Shakespeare Club - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 5

Emily prepares to act out Othello with her Shakespeare club.
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Edward - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 4

Edward announces his plan to cut down Emily's favorite tree so the railroad can be built on their land.
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Mrs. Dickinson talk Season 1 Episode 4

Mrs. Dickinson talks with Lavinia on Dickinson Season 1 Episode 4.
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Lavinia talk - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 4

Lavinia talks with Mrs. Dickinson on Dickinson Season 1 Episode 4.
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Emily and George - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 4

Emily and George seek out Henry David Thoreau for help.
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Lavinia dance - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 3

Lavinia dances with Joseph Lyman at the party on Dickinson Season 1 Episode 3.
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Jane Humphrey and co. - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 2

Jane Humphrey and her friends attend a party at the Dickinson's household.
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Emily plan - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 2

Emily comes up with a plan to see a lecturer give a presentation on volcanoes.
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Lavinia knit - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 2

Lavinia spends all day knitting on Dickinson Season 1 Episode 2.
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Sue dress shop - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 2

Emily lets it spill that Sue is engaged to Austin at Betty's dress shop.
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Emily and Sue - Dickinson Season 1 Episode 2

Emily and Sue dress as men to attend a lecture on volcanoes at Amherst.
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Mrs. Dickinson eager Season 1 Episode 1

Mrs. Dickinson is eager for Emily to marry on Dickinson Season 1 Episode 1.
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Dickinson Quotes

Ship: I’m glad you asked. I came here for you.
Lavinia: I’m surprised you even remember me.
Ship: Of course I remember you. You’re the most pure, simple, quiet, traditional girl I ever knew, and that is why I want to make you my wife.
Lavinia: Ship, Ship, we hooked up once. Then you hooked up with someone else the same night.
Ship: That wasn’t very chivalrous of me. You’ll see I’ve changed, Lavinia. I’m not that college dropout that got drunk and tobogganed into a lake. I’m a serious adult man with entrepreneurial instincts and a profound respect for women who embody traditional values such as submissiveness, chastity, and willingness to do household chores.
Lavinia: I’m not even like that.
Ship: You’re Lavinia Dickinson. You have tea parties for your cats.
Lavinia: Well, yes, but I’ve changed too.
Ship: Oh, and how have you changed?
Lavinia: I’ll show you.
Ship: Whoa, whoa, whoa, don’t you think we should wait until marriage?
Lavinia: Henry ‘Ship’ Shipley, I don’t think you have any idea who you’re dealing with.

Edward: You really are a poet. You write all the time these days. Well, what do you with all these poems? You never show them to me.
Emily: I couldn’t show them to you.
Edward: Why not?
Emily: You wouldn’t understand them.
Edward: Oh, well, you’re probably right. I just hope you find someone who can understand them.
Emily: Well, don’t worry. I have someone. I do.