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by Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886)

When I was small, a woman died
Language: English 
When I was small, a woman died;
Today her only boy
Went up from the Potomac,
His face all victory
 
To look at her.  How slowly
The seasons must have turned,
Till bullets clipped an angle
And he passed quickly round.
 
If pride shall be in paradise,
Ourself cannot decide;
Of their imperial conduct
No person testified.
 
But proud in apparition,
That woman and her boy
Pass back and forth before my brain,
As even in the sky
 
I'm confident that bravos
Perpetual break abroad
For braveries remote as this
In scarlet Maryland.

About the headline (FAQ)

Text Authorship:

  • by Emily Dickinson (1830 - 1886), no title [author's text not yet checked against a primary source]

Musical settings (art songs, Lieder, mélodies, (etc.), choral pieces, and other vocal works set to this text), listed by composer (not necessarily exhaustive):

  • by Gordon Getty (b. 1933), "When I was small, a woman died" [soprano and piano], from The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart, no. 13. [
     text verified 1 time
    ]

Researcher for this page: Barbara Miller

This text was added to the website: 2011-01-12
Line count: 20
Word count: 93

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This website began in 1995 as a personal project by Emily Ezust, who has been working on it full-time without a salary since 2008. Our research has never had any government or institutional funding, so if you found the information here useful, please consider making a donation. Your help is greatly appreciated!
–Emily Ezust, Founder

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