A wounded Deer — leaps highest —
poem by Emily Dickinson
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
A wounded Deer — leaps highest —
Summary
A wounded Deer — leaps highest — is a literary work[1].
Key Facts
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest — authored Emily Dickinson[2].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — instance of is recorded as literary work[3].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — language of work or name is recorded as English[4].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — catalog code is recorded as 165[5].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — publication date is recorded as +1890-01-01T00:00:00Z[6].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — has edition or translation is recorded as "A wounded deer leaps highest"[7].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — first line is recorded as A wounded Deer — leaps highest —[8].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — copyright status is recorded as public domain[9].
- A wounded Deer — leaps highest —'s leaps highest — — form of creative work is recorded as poem[10].
Body
Works and Contributions
A wounded Deer — leaps highest — authored Emily Dickinson[2].