1850.
Encyclopaedia Britannica provides a biography of Emily Dickinson (1830-1886 CE), an author widely acclaimed as one of America's greatest poets. Though she wrote nearly 2,000 poems, only 7 were printed during her lifetime, and those...
Shmoop University
Shmoop: I Felt a Funeral, in My Brain
From a clear introduction which includes "Why Should I Care," to the text and then an analysis of the poem, I Felt a Funeral, in my Brain, this site contains fascinating insights into the writings of the poet. Broken into clearly...
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Lady Feeds Her Little Bird
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Lady Feeds Her Little Bird", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Gary Bodwin and can access a printable version of this piece.
Georgia Department of Education
Ga Virtual Learning: Ap Literature & Composition: Satire and Humor
This unit focuses on satire and humor; it defines satire as a literary device used to expose follies, vices, and hypocrites to bring about change. It includes links to Gullivers Travels and Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift, "The Rape of...
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: I Went to Heaven
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "I Went to Heaven --", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Gary Bodwin and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: "Heaven" Has Different Signs to Me
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "'Heaven' Has Different Signs -- to Me", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Anthony McGovern and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: An Awful Tempest Mashed the Air
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "An Awful Tempest Mashed the Air", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Mark Eckardt and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Because I Could Not Stop for Death
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Because I Could Not Stop for Death", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Jeff Kiok and can access a printable version of this piece.
Repeat After Us
Repeat After Us: Dying! Dying in the Night!
A poem from Emily Dickinson, "Dying! Dying in the night!", is provided on this site. Students may listen to this poem read aloud by Bobby Allen and can access a printable version of this piece.