Title:   Poems by Emily Dickinson Third Series

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Author:   Edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and T.W. Higginson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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Bookmarks





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Table of Contents

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Edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and T.W. Higginson ...............................................................................1


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Poems by Emily Dickinson Third Series

Edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and T.W. Higginson

BOOK I.  LIFE. 

I. Real Riches 

II. Superiority to Fate 

III. Hope 

IV. Forbidden Fruit 

V. Forbidden Fruit 

VI. A Word 

VII. "To venerate the simple days" 

VIII. Life's Trades 

IX. "Drowning is not so pitiful" 

X. "How still the bells in steeples stand" 

XI. "If the foolish call them 'flowers'" 

XII. A Syllable 

XIII. Parting 

XIV. Aspiration 

XV. The Inevitable 

XVI. A Book 

XVII. "Who has not found the heaven below" 

XVIII. A Portrait 

XIX. I had a Guinea Golden 

XX. Saturday Afternoon 

XXI. "Few get enoughenough is one" 

XXII. "Upon the gallows hung a wretch" 

XXIII. The Lost Thought 

XXIV. Reticence 

XXV. With Flowers 

XXVI. "The farthest thunder that I heard" 

XXVII. "On the bleakness of my lot" 

XXVIII. Contrast 

XXIX. Friends 

XXX. Fire 

XXXI. A Man 

XXXII. Ventures 

XXXIII. Griefs 

XXXIV. "I have a king who does not speak" 

XXXV. Disenchantment 

XXXVI. Lost Faith 

XXXVII. Lost Joy 

XXXVIII. " I worked for chaff, and earning wheat" 

XXXIX. "Life, and Death, and Giants" 

XL. Alpine Glow 

XLI. Remembrance 

XLII. "To hang our head ostensibly" 

XLIII. The Brain 

XLIV. "The bone that has no marrow" 

XLV. The Past  

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XLVI. "To help our bleaker parts" 

XLVII. "What soft, cherubic creatures" 

XLVIII. Desire 

XLIX. Philosophy 

L. Power 

LI. "A modest lot, a fame petite" 

LII. "Is bliss, then, such abyss" 

LIII. Experience 

LIV. Thanksgiving Day 

LV. Childish Griefs 

BOOK II.  LOVE. 

I. Consecration 

II. Love's Humility 

III. Love 

IV. Satisfied 

V. With a Flower 

VI. Song 

VII. Loyalty 

VIII. "To lose thee, sweeter than to gain" 

IX. "Poor little heart!" 

X. Forgotten 

XI. "I've got an arrow here" 

XII. The Master 

XIII. "Heart, we will forget him!" 

XIV. "Father, I bring thee not myself" 

XV. "We outgrow love, like other things" 

XVI. "Not with a club the heart is broken" 

XVII. Who? 

XVIII. "He touched me, so I live to know" 

XIX. Dreams 

XX. Numen Lumen 

XXI. Longing 

XXII. Wedded 

BOOK III.  NATURE. 

I. Nature's Changes 

II. The Tulip 

III. "A light exists in spring" 

IV. The Waking Year 

V. To March 

VI. March 

VII. Dawn 

VIII. " A murmur in the trees to note" 

IX. "Morning is the place for dew" 

X. "To my quick ears the leaves conferred" 

XI. A Rose 

XII. "High from the earth I heard a bird" 

XIII. Cobwebs 

XIV. A Well 

XV. "To make a prairie it takes a clover" 

XVI. The Wind 

XVII. "A dew sufficed itself"  


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XVIII. The Woodpecker 

XIX. A Snake 

XX. "Could I but ride indefinite" 

XXI. The Moon 

XXII. The Bat 

XXIII. The Balloon 

XXIV. Evening 

XXV. Cocoon 

XXVI. Sunset 

XXVII. Aurora 

XXVIII. The Coming of Night 

XXIX. Aftermath 

BOOK IV.  TIME AND ETERNITY. 

I. "This world is not conclusion" 

II. "We learn in the retreating" 

III. "They say that 'time assuages'" 

IV. "We cover thee, sweet face" 

V. Ending 

VI. "The stimulus, beyond the grave" 

VII. "Given in marriage unto thee" 

VIII. "That such have died enables us" 

IX. "They won't frown always,  some sweet day" 

X. Immortality 

XI. "The distance that the dead have gone" 

XII. "How dare the robins sing" 

XIII. Death 

XIV. Unwarned 

XV. "Each that we lose takes part of us" 

XVI. "Not any higher stands the grave" 

XVII. Asleep 

XVIII. The Spirit 

XIX. The Monument 

XX. "Bless God, he went as soldiers" 

XXI. "Immortal is an ample word" 

XXII. "Where every bird is bold to go" 

XXIII. "The grave my little cottage is" 

XXIV. "This was in the white of the year" 

XXV. "Sweet hours have perished here" 

XXVI. "Me! Come! My dazzled face" 

XXVII. Invisible 

XXVIII. "I wish I knew that woman's name" 

XXIX. Trying to Forget 

XXX. "I felt a funeral in my brain" 

XXXI. "I meant to find her when I came" 

XXXII. Waiting 

XXXIII. "A sickness of this world it most occassions" 

XXXIV. "Superfluous were the sun" 

XXXV. "So proud she was to die" 

XXXVI. Farewell 

XXXVII. "The dying need but little, dear" 

XXXVIII. Dead  


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XXXIX. "The soul should always stand ajar" 

XL. "Three weeks passed since I had seen her" 

XLI. "I brethed enough to learn the trick" 

XLII. "I wonder if the sepulchre" 

XLIII. Joy in Death 

XLIV. "If I may have it when it's dead" 

XLV. "Before the ice is in the pools" 

XLVI. Dying 

XLVII. "Adrift! A little boat adrift!" 

XLVIII. "There's been a death in the opposite house" 

XLIX. "We never know we go,  when we are going" 

L. The Soul's Storm 

LI. "Water is taught by thirst" 

LII. Thirst 

LIII. "A clock stopped  not the mantel's" 

LIV. Charlotte Brontė's Grave 

LV. "A toad can die of light!" 

LVI. "Far from love the Heavenly Father" 

LVII. Sleeping 

LVIII. Retrospect 

LIX. Eternity  

PREFACE.

THE intellectual activity of Emily Dickinson was so great that a large and characteristic choice is still

possible among her literary material, and this third volume of her verses is put forth in response to the

repeated wish of the admirers of her peculiar genius.

Much of Emily Dickinson's prose was rhythmic,  even rhymed, though frequently not set apart in lines.

Also many verses, written as such, were sent to friends in letters; these were published in , in the volumes of

her Letters. It has not been necessary, however, to include them in this Series, and all have been omitted,

except three or four exceptionally strong ones, as "A Book," and "With Flowers."

There is internal evidence that many of the poems were simply spontaneous flashes of insight, apparently

unrelated to outward circumstance. Others, however, had an obvious personal origin; for example, the verses

"I had a Guinea golden," which seem to have been sent to some friend travelling in Europe, as a dainty

reminder of letterwriting delinquencies. The surroundings in which any of Emily Dickinson's verses are

known to have been written usually serve to explain them clearly; but in general the present volume is full of

thoughts needing no interpretation to those who apprehend this scintillating spirit.

M. L. T.

AMHERST, October, . 


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I. LIFE.

POEMS.

I. REAL RICHES.

'T IS little I could care for pearls

            Who own the ample sea;

Or brooches, when the Emperor

            With rubies pelteth me;

Or gold, who am the Prince of Mines;

            Or diamonds, when I see

A diadem to fit a dome

            Continual crowning me.

II. SUPERIORITY TO FATE.

SUPERIORITY to fate

            Is difficult to learn.

'T is not conferred by any,

            But possible to earn

A pittance at a time,

            Until, to her surprise,

The soul with strict economy

            Subsists till Paradise.


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III. HOPE.

HOPE is a subtle glutton;

            He feeds upon the fair;

And yet, inspected closely,

            What abstinence is there!

His is the halcyon table

            That never seats but one,

And whatsoever is consumed

            The same amounts remain.

IV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT. 

I.

FORBIDDEN fruit a flavor has

            That lawful orchards mocks;

How luscious lies the pea within

            The pod that Duty locks!

V. FORBIDDEN FRUIT.

II.

HEAVEN is what I cannot reach!

            The apple on the tree,

Provided it do hopeless hang,

            That 'heaven' is, to me.

The color on the cruising cloud,

            The interdicted ground

Behind the hill, the house behind, 

            There Paradise is found!

VI. A WORD.


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AWORD is dead

When it is said,

            Some say.

I say it just

Begins to live

            That day.

VII.

To venerate the simple days

            Which lead the seasons by,

Needs but to remember

            That from you or me

They may take the trifle

            Termed mortality!

To invent existence with a stately air,

Needs but to remember

            That the acorn there

Is the egg of forests,

            For the upper air!

VIII. LIFE'S TRADES.

IT's such a little thing to weep,

            So short a thing to sigh;

And yet by trades the size of these

            We men and women die!

IX. DROWNING is not so pitiful

            As the attempt to rise.

Three times, 't is said, a sinking man

            Comes up to face the skies,

And then declines forever

            To that abhorred abode

Where hope and he part company, 

            For he is grasped of God.


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The Maker's cordial visage,

            However good to see,

Is shunned, we must admit it,

            Like an adversity.

X.

HOW still the bells in steeples stand,

            Till, swollen with the sky,

They leap upon their silver feet

            In frantic melody!

XI.

IF the foolish call them 'flowers,' 

            Need the wiser tell?

If the savans 'classify' them,

            It is just as well!

Those who read the Revelations

            Must not criticise

Those who read the same edition

            With beclouded eyes!

Could we stand with that old Moses

            Canaan denied, 

Scan, like him, the stately landscape

            On the other side, 

Doubtless we should deem superfluous

            Many sciences

Not pursued by learnčd angels

            In scholastic skies!

Low amid that glad Belles lettres

            Grant that we may stand,

Stars, amid profound Galaxies,

            At that grand 'Right hand'!


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XII. A SYLLABLE. 

COULD mortal lip divine

            The undeveloped freight

Of a delivered syllable,

            'T would crumble with the weight.

XIII. PARTING.

MY life closed twice before its close;

            It yet remains to see

If Immortality unveil

            A third event to me,

So huge, so hopeless to conceive,

            As these that twice befell.

Parting is all we know of heaven, 

            And all we need of hell. 

XIV. ASPIRATION.

WE never know how high we are

            Till we are called to rise;

And then, if we are true to plan,

            Our statures touch the skies.

The heroism we recite

            Would be a daily thing,

Did not ourselves the cubits warp

            For fear to be a king.

XV. THE INEVITABLE.

WHILE I was fearing it, it came,

            But came with less of fear,

Because that fearing it so long

            Had almost made it dear.


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There is a fitting a dismay,

            A fitting a despair.

'Tis harder knowing it is due,

            Than knowing it is here.

The trying on the utmost,

            The morning it is new,

Is terribler than wearing it

            A whole existence through.

XVI. A BOOK.

THERE is no frigate like a book

            To take us lands away,

Nor any coursers like a page

            Of prancing poetry.

This traverse may the poorest take

            Without oppress of toll;

How frugal is the chariot

            That bears a human soul!

XVII.

WHO has not found the heaven below

            Will fail of it above.

God's residence is next to mine,

            His furniture is love.

XVIII. A PORTRAIT.

A FACE devoid of love or grace,

            A hateful, hard, successful face,

A face with which a stone

            Would feel as thoroughly at ease

As were they old acquaintances, 

            First time together thrown.


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XIX. I HAD A GUINEA GOLDEN.

I HAD a guinea golden;

            I lost it in the sand,

And though the sum was simple,

            And pounds were in the land,

Still had it such a value

            Unto my frugal eye,

That when I could not find it

            I sat me down to sigh. 

I had a crimson robin

            Who sang full many a day,

But when the woods were painted

            He, too, did fly away.

Time brought me other robins, 

            Their ballads were the same, 

Still for my missing troubadour

            I kept the 'house at hame.' 

I had a star in heaven;

            One Pleiad was its name,

And when I was not heeding

            It wandered from the same.

And though the skies are crowded,

            And all the night ashine,

I do not care about it,

            Since none of them are mine.

My story has a moral:

            I have a missing friend, 

Pleiad its name, and robin,

            And guinea in the sand, 

And when this mournful ditty,

            Accompanied with tear,

Shall meet the eye of traitor

            In country far from here,

Grant that repentance solemn

            May seize upon his mind,

And he no consolation

            Beneath the sun may find.

(Note: NOTE.  This poem may have had, like many others, a personal origin. It is more than probable that

it was sent to some friend travelling in Europe, a dainty reminder of letter writing delinquencies.)

XX. SATURDAY AFTERNOON.


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FROM all the jails the boys and girls

            Ecstatically leap, 

Beloved, only afternoon

            That prison doesn't keep.

They storm the earth and stun the air,

            A mob of solid bliss.

Alas! that frowns could lie in wait

            For such a foe as this!

XXI.

FEW get enough,  enough is one;

            To that ethereal throng

Have not each one of us the right

            To stealthily belong?

XXII.

UPON the gallows hung a wretch,

            Too sullied for the hell

To which the law entitled him.

            As nature's curtain fell

The one who bore him tottered in,

            For this was woman's son.

''T was all I had,' she stricken gasped;

            Oh, what a livid boon!

XXIII. THE LOST THOUGHT.

I FELT a clearing in my mind

            As if my brain had split;

I tried to match it, seam by seam,

            But could not make them fit.

The thought behind I strove to join

            Unto the thought before,

But sequence ravelled out of reach


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Like balls upon a floor.

XXIV. RETICENCE.

THE reticent volcano keeps

            His never slumbering plan;

Confided are his projects pink

            To no precarious man.

If nature will not tell the tale

            Jehovah told to her,

Can human nature not survive

            Without a listener?

Admonished by her buckled lips

            Let every babbler be.

The only secret people keep

            Is Immortality.

XXV. WITH FLOWERS.

IF recollecting were forgetting,

            Then I remember not;

And if forgetting, recollecting,

            How near I had forgot!

And if to miss were merry,

            And if to mourn were gay,

How very blithe the fingers

            That gathered these today!

XXVI.

THE farthest thunder that I heard

            Was nearer than the sky,

And rumbles still, though torrid noons

            Have lain their missiles by.

The lightning that preceded it

            Struck no one but myself,

But I would not exchange the bolt

            For all the rest of life.

Indebtedness to oxygen


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The chemist may repay,

But not the obligation

            To electricity. 

It founds the homes and decks the days,

            And every clamor bright

Is but the gleam concomitant

            Of that waylaying light.

The thought is quiet as a flake, 

            A crash without a sound;

How life's reverberation

            Its explanation found!

XXVII.

ON the bleakness of my lot

            Bloom I strove to raise.

Late, my acre of a rock

            Yielded grape and maize.

Soil of flint if steadfast tilled

            Will reward the hand;

Seed of palm by Lybian sun

            Fructified in sand.

XXVIII. CONTRAST.

A DOOR just opened on a street 

            I, lost, was passing by 

An instant's width of warmth disclosed,

            And wealth, and company.

The door as sudden shut, and I,

            I, lost, was passing by, 

Lost doubly, but by contrast most,

            Enlightening misery.

XXIX. FRIENDS.


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ARE friends delight or pain?

            Could bounty but remain

Riches were good.

But if they only stay

Bolder to fly away,

            Riches are sad.

XXX. FIRE.

ASHES denote that fire was;

            Respect the grayest pile

For the departed creature's sake

            That hovered there awhile.

Fire exists the first in light;

            And then consolidates, 

Only the chemist can disclose

            Into what carbonates.

XXXI. A MAN.

FATE slew him, but he did not drop;

            She felled  he did not fall 

Impaled him on her fiercest stakes 

            He neutralized them all.

She stung him, sapped his firm advance,

            But, when her worst was done,

And he, unmoved, regarded her,

            Acknowledged him a man.

XXXII. VENTURES.

FINITE to fail, but infinite to venture.

            For the one ship that struts the shore


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Many's the gallant, overwhelmed creature

            Nodding in navies nevermore.

XXXIII. GRIEFS.

I MEASURE every grief I meet

            With analytic eyes;

I wonder if it weighs like mine,

            Or has an easier size.

I wonder if they bore it long,

            Or did it just begin?

I could not tell the date of mine,

            It feels so old a pain.

I wonder if it hurts to live,

            And if they have to try,

And whether, could they choose between,

            They would not rather die.

I wonder if when years have piled 

            Some thousands  on the cause

Of early hurt, if such a lapse 

            Could give them any pause;

Or would they go on aching still

            Through centuries above,

Enlightened to a larger pain

            By contrast with the love.

The grieved are many, I am told;

            The reason deeper lies, 

Death is but one and comes but once,

            And only nails the eyes.

There's grief of want, and grief of cold, 

            A sort they call 'despair;'

There's banishment from native eyes,

            In sight of native air.

And though I may not guess the kind

            Correctly, yet to me

A piercing comfort it affords

            In passing Calvary,

To note the fashions of the cross,

            Of those that stand alone,


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Still fascinated to presume

            That some are like my own.

XXXIV.

I HAVE a king who does not speak;

So, wondering, thro' the hours meek

            I trudge the day away,

Half glad when it is night and sleep,

If, haply, thro' a dream to peep

            In parlors shut by day.

And if I do, when morning comes,

It is as if a hundred drums

            Did round my pillow roll.

And shouts fill all my childish sky,

And bells keep saying 'victory'

            From steeples in my soul!

And if I don't, the little Bird

Within the Orchard is not heard,

            And I omit to pray,

'Father, thy will be done' today,

For my will goes the other way,

            And it were perjury!

XXXV. DISENCHANTMENT.

IT dropped so low in my regard

            I heard it hit the ground,

And go to pieces on the stones

            At bottom of my mind;

Yet blamed the fate that fractured, less

            Than I reviled myself

For entertaining plated wares

            Upon my silver shelf.


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XXXVI. LOST FAITH.

TO lose one's faith surpasses

            The loss of an estate,

Because estates can be

            Replenished,  faith cannot.

Inherited with life,

            Belief but once can be;

Annihilate a single clause,

            And Being's beggary.

XXXVII. LOST JOY.

I HAD a daily bliss

            I half indifferent viewed,

Till sudden I perceived it stir, 

            It grew as I pursued,

Till when, around a crag,

            It wasted from my sight,

Enlarged beyond my utmost scope,

            I learned its sweetness right.

XXXVIII.

I WORKED for chaff, and earning wheat

            Was haughty and betrayed.

What right had fields to arbitrate

            In matters ratified?

I tasted wheat,  and hated chaff,

            And thanked the ample friend;

Wisdom is more becoming viewed

            At distance than at hand.


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XXXIX.

LIFE, and Death, and Giants

            Such as these, are still.

Minor apparatus, hopper of the mill,

Beetle at the candle,

            Or a fife's small fame,

Maintain by accident

            That they proclaim.

XL. ALPINE GLOW.

OUR lives are Swiss, 

            So still, so cool,

            Till, some odd afternoon,

The Alps neglect their curtains,

            And we look farther on.

Italy stands the other side,

            While, like a guard between,

The solemn Alps,

The siren Alps,

            Forever intervene!

XLI. REMEMBRANCE.

REMEMBRANCE has a rear and front, 

            'T is something like a house;

It has a garret also

            For refuse and the mouse,

Besides, the deepest cellar

            That ever mason hewed;

Look to it, by its fathoms

            Ourselves be not pursued.


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XLII.

TO hang our head ostensibly,

            And subsequent to find

That such was not the posture

            Of our immortal mind,

Affords the sly presumption

            That, in so dense a fuzz,

You, too, take cobweb attitudes

            Upon a plane of gauze!

XLIII. THE BRAIN.

THE brain is wider than the sky,

            For, put them side by side,

The one the other will include

            With ease, and you beside.

The brain is deeper than the sea,

            For, hold them, blue to blue,

The one the other will absorb,

            As sponges, buckets do.

The brain is just the weight of God,

            For, lift them, pound for pound,

And they will differ, if they do,

            As syllable from sound.

XLIV.

THE bone that has no marrow;

            What ultimate for that? 

It is not fit for table,

            For beggar, or for cat.

A bone has obligations,

            A being has the same;

A marrowless assembly

            Is culpabler than shame.


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But how shall finished creatures

            A function fresh obtain? 

Old Nicodemus' phantom

            Confronting us again!

XLV. THE PAST.

THE past is such a curious creature,

            To look her in the face.

A transport may reward us,

            Or a disgrace.

Unarmed if any meet her,

            I charge him, fly!

Her rusty ammunition

            Might yet reply!

XLVI.

To help our bleaker parts

            Salubrious hours are given,

Which if they do not fit for earth

            Drill silently for heaven.

XLVII.

WHAT soft, cherubic creatures

            These gentlewomen are!

One would as soon assault a plush

            Or violate a star.

Such dimity convictions,

            A horror so refined

Of freckled human nature,

            Of Deity ashamed, 

It's such a common glory,


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A fisherman's degree!

Redemption, brittle lady,

            Be so, ashamed of thee.

XLVIII. DESIRE.

WHO never wanted,  maddest joy

            Remains to him unknown:

The banquet of abstemiousness 

            Surpasses that of wine.

Within its hope, though yet ungrasped

            Desire's perfect goal,

No nearer, lest reality

            Should disenthrall thy soul.

XLIX. PHILOSOPHY.

IT might be easier

            To fail with land in sight,

Than gain my blue peninsula

            To perish of delight.

L. POWER.

YOU cannot put a fire out;

            A thing that can ignite

Can go, itself, without a fan

            Upon the slowest night. 

You cannot fold a flood

            And put it in a drawer, 

Because the winds would find it out,

            And tell your cedar floor.


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Page No 25


LI.

A MODEST lot, a fame petite,

            A brief campaign of sting and sweet

            Is plenty! Is enough! 

A sailor's business is the shore,

            A soldier's  balls. Who asketh more

Must seek the neighboring life!

LII.

IS bliss, then, such abyss

I must not put my foot amiss

For fear I spoil my shoe?

I'd rather suit my foot

Than save my boot,

For yet to buy another pair

Is possible

At any fair. 

But bliss is sold just once;

The patent lost

None buy it any more.

LIII. EXPERIENCE.

I STEPPED from plank to plank

            So slow and cautiously;

The stars about my head I felt,

            About my feet the sea.

I knew not but the next

            Would be my final inch, 

This gave me that precarious gait

            Some call experience.


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Page No 26


LIV. THANKSGIVING DAY.

ONE day is there of the series

            Termed Thanksgiving day,

Celebrated part at table,

            Part in memory.

Neither patriarch nor pussy,

            I dissect the play;

Seems it, to my hooded thinking,

            Reflex holiday.

Had there been no sharp subtraction

            From the early sum,

Not an acre or a caption

            Where was once a room,

Not a mention, whose small pebble

            Wrinkled any bay, 

Unto such, were such assembly,

            'T were Thanksgiving day.

LV. CHILDISH GRIEFS.

SOFTENED by Time's consummate plush,

            How sleek the woe appears

That threatened childhood's citadel

            And undermined the years!

Bisected now by bleaker griefs,

            We envy the despair

That devastated childhood's realm,

            So easy to repair.

II. LOVE.


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I. CONSECRATION.

PROUD of my broken heart since thou didst break it,

            Proud of the pain I did not feel till thee,

Proud of my night since thou with moons dost slake it,

            Not to partake thy passion, my humility.

II. LOVE'S HUMILITY.

MY worthiness is all my doubt,

            His merit all my fear,

Contrasting which, my qualities

            Do lowlier appear;

Lest I should insufficient prove

            For his beloved need,

The chiefest apprehension

            Within my loving creed.

So I, the undivine abode

            Of his elect content,

Conform my soul as 't were a church

            Unto her sacrament.

III. LOVE.

LOVE is anterior to life,

            Posterior to death,

Initial of creation, and

            The exponent of breath.


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Page No 28


IV. SATISFIED.

ONE blessing had I, than the rest

            So larger to my eyes

That I stopped gauging, satisfied,

            For this enchanted size.

It was the limit of my dream,

            The focus of my prayer, 

A perfect, paralyzing bliss

            Contented as despair.

I knew no more of want or cold,

            Phantasms both become,

For this new value in the soul,

            Supremest earthly sum.

The heaven below the heaven above

            Obscured with ruddier hue.

Life's latitude leant overfull;

            The judgment perished, too.

Why joys so scantily disburse,

            Why Paradise defer,

Why floods are served to us in bowls, 

            I speculate no more.

V. WITH A FLOWER.

WHEN roses cease to bloom, dear,

            And violets are done,

When bumblebees in solemn flight

            Have passed beyond the sun,

The hand that paused to gather

            Upon this summer's day

Will idle lie, in Auburn, 

            Then take my flower, pray!

VI. SONG.


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Page No 29


SUMMER for thee grant I may be

            When summer days are flown!

Thy music still when whippoorwill

            And oriole are done!

For thee to bloom, I'll skip the tomb

            And sow my blossoms o'er!

Pray gather me, Anemone,

            Thy flower forevermore!

VII. LOYALTY.

SPLIT the lark and you'll find the music,

            Bulb after bulb, in silver rolled,

Scantily dealt to the summer morning,

            Saved for your ear when lutes be old.

Loose the flood, you shall find it patent,

            Gush after gush, reserved for you;

Scarlet experiment! sceptic Thomas,

            Now, do you doubt that your bird was true?

VIII.

TO lose thee, sweeter than to gain

            All other hearts I knew.

'T is true the drought is destitute,

            But then I had the dew!

The Caspian has its realms of sand,

            Its other realm of sea;

Without the sterile perquisite

            No Caspian could be.

IX.


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POOR little heart!

            Did they forget thee?

Then dinna care! Then dinna care!

            Proud little heart!

            Did they forsake thee?

Be debonair! Be debonair!

            Frail little heart!

            I would not break thee:

Could'st credit me? Could'st credit me?

            Gay little heart!

            Like morning glory

Thou'll wilted be; thou'll wilted be!

X. FORGOTTEN.

THERE is a word

            Which bears a sword

            Can pierce an armed man.

It hurls its barbed syllables,

            At once is mute again.

But where it fell

The saved will tell

            On patriotic day,

Some epauletted brother

            Gave his breath away.

Wherever runs the breathless sun,

            Wherever roams the day,

There is its noiseless onset,

            There is its victory!

Behold the keenest marksman!

            The most accomplished shot!

Time's sublimest target

            Is a soul 'forgot'!

XI.


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I'VE got an arrow here;

            Loving the hand that sent it,

I the dart revere.

Fell, they will say, in 'skirmish'!

            Vanquished, my soul will know,

By but a simple arrow

            Sped by an archer's bow.

XII. THE MASTER.

HE fumbles at your spirit

            As players at the keys

Before they drop full music on;

            He stuns you by degrees,

Prepares your brittle substance

            For the ethereal blow,

By fainter hammers, further heard,

            Then nearer, then so slow

Your breath has time to straighten,

            Your brain to bubble cool, 

Deals one imperial thunderbolt

            That scalps your naked soul.

XIII.

HEART, we will forget him!

            You and I, tonight!

You may forget the warmth he gave,

            I will forget the light.

When you have done, pray tell me,

            That I my thoughts may dim;

Haste! lest while you're lagging,

            I may remember him!


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XIV.

FATHER, I bring thee not myself, 

            That were the little load;

I bring thee the imperial heart 

            I had not strength to hold.

The heart I cherished in my own

            Till mine too heavy grew,

Yet strangest, heavier since it went,

            Is it too large for you?

XV.

WE outgrow love like other things

            And put it in the drawer,

Till it an antique fashion shows

            Like costumes grandsires wore.

XVI.

NOT with a club the heart is broken,

            Nor with a stone;

A whip, so small you could not see it.

            I've known

To lash the magic creature

            Till it fell,

Yet that whip's name too noble

            Then to tell.

Magnanimous of bird

            By boy descried,

To sing unto the stone

            Of which it died.


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XVII. WHO?

MY friend must be a bird,

            Because it flies!

Mortal my friend must be,

            Because it dies!

Barbs has it, like a bee.

Ah, curious friend,

            Thou puzzlest me!

XVIII.

HE touched me, so I live to know

That such a day, permitted so,

            I groped upon his breast.

It was a boundless place to me,

And silenced, as the awful sea

            Puts minor streams to rest.

And now, I'm different from before,

As if I breathed superior air,

            Or brushed a royal gown;

My feet, too, that had wandered so,

My gypsy face transfigured now

            To tenderer renown.

XIX. DREAMS.

LET me not mar that perfect dream

            By an auroral stain, 

But so adjust my daily night

            That it will come again.

XX. NUMEN LUMEN.

I LIVE with him, I see his face;

            I go no more away

For visitor, or sundown;


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Death's single privacy,

The only one forestaling mine,

            And that by right that he

Presents a claim invisible,

            No wedlock granted me.

I live with him, I hear his voice,

            I stand alive today

To witness to the certainty

            Of immortality

Taught me by Time,  the lower way,

            Conviction every day, 

That life like this is endless,

            Be judgment what it may.

XXI. LONGING.

I ENVY seas whereon he rides,

            I envy spokes of wheels

Of chariots that him convey,

            I envy speechless hills

That gaze upon his journey;

            How easy all can see

What is forbidden utterly

            As heaven, unto me!

I envy nests of sparrows

            That dot his distant eaves,

The wealthy fly upon his pane,

            The happy, happy leaves

That just abroad his window

            Have summer's leave to be,

The earrings of Pizarro 

            Could not obtain for me.

I envy light that wakes him,

            And bells that boldly ring

To tell him it is noon abroad, 

            Myself his noon could bring,

Yet interdict my blossom

            And abrogate my bee,


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Lest noon in everlasting night

            Drop Gabriel and me.

XXII. WEDDED.

A SOLEMN thing it was, I said,

            A woman white to be,

And wear, if God should count me fit,

            Her hallowed mystery.

A timid thing to drop a life

            Into the purple well,

Too plummetless that it come back

            Eternity until.

III. NATURE.

I. NATURE'S CHANGES.

THE springtime's pallid landscape

            Will glow like bright bouquet,

Though drifted deep in parian

            The village lies today.

The lilacs, bending many a year,

            With purple load will hang;

The bees will not forget the tune

            Their old forefathers sang.


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Page No 36


The rose will redden in the bog,

            The aster on the hill

Her everlasting fashion set,

            And covenant gentians frill,

Till summer folds her miracle 

            As women do their gown,

Or priests adjust the symbols 

            When sacrament is done.

II. THE TULIP.

SHE slept beneath a tree

            Remembered but by me.

I touched her cradle mute;

She recognized the foot,

Put on her carmine suit, 

            And see!

III.

A LIGHT exists in spring

            Not present on the year

At any other period.

            When March is scarcely here

A color stands abroad

            On solitary hills

That science cannot overtake,

            But human nature feels.

It waits upon the lawn;

            It shows the furthest tree

Upon the furthest slope we know;

            It almost speaks to me.

Then, as horizons step,

            Or noons report away,

Without the formula of sound,

            It passes, and we stay:


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A quality of loss

            Affecting our content,

As trade had suddenly encroached

            Upon a sacrament.

IV. THE WAKING YEAR.

A LADY red upon the hill 

            Her annual secret keeps;

A lady white within the field

            In placid lily sleeps!

The tidy breezes with their brooms

            Sweep vale, and hill, and tree!

Prithee, my pretty housewives!

            Who may expected be?

The neighbors do not yet suspect!

            The woods exchange a smile 

Orchard, and buttercup, and bird 

            In such a little while!

And yet how still the landscape stands,

            How nonchalant the wood,

As if the resurrection

            Were nothing very odd!

V. TO MARCH.

DEAR March, come in!

How glad I am!

I looked for you before.

Put down your hat 

You must have walked 

How out of breath you are!

Dear March, how are you?

And the rest?

Did you leave Nature well?

Oh, March, come right upstairs with me,

I have so much to tell!


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Page No 38


I got your letter, and the birds';

The maples never knew

That you were coming,  I declare,

How red their faces grew!

But, March, forgive me 

And all those hills

You left for me to hue;

There was no purple suitable,

You took it all with you.

Who knocks? That April!

Lock the door!

I will not be pursued!

He stayed away a year, to call

When I am occupied.

But trifles look so trivial

As soon as you have come,

That blame is just as dear as praise

And praise as mere as blame.

VI. MARCH.

WE like March, his shoes are purple,

            He is new and high;

Makes he mud for dog and peddler,

            Makes he forest dry;

Knows the adder's tongue his coming,

            And begets her spot.

Stands the sun so close and mighty

            That our minds are hot.

News is he of all the others;

            Bold it were to die

With the bluebirds buccaneering

            On his British sky.

VII.

DAWN.

NOT knowing when the dawn will come

            I open every door;

Or has it feathers like a bird,

            Or billows like a shore?


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Page No 39


VIII.

A MURMUR in the trees to note,

            Not loud enough for wind;

A star not far enough to seek,

            Nor near enough to find;

A long, long yellow on the lawn,

            A hubbub as of feet;

Not audible, as ours to us,

            But dapperer, more sweet;

A hurrying home of little men

            To houses unperceived, 

All this, and more, if I should tell,

            Would never be believed.

Of robins in the trundle bed

            How many I espy

Whose nightgowns could not hide the wings,

            Although I heard them try!

But then I promised ne'er to tell;

            How could I break my word?

So go your way and I'll go mine, 

            No fear you'll miss the road.

IX.

MORNING is the place for dew,

            Corn is made at noon,

After dinner light for flowers,

            Dukes for setting sun!

X.


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TO my quick ear the leaves conferred;

            The bushes they were bells;

I could not find a privacy

            From Nature's sentinels.

In cave if I presumed to hide,

            The walls began to tell;.

Creation seemed a mighty crack

            To make me visible.

XI. A ROSE.

A SEPAL, petal, and a thorn

            Upon a common summer's morn,

A flash of dew, a bee or two,

A breeze

A caper in the trees, 

            And I'm a rose!

XII.

HIGH from the earth I heard a bird;

            He trod upon the trees

As he esteemed them trifles,

            And then he spied a breeze,

And situated softly 

            Upon a pile of wind

Which in a perturbation

            Nature had left behind.

A joyousgoing fellow

            I gathered from his talk,

Which both of benediction

            And badinage partook,

Without apparent burden,

            I learned, in leafy wood

He was the faithful father

            Of a dependent brood;

And this untoward transport

            His remedy for care, 

A contrast to our respites.

            How different we are!


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Page No 41


XIII. COBWEBS.

THE spider as an artist

            Has never been employed

Though his surpassing merit

            Is freely certified

By every broom and Bridget

            Throughout a Christian land.

Neglected son of genius,

            I take thee by the hand.

XIV. A WELL.

WHAT mystery pervades a well!

            The water lives so far,

Like neighbor from another world

            Residing in a jar.

The grass does not appear afraid;

            I often wonder he

Can stand so close and look so bold

            At what is dread to me.

Related somehow they may be, 

            The sedge stands next the sea,

Where he is floorless, yet of fear

            No evidence gives he.

But nature is a stranger yet;

            The ones that cite her most

Have never passed her haunted house,

            Nor simplified her ghost.

To pity those that know her not

            Is helped by the regret

That those who know her, know her less

            The nearer her they get.


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Page No 42


XV.

TO make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee,  

One clover, and a bee,

And revery.

The revery alone will do

If bees are few

XVI. THE WIND.

IT's like the light, 

            A fashionless delight

It's like the bee, 

            A dateless melody.

It's like the woods,

            Private like breeze,

Phraseless, yet it stirs

            The proudest trees.

It's like the morning, 

            Best when it's done, 

The everlasting clocks

            Chime noon.

XVII.

A DEW sufficed itself

            And satisfied a leaf,

And felt, 'how vast a destiny!

            How trivial is life!'

The sun went out to work,

            The day went out to play,

But not again that dew was seen

            By physiognomy.

Whether by day abducted,

            Or emptied by the sun

Into the sea, in passing,


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Eternally unknown.

XVIII. THE WOODPECKER.

HIS bill an auger is,

            His head, a cap and frill.

He laboreth at every tree, 

            A worm his utmost goal.

XIX. A SNAKE.

SWEET is the swamp with its secrets,

            Until we meet a snake;

'T is then we sigh for houses,

            And our departure take

At that enthralling gallop

            That only childhood knows.

A snake is summer's treason,

            And guile is where it goes.

XX.

COULD I but ride indefinite,

            As doth the meadowbee,

And visit only where I liked,

            And no man visit me,

And flirt all day with buttercups,

            And marry whom I may,

And dwell a little everywhere,

            Or better, run away

With no police to follow,

            Or chase me if I do,

Till I should jump peninsulas

            To get away from you, 

I said, but just to be a bee


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Page No 44


Upon a raft of air,

And row in nowhere all day long,

            And anchor off the bar,

What liberty! So captives deem

            Who tight in dungeons are.

XXI. THE MOON.

THE moon was but a chin of gold

            A night or two ago,

And now she turns her perfect face

            Upon the world below.

Her forehead is of amplest blond;

            Her cheek like beryl stone;

Her eye unto the sumtner dew

            The likest I have known.

Her lips of amber never part;

            But what must be the smile

Upon her friend she could bestow

            Were such her silver will!

And what a privilege to be

            But the remotest star!

For certainly her way might pass

            Beside your twinkling door.

Her bonnet is the firmament,

            The universe her shoe,

The stars the trinkets at her belt,

            Her dimities of blue.

XXII. THE BAT.

THE bat is dun with wrinkled wings

            Like fallow article,

And not a song pervades his lips,

            Or none perceptible.

His small umbrella, quaintly halved,


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Describing in the air

An arc alike inscrutable, 

            Elate philosopher! 

Deputed from what firmament

            Of what astute abode,

Empowered with what malevolence

            Auspiciously withheld.

To his adroit Creator 

            Ascribe no less the praise;

Beneficent, believe me,

            His eccentricities.

XXIII. THE BALLOON.

YOU've seen balloons set, haven't you?

            So stately they ascend

It is as swans discarded you

            For duties diamond.

Their liquid feet go softly out

            Upon a sea of blond;

They spurn the air as 't were too mean

            For creatures so renowned.

Their ribbons just beyond the eye,

            They struggle some for breath,

And yet the crowd applauds below;

            They would not encore death.

The gilded creature strains and spins,

            Trips frantic in a tree,

Tears open her imperial veins

            And tumbles in the sea.

The crowd retire with an oath

            The dust in streets goes down,

And clerks in countingrooms observe,

            ''T was only a balloon.'


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XXIV. EVENING.

THE cricket sang,

And set the sun,

And workmen finished, one by one,

            Their seam the day upon.

The low grass loaded with the dew,

The twilight stood as strangers do

With hat in hand, polite and new,

            To stay as if, or go. 

A vastness, as a neighbor, came, 

A wisdom without face or name,

A peace, as hemispheres at home, 

            And so the night became.

XXV. COCOON.

DRAB habitation of whom?

Tabernacle or tomb,

Or dome of worm,

Or porch of gnome,

Or some elf's catacomb?

XXVI. SUNSET.

A SLOOP of amber slips away

            Upon an ether sea,

And wrecks in peace a purple tar,

            The son of ecstasy.

XXVII. AURORA.

OF bronze and blaze

            The north, tonight!

            So adequate its forms,

So preconcerted with itself,


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So distant to alarms, 

An unconcern so sovereign

            To universe, or me,

It paints my simple spirit

            With tints of majesty,

Till I take vaster attitudes,

            And strut upon my stem,

Disdaining men and oxygen,

            For arrogance of them.

My splendors are menagerie;

            But their competeless show

Will entertain the centuries

            When I am, long ago,

An island in dishonored grass,

            Whom none but daisies know.

XXVIII. THE COMING OF NIGHT. 

HOW the old mountains drip with sunset,

            And the brake of dun! 

How the hemlocks are tipped in tinsel

            By the wizard sun!

How the old steeples hand the scarlet,

            Till the ball is full, 

Have I the lip of the flamingo 

            That I dare to tell?

Then, how the fire ebbs like billows,

            Touching all the grass

With a departing, sapphire feature,

            As if a duchess pass! 

How a small dusk crawls on the village

            Till the houses blot;

And the odd flambeaux no men carry

            Glimmer on the spot! 

Now it is night in nest and kennel,

            And where was the wood,

Just a dome of abyss is nodding

            Into solitude! 

These are the visions baffled Guido;

            Titian never told;


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Domenichino dropped the pencil,

            Powerless to unfold.

XXIX. AFTERMATH.

THE murmuring of bees has ceased;

            But murmuring of some

Posterior, prophetic,

            Has simultaneous come, 

The lower metres of the year,

            When nature's laugh is done, 

The Revelations of the book

            Whose Genesis is June.

IV. TIME AND ETERNITY.

I.

THIS world is not conclusion;

            A sequel stands beyond,

Invisible, as music,

            But positive, as sound.

It beckons and it baffles;

            Philosophies don't know,

And through a riddle, at the last,

            Sagacity must go.

To guess it puzzles scholars;

            To gain it, men have shown

Contempt of generations,

            And crucifixion known.


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II.

WE learn in the retreating

            How vast an one

Was recently among us.

            A perished sun

Endears in the departure

            How doubly more

Than all the golden presence

            It was before!

III.

THEY say that 'time assuages,' 

            Time never did assuage;

An actual suffering strengthens,

            As sinews do, with age.

Time is a test of trouble,

            But not a remedy.

If such it prove, it prove too

            There was no malady.

IV.

WE cover thee, sweet face.

            Not that we tire of thee,

But that thyself fatigue of us;

            Remember, as thou flee,

We follow thee until

            Thou notice us no more,

And then, reluctant, turn away

            To con thee o'er and o'er,

And blame the scanty love

            We were content to show,

Augmented, sweet, a hundred fold


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Page No 50


If thou would'st take it now.

V. ENDING.

THAT is solemn we have ended, 

            Be it but a play,

Or a glee among the garrets,

            Or a holiday, 

Or a leaving home; or later,

            Parting with a world

We have understood, for better

            Still it be unfurled.

VI.

THE stimulus, beyond the grave

            His countenance to see,

Supports me like imperial drams

            Afforded royally.

VII.

GIVEN in marriage unto thee,

            Oh, thou celestial host!

Bride of the Father and the Son,

            Bride of the Holy Ghost!

Other betrothal shall dissolve,

            Wedlock of will decay;

Only the keeper of this seal

            Conquers mortality.


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VIII.

THAT such have died enables us

            The tranquiller to die;

That such have lived, certificate

            For immortality.

IX.

THEY won't frown always,  some sweet day

            When I forget to tease,

They'll recollect how cold I looked,

            And how I just said 'please.'

Then they will hasten to the door

            To call the little child,

Who cannot thank them, for the ice

            That on her lisping piled.

X. IMMORTALITY.

IT is an honorable thought,

            And makes one lift one's hat,

As one encountered gentlefolk

            Upon a daily street,

That we're immortal place,

            Though pyramids decay,

And kingdoms, like the orchard,

            Flit russetly away.

XI.

THE distance that the dead have gone

            Does not at first appear;

Their coming back seems possible

            For many an ardent year.


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And then, that we have followed them

            We more than half suspect,

So intimate have we become

            With their dear retrospect.

XII.

HOW dare the robins sing,

            When men and women hear

Who since they went to their account

            Have settled with the year!  

Paid all that life had earned

            In one consummate bill,

And now, what life or death can do 

            Is immaterial.

Insulting is the sun

            To him whose mortal light,

Beguiled of immortality,

            Bequeaths him to the night.

In deference to him

            Extinct be every hum,

Whose garden wrestles with the dew,

            At daybreak overcome!

XIII. DEATH.

DEATH is like the insect

            Menacing the tree,

Competent to kill it, 

            But decoyed may be.

Bait it with the balsam,

            Seek it with the knife,

Baffle, if it cost you

            Everything in life.

Then, if it have burrowed

            Out of reach of skill,

Ring the tree and leave it, 

            'T is the vermin's will.


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XIV. UNWARNED.

'T IS sunrise, little maid, hast thou

            No station in the day?

'T was not thy wont to hinder so, 

            Retrieve thine industry.

'T is noon, my little maid, alas!

            And art thou sleeping yet?

The lily waiting to be wed,

            The bee, dost thou forget?

My little maid, 't is night; alas,

            That night should be to thee

Instead of morning! Hadst thou broached

            Thy little plan to me,

Dissuade thee if I could not, sweet,

            I might have aided thee.

XV.

EACH that we lose takes part of us;

            A crescent still abides,

Which like the moon, some turbid night,

            Is summoned by the tides.

XVI.

NOT any higher stands the grave

            For heroes than for men;

Not any nearer for the child

            Than numb threescore and ten.

This latest leisure equal lulls

            The beggar and his queen;

Propitiate this democrat

            By summer's gracious mien.


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XVII. ASLEEP.

AS far from pity as complaint,

            As cool to speech as stone,

As numb to revelation

            As if my trade were bone.

As far from time as history,

            As near yourself today

As children to the rainbow's scarf,

            Or sunset's yellow play

To eyelids in the sepulchre.

            How still the dancer lies,

While color's revelations break,

            And blaze the butterflies!

XVIII. THE SPIRIT.

'T IS whiter than an Indian pipe,

            'T is dimmer than a lace; 

No stature has it, like a fog,

            When you approach the place.

Not any voice denotes it here,

            Or intimates it there;

A spirit, how doth it accost?

            What customs hath the air?

This limitless hyperbole

            Each one of us shall be;

'T is drama, if (hypothesis)

            It be not tragedy!

XIX. THE MONUMENT.


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SHE laid her docile crescent down,

            And this mechanic stone

Still states, to dates that have forgot,

            The news that she is gone.

So constant to its stolid trust,

            The shaft that never knew,

It shames the constancy that fled

            Before its emblem flew.

XX.

BLESS God, he went as soldiers,

            His musket on his breast;

Grant, God, he charge the bravest

            Of all the martial blest.

Please God, might I behold him

            In epauletted white,

I should not fear the foe then,

            I should not fear the fight.

XXI.

IMMORTAL is an ample word

            When what we need is by,

But when it leaves us for a time,

            'T is a necessity.

Of heaven above the firmest proof

            We fundamental know,

Except for its marauding hand,

            It had been heaven below.

XXII.


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WHERE every bird is bold to go,

            And bees abashless play,

The foreigner before he knocks

            Must thrust the tears away.

XXIII.

THE grave my little cottage is,

            Where, keeping house for thee,

I make my parlor orderly,

            And lay the marble tea,

For two divided, briefly,

            A cycle, it may be,

Till everlasting life unite

            In strong society.

XXIV.

THIS was in the white of the year,

            That was in the green,

Drifts were as difficult then to think

            As daisies now to be seen.

Looking back is best that is left,

            Or if it be before,

Retrospection is prospect's half,

            Sometimes almost more.

XXV.

SWEET hours have perished here;

            This is a mighty room;

Within its precincts hopes have played, 

            Now shadows in the tomb.


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XXVI.

ME! Come! My dazzled face

In such a shining place!

Me! Hear! My foreign ear

The sounds of welcome near! 

The saints shall meet

Our bashful feet.

My holiday shall be

That they remember me;

My paradise, the fame

That they pronounce my name.

XXVII. INVISIBLE.

FROM us she wandered now a year,

            Her tarrying unknown;

If wilderness prevent her feet,

            Or that ethereal zone

No eye hath seen and lived,

            We ignorant must be.

We only know what time of year

            We took the mystery.

XXVIII.

I WISH I knew that woman's name,

            So, when she comes this way,

To hold my life, and hold my ears,

            For fear I hear her say

She's 'sorry I am dead,' again,

            Just when the grave and I


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Have sobbed ourselves almost to sleep, 

            Our only lullaby.

XXIX. TRYING TO FORGET.

BEREAVED of all, I went abroad,

            No less bereaved to be

Upon a new peninsula, 

            The grave preceded me,

Obtained my lodgings ere myself,

            And when I sought my bed,

The grave it was, reposed upon

            The pillow for my head.

I waked, to find it first awake,

            I rose,  it followed me;

I tried to drop it in the crowd,

            To lose it in the sea,

In cups of artificial drowse

            To sleep its shape away, 

The grave was finished, but the spade

            Remained in memory.

XXX.

I FELT a funeral in my brain,

            And mourners, to and fro,

Kept treading, treading, till it seemed

            That sense was breaking through.

And when they all were seated,

            A service like a drum

Kept beating, beating, till I thought

            My mind was going numb.

And then I heard them lift a box,

            And creak across my soul

With those same boots of lead, again.

            Then space began to toll


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As all the heavens were a bell, 

            And Being but an ear,

And I and silence some strange race,

            Wrecked, solitary, here.

XXXI.

I MEANT to find her when I came;

            Death had the same design;

But the success was his, it seems,

            And the discomfit mine.

I meant to tell her how I longed

            For just this single time;

But Death had told her so the first,

            And she had hearkened him.

To wander now is my abode;

            To rest,  to rest would be

A privilege of hurricane

            To memory and me.

XXXII. WAITING.

I SING to use the waiting,

            My bonnet but to tie,

And shut the door unto my house;

            No more to do have I,

Till, his best step approaching,

            We journey to the day,

And tell each other how we sang

            To keep the dark away.

XXXIII.


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A SICKNESS of this world it most occasions

            When best men die;

A wishfulness their far condition

            To occupy.

A chief indifference, as foreign

            A world must be

Themselves forsake contented,

            For Deity.

XXXIV.

SUPERFLUOUS were the sun

            When excellence is dead;

He were superfluous every day,

            For every day is said

That syllable whose faith

            Just saves it from despair,

And whose 'I'll meet you' hesitates

            If love inquire, 'Where?'

Upon his dateless fame

            Our periods may lie,

As stars that drop anonymous

            From an abundant sky.

XXXV.

SO proud she was to die

            It made us all ashamed

That what we cherished, so unknown

            To her desire seemed.

So satisfied to go

            Where none of us should be,

Immediately, that anguish stooped

            Almost to jealousy.


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XXXVI. FAREWELL.

TIE the strings to my life, my Lord,

            Then I am ready to go!

Just a look at the horses 

            Rapid! That will do!

Put me in on the firmest side,

            So I shall never fall;

For we must ride to the Judgment,

            And it's partly down hill.

But never I mind the bridges,

            And never I mind the sea;

Held fast in everlasting race

            By my own choice and thee.

Goodby to the life I used to live,

            And the world I used to know;

And kiss the hills for me, just once;

            Now I am ready to go!

XXXVII.

THE dying need but little, dear, 

            A glass of water's all,

A flower's unobtrusive face

            To punctuate the wall,

A fan, perhaps, a friend's regret,

            And certainly that one

No color in the rainbow

            Perceives when you are gone.

XXXVIII. DEAD.

THERE's something quieter than sleep

            Within this inner room!


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It wears a sprig upon its breast,

            And will not tell its name.

Some touch it and some kiss it,

            Some chafe its idle hand;

It has a simple gravity

            I do not understand!

While simplehearted neighbors

            Chat of the 'early dead,'

We, prone to periphrasis,

            Remark that birds have fled!

XXXIX.

THE soul should always stand ajar,

            That if the heaven inquire,

He will not be obliged to wait,

            Or shy of troubling her.

Depart, before the host has slid

            The bolt upon the door,

To seek for the accomplished guest, 

            Her visitor no more.

XL.

THREE weeks passed since I had seen her, 

            Some disease had vexed;

'T was with text and village singing

            I beheld her next,

And a company  our pleasure

            To discourse alone;

Gracious now to me as any,

            Gracious unto none.

Borne, without dissent of either,

            To the parish night;

Of the separated people

            Which are out of sight?


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XLI.

I BREATHED enough to learn the trick, 

            And now, removed from air,

I simulate the breath so well,

            That one, to be quite sure 

The lungs are stirless, must descend

            Among the cunning cells,

And touch the pantomime himself.

            How cool the bellows feels! 

XLII.

I WONDER if the sepulchre

            Is not a lonesome way,

When men and boys, and larks and June

            Go down the fields to hay!

XLIII. JOY IN DEATH.

IF tolling bell I ask the cause.

            'A soul has gone to God,'

I'm answered in a lonesome tone;

            Is heaven then so sad?

That bells should joyful ring to tell

            A soul had gone to heaven,

Would seem to me the proper way

            A good news should be given.


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XLIV.

IF I may have it when it's dead

            I will contented be;

If just as soon as breath is out

            It shall belong to me,

Until they lock it in the grave,

            'T is bliss I cannot weigh,

For though they lock thee in the grave,

            Myself can hold the key.

Think of it, lover! I and thee

            Permitted face to face to be;

After a life, a death we'll say, 

            For death was that, and this is thee.

XLV.

BEFORE the ice is in the pools,

            Before the skaters go,

Or any cheek at nightfall

            Is tarnished by the snow,

Before the fields have finished,

            Before the Christmas tree,

Wonder upon wonder

            Will arrive to me!

What we touch the hems of

            On a summer's day;

What is only walking

            Just a bridge away;

That which sings so, speaks so,

            When there's no one here, 

Will the frock I wept in

            Answer me to wear?

XLVI. DYING.


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I HEARD a fly buzz when I died;

            The stillness round my form

Was like the stillness in the air

            Between the heaves of storm.

The eyes beside had wrung them dry,

            And breaths were gathering sure

For that last onset, when the king

            Be witnessed in his power.

I willed my keepsakes, signed away

            What portion of me I 

Could make assignable,  and then

            There interposed a fly,

With blue, uncertain, stumbling buzz,

            Between the light and me;

And then the windows failed, and then

            I could not see to see.

XLVII.

ADRIFT! A little boat adrift!

            And night is coming down!

Will no one guide a little boat

            Unto the nearest town?

So sailors say, on yesterday,

            Just as the dusk was brown,

One little boat gave up its strife,

            And gurgled down and down.

But angels say, on yesterday,

            Just as the dawn was red,

One little boat o'erspent with gales

Retrimmed its masts, redecked its sails

            Exultant, onward sped!

XLVIII.


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THERE's been a death in the opposite house

            As lately as today.

I know it by the numb look

            Such houses have alway.

The neighbors rustle in and out,

            The doctor drives away.

A window opens like a pod,

            Abrupt, mechanically;

Somebody flings a mattress out, 

            The children hurry by;

They wonder if It died on that, 

            I used to when a boy.

The minister goes stiffly in

            As if the house were his,

And he owned all the mourners now,

            And little boys besides;

And then the milliner, and the man

            Of the appalling trade,

To take the measure of the house.

            There'll be that dark parade

Of tassels and of coaches soon;

            It's easy as a sign, 

The intuition of the news

            In just a country town.

XLIX.

WE never know we go,  when we are going

            We jest and shut the door;

Fate following behind us bolts it,

            And we accost no more.

L. THE SOUL'S STORM.

IT struck me every day

            The lightning was as new

As if the cloud that instant slit


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And let the fire through.

It burned me in the night,

            It blistered in my dream;

It sickened, fresh upon my sight

            With every morning's beam.

I thought that storm was brief, 

            The maddest, quickest by;

But Nature lost the date of this,

            And left it in the sky.

LI.

WATER is taught by thirst;

Land, by the oceans passed;

            Transport, by throe;

Peace, by its battles told;

Love, by memorial mould;

            Birds, by the snow.

LII. THIRST.

WE thirst at first,  't is Nature's act;

            And later, when we die,

A little water supplicate

            Of fingers going by.

It intimates the finer want,

            Whose adequate supply

Is that great water in the west

            Termed immortality.

LIII.

A CLOCK stopped  not the mantel's;

            Geneva's farthest skill


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Can't put the puppet bowing

            That just now dangled still.

An awe came on the trinket!

            The figures hunched with pain,

Then quivered out of decimals

            Into degreeless noon.

It will not stir for doctors,

            This pendulum of snow;

The shopman importunes it,

            While cool, concernless No

Nods from the gilded pointers,

            Nods from the seconds slim,

Decades of arrogance between

            The dial life and him.

LIV. CHARLOTTE BRONTĖ'S GRAVE.

ALL overgrown by cunning moss,

            All interspersed with weed,

The little cage of 'Currer Bell,'

            In quiet Haworth laid.

This bird, observing others,

            When frosts too sharp became,

Retire to other latitudes,

            Quietly did the same,

But differed in returning;

            Since Yorkshire hills are green,

Yet not in all the nests I meet

            Can nightingale be seen.

Gathered from many wanderings,

            Gethsemane can tell

Through what transporting anguish 

            She reached the asphodel!

Soft fall the sounds of Eden

            Upon her puzzled ear;

Oh, what an afternoon for heaven,

            When 'Brontė' entered there!


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LV.

A TOAD can die of light!

Death is the common right

            Of toads and men, 

Of earl and midge

The privilege.

            Why swagger then?

The gnat's supremacy

Is large as thine.

LVI.

FAR from love the Heavenly Father

            Leads the chosen child;

Oftener through realm of briar

            Than the meadow mild,

Oftener by the claw of dragon

            Than the hand of friend,

Guides the little one predestined

            To the native land.

LVII. SLEEPING.

A LONG, long sleep, a famous sleep

            That makes no show for dawn

By stretch of limb or stir of lid, 

            An independent one.

Was ever idleness like this?

            Within a hut of stone

To bask the centuries away

            Nor once look up for noon?


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LVIII. RETROSPECT.

'T WAS just this time last year I died.

            I know I heard the corn,

When I was carried by the farms, 

            It had the tassels on.

I thought how yellow it would look

            When Richard went to mill;

And then I wanted to get out,

            But something held my will.

I thought just how red apples wedged

            The stubble's joints between;

And carts went stooping round the fields

            To take the pumpkins in.

I wondered which would miss me least,

            And when Thanksgiving came,

If father 'd multiply the plates

            To make an even sum.

And if my stocking hung too high,

            Would it blur the Christmas glee,

That not a Santa Claus could reach

            The altitude of me? 

But this sort grieved myself, and so

            I thought how it would be

When just this time, some perfect year,

            Themselves should come to me.

LIX. ETERNITY.

ON this wondrous sea,

Sailing silently,

            Ho! pilot, ho!

Knowest thou the shore

Where no breakers roar,

            Where the storm is o'er?

In the silent west

Many sails at rest,

            Their anchors fast;


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Thither I pilot thee, 

Land, ho! Eternity!

            Ashore at last!


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1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Poems by Emily Dickinson Third Series, page = 4

   3. Edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and T.W. Higginson, page = 4