Lives Like Loaded Guns_ Emily Dickinson and Her Family's Feuds - Lyndall Gordon [205]
———, Emily Dickinson: A Revelation (NY: Harper, 1954)
———, Emily Dickinson’s Home: Letters of Edward Dickinson and Family (NY: Harper, 1955; repr. Dover, 1967)
———, Correspondence with Amy Lowell. Houghton: bMS Lowell 19 (95) and 19.1 (99)
———, Letters to Theodora Ward, granddaughter of Dickinson correspondents, Dr and Mrs Holland (1945-54). Houghton: *7OM-33
———with Raoul Blanchard (Professor of Geography, University of Grenoble), A Geography of France (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1919)
———(trans. from the French), Principles of Human Geography by P. Vidal de La Blache (London: Constable, 1926)
———, Autobiographical typescripts. Yale: Bingham Papers, mainly box 46.
———, ‘Notes for Autobiography’. Yale: Bingham Papers. Cited in Richard B. Sewall, Life of Emily Dickinson, i, 294-301. These rather scrappy ‘Notes’ do not indicate the abundance of these typescripts
———, Correspondence with Mrs George E. Pearl (Clara Pearl), daughter of Anna Newman (Mrs George H. Carleton), who lived at The Evergreens in her youth. Yale: box 84, f.258a, together with letter from Mrs Pearl to Mrs Bingham (15 Sept 1932) ‘boiling’ with animosity towards Martha Dickinson Bianchi. The date is a month before the attack of ‘apoplexy’ that killed Mabel Loomis Todd
———, ‘Notes taken during the talk with my father’ (typed Oct 1967, from notes she dates on TS as 29 Sept-3 Oct 1933, but the original notes go back to 1927, the year she began to abandon her academic career and join her parents’ camp). Yale: box 47, f.14. David Todd’s striking memories of the first transcriptions of Dickinson’s poems in the late 1880s and early 1890s
———, Letters to Gilbert Montague (1945-55). Manuscripts and Archives Division, New York Public Library: Montague-Collier Family Papers, box 1
———, Article on Millicent Todd Bingham in Current Biography (June 1961), 10-12. Copy in Yale: Bingham Papers, box 46, f.1
———, Four tapes (3 May 1957; Dec 1958; 17 June 1963; and 31 May 1964). Historical Sound Recordings, Music Library, Sterling Library, Yale
Bowles, Samuel, 156 letters to Austin and Susan Dickinson. Houghton: bMS Am 1118.8
———, ‘An annotated calendar of Samuel Bowles’s letters to Austin and Susan Dickinson’, by Alfred Habegger and Nellie Habegger, Emily Dickinson Journal, 11/2 (Fall 2002), 1-47. Dating and excerpts.
Cutter, Calvin, Anatomy and Physiology (repr. Boston: Mussey, 1854). Dickinson’s textbook at Mount Holyoke. Copy in Radcliffe Science Library, Oxford
Dickerman, Elizabeth (of Amherst and Smith College class of 1894), ‘Portrait of Two Sisters: Emily and Lavinia Dickinson’, Smith Alumnae Quarterly, 45/2 (Feb 1954), 79. Copy at Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts
Dickinson Papers, including Family Papers. Houghton: bMS Am 1118.95. Arranged by first line.
1. Inventory by William McCarthy when poems first came to the Library in 1951.
2. Rearrangement of the booklets by editor, Thomas H. Johnson, in 1952.
3. Inventory of letters and contents of Dickinson Papers by Jay Leyda.
4. Rearrangement of the poems by R. W. Franklin: see The Editing of Emily Dickinson (1967), The Manuscript Books (1981) and the three-volume edition of 1998 that includes poems taken from letters (a questionable disruption of what some regard as cross-genre letter poems)
Dickinson library. Emily Dickinson Room, Houghton. This library brings together all Dickinson-owned books, belonging to both households, the Homestead and The Evergreens.
Dickinson, Edward (the poet’s father), essay signed ‘Coelebs’ (from Hannah More’s bestseller, Coelebs in Search of a Wife), for the New England Enquirer. Houghton: bMS Am 1118.95
———, Letters in Bingham, Emily Dickinson’s Home, above
———, A Poet’s Parents: The Courtship Letters of Emily Norcross and Edward Dickinson, ed. Vivian R. Pollak (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988)
Dickinson, Edward (Ned, the poet’s nephew), ‘“Your Prodigal”: Letters from Ned Dickinson, 1879-1885’, put together with commentary by Barton Levi St Armand, New England Quarterly,