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  1. Emily Dickinson. 1830 –. 1886. Wild NightsWild Nights! Were I with thee. Wild Nights should be. Our luxury! Futile – the winds –. To a heart in port –. Done with the compass –. Done with the chart! Rowing in Eden –. Ah, the sea! Might I moor – Tonight –. In thee! This poem is in the public domain. Wild Nights—Wild Nights! (249) - Wild Nights!

  2. The poem is the origin of the title Wild Nights with Emily, a 2018 biopic of Dickinson starring Molly Shannon. Actress Najarra Townsend recites the poem in its entirety in the 2017 film Mercury in Retrograde.

  3. Wild NightsWild Nights! (249) Emily Dickinson. Track 64 on Second Series. One of Dickinsons most famous romantic/erotic poems, dating to about 1861. While working on the 1891...

  4. By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University) ‘Wild nightsWild nights!’. The energy and exultation with which Emily Dickinson opens this, one of her most passionately felt poems, encourages us to share the excitement and passion, or at least dares us to try to resist it.

  5. Wild nights! by Emily Dickinson. Wild nights! Were I with thee, Wild nights should be. Our luxury! Futile the winds. To a heart in port, — Done with the compass, Done with the chart. Rowing in Eden! Ah! the sea! Might I but moor. To-night in thee!

  6. Wild NightsWild Nights! by Emily Dickinson - Meaning, Themes, Analysis and Literary Devices - American Poems. Home. Poets. Emily Dickinson. Wild NightsWild Nights! Were I with thee. Wild Nights should be. Our luxury! Futile — the Winds — To a Heart in port — Done with the Compass — Done with the Chart! Rowing in Eden — Ah, the Sea!

  7. April 15, 2022. 00:00. 00:00. View the full text of the poem in this episode. By Emily Dickinson. Audio recordings of classic and contemporary poems read by poets and actors, delivered every day. Subscribe. More Episodes from Audio Poem of the Day. Showing 1 to 20 of 2,501 Podcasts.

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