by Stephen J. Gertz
Written in Amherst during Autumn 1884 to Mrs. Samuel E. Mack, the reclusive American poetess expresses her pleasure in Mrs. Mack's recent visit and quotes from Last Lines, a poem by Emily Brontë.
Dickinson writes in full:
It was very dear to see Mrs. Mack. A friend is a solemnity and after the great intrusion of Death, each one that remains has a special pricelessness besides the mortal worth --- I hope you may live while we live, and then with loving selfishness consent that you should go ---
Said the Marvellous Emily Bronte
Though Earth and Man were gone And suns and Universe ceased to be And thou wert left alone,
Every Existence would Exist in thee--
Tenderly, Emily
Letters by Dickinson are extremely rare. This missive - oddly addressing her correspondent in the first sentence in the third person - was published in the Letters of Emily Dickinson edited by T.H. Johnson, no. 940, (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958), noting that Dickinson quoted the same poem of Emily Bronte in a letter to another friend, Maria Whitney.
The letter was last seen at Christie’s New York, 15 December 1995, lot 16, when, along with related material, it sold for $16,000.__________
Images courtesy of Profiles In History, woth our thanks.
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A rare three-page autograph letter by Emily Dickinson, written in pencil and signed “Emily," is being offered by Profiles In History in its Property of a Distinguished American Private Collector sale December 18, 2012.
It is estimated to sell for $20,000 - $30,000.
Written in Amherst during Autumn 1884 to Mrs. Samuel E. Mack, the reclusive American poetess expresses her pleasure in Mrs. Mack's recent visit and quotes from Last Lines, a poem by Emily Brontë.
Dickinson writes in full:
It was very dear to see Mrs. Mack. A friend is a solemnity and after the great intrusion of Death, each one that remains has a special pricelessness besides the mortal worth --- I hope you may live while we live, and then with loving selfishness consent that you should go ---
Said the Marvellous Emily Bronte
Though Earth and Man were gone And suns and Universe ceased to be And thou wert left alone,
Every Existence would Exist in thee--
Tenderly, Emily
Letters by Dickinson are extremely rare. This missive - oddly addressing her correspondent in the first sentence in the third person - was published in the Letters of Emily Dickinson edited by T.H. Johnson, no. 940, (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958), noting that Dickinson quoted the same poem of Emily Bronte in a letter to another friend, Maria Whitney.
The letter was last seen at Christie’s New York, 15 December 1995, lot 16, when, along with related material, it sold for $16,000.
Images courtesy of Profiles In History, woth our thanks.
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