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  1. Susan Huntington Gilbert was born December 19, 1830, in Old Deerfield, Massachusetts, the youngest of six children born to Thomas and Harriet (Arms) Gilbert. She was orphaned by the time she was eleven years old, after her mother died in 1837 and her father in 1841. Gilbert lived with her aunt, Sophia (Arms) Van Vranken, in Geneva, New York ...

  2. Susan Dickinson, n.d. Susan Huntington Gilbert was born on December 19, 1830, in Deerfield, Massachusetts, the youngest of seven children of Thomas and Harriet Arms Gilbert. After the death of her mother in 1835, she was raised with her sisters in Geneva, New York, by her aunt Sophia van Vranken. As a girl of sixteen she visited Amherst, where ...

  3. With Susan as the inspiration for many of Emily’s poems and the sole recipient of even more, it is clear that the two women shared an intimate, loving, and life-long relationship. For more information on Susan visit Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson. Below you’ll find a selection of poems Emily sent to Susan.

  4. Though her intense and constant relationship with Emily Dickinson spanned five decades, forty years (from the late 1840s until the poet's death in 1886), and though Dickinson sent her substantially more writings than any other correspondent and changed at least one poem at her behest, a book-length biography of Susan Huntington Gilbert ...

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  6. Austin’s marriage to Susan Huntington Gilbert in 1856 solidified the place in the family of one of Dickinson’s dearest friends. Susan’s friendship helped expand the poet’s horizons, and their sharing of books and ideas was a vital component of her intellectual life. Susan was a vivacious and intelligent woman, a great reader, and a ...

  7. Dec 18, 2021 · So you can imagine how the closest person to her, Susan Huntington Gilbert, felt when she read such lines as, “To own a / Susan of / my own / Is of itself / a Bliss — / Whatever / Realm I / forfeit, Lord, / Continue / me in this!” and “Sweet Hour, blessed Hour, to carry me to you, and to bring you back to me, long enough to snatch one kiss, and whisper Good bye, again.”

  8. Dickinson, Susan Huntington Gilbert. "Annals of the Evergreens" and other manuscripts. H Box 9, Houghton Library, Harvard University. "Annals" abridged version published as "Magnetic Visitors," Amherst (Alumni Quarterly) 33.4 (Spring 1981): 8-15, 27.---. H Lowell Autograph, letters to William Hayes Ward.

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