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Complete Poems by Emily Dickinson

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by Emily Dickinson


  XII.

  PSALM OF THE DAY.

  A something in a summer's day,

  As slow her flambeaux burn away,

  Which solemnizes me.

  A something in a summer's noon, —

  An azure depth, a wordless tune,

  Transcending ecstasy.

  And still within a summer's night

  A something so transporting bright,

  I clap my hands to see;

  Then veil my too inspecting face,

  Lest such a subtle, shimmering grace

  Flutter too far for me.

  The wizard-fingers never rest,

  The purple brook within the breast

  Still chafes its narrow bed;

  Still rears the East her amber flag,

  Guides still the sun along the crag

  His caravan of red,

  Like flowers that heard the tale of dews,

  But never deemed the dripping prize

  Awaited their low brows;

  Or bees, that thought the summer's name

  Some rumor of delirium

  No summer could for them;

  Or Arctic creature, dimly stirred

  By tropic hint, — some travelled bird

  Imported to the wood;

  Or wind's bright signal to the ear,

  Making that homely and severe,

  Contented, known, before

  The heaven unexpected came,

  To lives that thought their worshipping

  A too presumptuous psalm.

  XIII.

  THE SEA OF SUNSET.

  This is the land the sunset washes,

  These are the banks of the Yellow Sea;

  Where it rose, or whither it rushes,

  These are the western mystery!

  Night after night her purple traffic

  Strews the landing with opal bales;

  Merchantmen poise upon horizons,

  Dip, and vanish with fairy sails.

  XIV.

  PURPLE CLOVER.

  There is a flower that bees prefer,

  And butterflies desire;

  To gain the purple democrat

  The humming-birds aspire.

  And whatsoever insect pass,

  A honey bears away

  Proportioned to his several dearth

  And her capacity.

  Her face is rounder than the moon,

  And ruddier than the gown

  Of orchis in the pasture,

  Or rhododendron worn.

  She doth not wait for June;

  Before the world is green

  Her sturdy little countenance

  Against the wind is seen,

  Contending with the grass,

  Near kinsman to herself,

  For privilege of sod and sun,

  Sweet litigants for life.

  And when the hills are full,

  And newer fashions blow,

  Doth not retract a single spice

  For pang of jealousy.

  Her public is the noon,

  Her providence the sun,

  Her progress by the bee proclaimed

  In sovereign, swerveless tune.

  The bravest of the host,

  Surrendering the last,

  Nor even of defeat aware

  When cancelled by the frost.

  XV.

  THE BEE.

  Like trains of cars on tracks of plush

  I hear the level bee:

  A jar across the flowers goes,

  Their velvet masonry

  Withstands until the sweet assault

  Their chivalry consumes,

  While he, victorious, tilts away

  To vanquish other blooms.

  His feet are shod with gauze,

  His helmet is of gold;

  His breast, a single onyx

  With chrysoprase, inlaid.

  His labor is a chant,

  His idleness a tune;

  Oh, for a bee's experience

  Of clovers and of noon!

  XVI.

  Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn

  Indicative that suns go down;

  The notice to the startled grass

  That darkness is about to pass.

  XVII.

  As children bid the guest good-night,

  And then reluctant turn,

  My flowers raise their pretty lips,

  Then put their nightgowns on.

  As children caper when they wake,

  Merry that it is morn,

  My flowers from a hundred cribs

  Will peep, and prance again.

  XVIII.

  Angels in the early morning

  May be seen the dews among,

  Stooping, plucking, smiling, flying:

  Do the buds to them belong?

  Angels when the sun is hottest

  May be seen the sands among,

  Stooping, plucking, sighing, flying;

  Parched the flowers they bear along.

  XIX.

  So bashful when I spied her,

  So pretty, so ashamed!

  So hidden in her leaflets,

  Lest anybody find;

  So breathless till I passed her,

  So helpless when I turned

  And bore her, struggling, blushing,

  Her simple haunts beyond!

  For whom I robbed the dingle,

  For whom betrayed the dell,

  Many will doubtless ask me,

  But I shall never tell!

  XX.

  TWO WORLDS.

  It makes no difference abroad,

  The seasons fit the same,

  The mornings blossom into noons,

  And split their pods of flame.

  Wild-flowers kindle in the woods,

  The brooks brag all the day;

  No blackbird bates his jargoning

  For passing Calvary.

  Auto-da-fe and judgment

  Are nothing to the bee;

  His separation from his rose

  To him seems misery.

  XXI.

  THE MOUNTAIN.

  The mountain sat upon the plain

  In his eternal chair,

  His observation omnifold,

  His inquest everywhere.

  The seasons prayed around his knees,

  Like children round a sire:

  Grandfather of the days is he,

  Of dawn the ancestor.

  XXII.

  A DAY.

  I'll tell you how the sun rose, —

  A ribbon at a time.

  The steeples swam in amethyst,

  The news like squirrels ran.

  The hills untied their bonnets,

  The bobolinks begun.

  Then I said softly to myself,

  "That must have been the sun!"

  * * *

  But how he set, I know not.

  There seemed a purple stile

  Which little yellow boys and girls

  Were climbing all the while

  Till when they reached the other side,

  A dominie in gray

  Put gently up the evening bars,

  And led the flock away.

  XXIII.

  The butterfly's assumption-gown,

  In chrysoprase apartments hung,

  This afternoon put on.

  How condescending to descend,

  And be of buttercups the friend

  In a New England town!

  XXIV.

  THE WIND.

  Of all the sounds despatched abroad,

  There's not a charge to me

  Like that old measure in the boughs,

  That phraseless melody

  The wind does, working like a hand

  Whose fingers brush the sky,

  Then quiver down, with tufts of tune

  Permitted gods and me.

  When winds go round and round in bands,

  And thrum upon the door,

  And birds t
ake places overhead,

  To bear them orchestra,

  I crave him grace, of summer boughs,

  If such an outcast be,

  He never heard that fleshless chant

  Rise solemn in the tree,

  As if some caravan of sound

  On deserts, in the sky,

  Had broken rank,

  Then knit, and passed

  In seamless company.

  XXV.

  DEATH AND LIFE.

  Apparently with no surprise

  To any happy flower,

  The frost beheads it at its play

  In accidental power.

  The blond assassin passes on,

  The sun proceeds unmoved

  To measure off another day

  For an approving God.

  XXVI.

  'T was later when the summer went

  Than when the cricket came,

  And yet we knew that gentle clock

  Meant nought but going home.

  'T was sooner when the cricket went

  Than when the winter came,

  Yet that pathetic pendulum

  Keeps esoteric time.

  XXVII.

  INDIAN SUMMER.

  These are the days when birds come back,

  A very few, a bird or two,

  To take a backward look.

  These are the days when skies put on

  The old, old sophistries of June, —

  A blue and gold mistake.

  Oh, fraud that cannot cheat the bee,

  Almost thy plausibility

  Induces my belief,

  Till ranks of seeds their witness bear,

  And softly through the altered air

  Hurries a timid leaf!

  Oh, sacrament of summer days,

  Oh, last communion in the haze,

  Permit a child to join,

  Thy sacred emblems to partake,

  Thy consecrated bread to break,

  Taste thine immortal wine!

  XXVIII.

  AUTUMN.

  The morns are meeker than they were,

  The nuts are getting brown;

  The berry's cheek is plumper,

  The rose is out of town.

  The maple wears a gayer scarf,

  The field a scarlet gown.

  Lest I should be old-fashioned,

  I'll put a trinket on.

  XXIX.

  BECLOUDED.

  The sky is low, the clouds are mean,

  A travelling flake of snow

  Across a barn or through a rut

  Debates if it will go.

  A narrow wind complains all day

  How some one treated him;

  Nature, like us, is sometimes caught

  Without her diadem.

  XXX.

  THE HEMLOCK.

  I think the hemlock likes to stand

  Upon a marge of snow;

  It suits his own austerity,

  And satisfies an awe

  That men must slake in wilderness,

  Or in the desert cloy, —

  An instinct for the hoar, the bald,

  Lapland's necessity.

  The hemlock's nature thrives on cold;

  The gnash of northern winds

  Is sweetest nutriment to him,

  His best Norwegian wines.

  To satin races he is nought;

  But children on the Don

  Beneath his tabernacles play,

  And Dnieper wrestlers run.

  XXXI.

  There's a certain slant of light,

  On winter afternoons,

  That oppresses, like the weight

  Of cathedral tunes.

  Heavenly hurt it gives us;

  We can find no scar,

  But internal difference

  Where the meanings are.

  None may teach it anything,

  ' T is the seal, despair, —

  An imperial affliction

  Sent us of the air.

  When it comes, the landscape listens,

  Shadows hold their breath;

  When it goes, 't is like the distance

  On the look of death.

  IV. TIME AND ETERNITY.

  I.

  One dignity delays for all,

  One mitred afternoon.

  None can avoid this purple,

  None evade this crown.

  Coach it insures, and footmen,

  Chamber and state and throng;

  Bells, also, in the village,

  As we ride grand along.

  What dignified attendants,

  What service when we pause!

  How loyally at parting

  Their hundred hats they raise!

  How pomp surpassing ermine,

  When simple you and I

  Present our meek escutcheon,

  And claim the rank to die!

  II.

  TOO LATE.

  Delayed till she had ceased to know,

  Delayed till in its vest of snow

  Her loving bosom lay.

  An hour behind the fleeting breath,

  Later by just an hour than death, —

  Oh, lagging yesterday!

  Could she have guessed that it would be;

  Could but a crier of the glee

  Have climbed the distant hill;

  Had not the bliss so slow a pace, —

  Who knows but this surrendered face

  Were undefeated still?

  Oh, if there may departing be

  Any forgot by victory

  In her imperial round,

  Show them this meek apparelled thing,

  That could not stop to be a king,

  Doubtful if it be crowned!

  III.

  ASTRA CASTRA.

  Departed to the judgment,

  A mighty afternoon;

  Great clouds like ushers leaning,

  Creation looking on.

  The flesh surrendered, cancelled,

  The bodiless begun;

  Two worlds, like audiences, disperse

  And leave the soul alone.

  IV.

  Safe in their alabaster chambers,

  Untouched by morning and untouched by noon,

  Sleep the meek members of the resurrection,

  Rafter of satin, and roof of stone.

  Light laughs the breeze in her castle of sunshine;

  Babbles the bee in a stolid ear;

  Pipe the sweet birds in ignorant cadence, —

  Ah, what sagacity perished here!

  Grand go the years in the crescent above them;

  Worlds scoop their arcs, and firmaments row,

  Diadems drop and Doges surrender,

  Soundless as dots on a disk of snow.

  V.

  On this long storm the rainbow rose,

  On this late morn the sun;

  The clouds, like listless elephants,

  Horizons straggled down.

  The birds rose smiling in their nests,

  The gales indeed were done;

  Alas! how heedless were the eyes

  On whom the summer shone!

  The quiet nonchalance of death

  No daybreak can bestir;

  The slow archangel's syllables

  Must awaken her.

  VI.

  FROM THE CHRYSALIS.

  My cocoon tightens, colors tease,

  I'm feeling for the air;

  A dim capacity for wings

  Degrades the dress I wear.

  A power of butterfly must be

  The aptitude to fly,

  Meadows of majesty concedes

  And easy sweeps of sky.

  So I must baffle at the hint

  And cipher at the sign,

  And make much blunder, if at last

  I take the clew divine.

  VII.

  SETTING SAIL.

  Exultation is the going

  Of an inland soul to sea, —

&nb
sp; Past the houses, past the headlands,

  Into deep eternity!

  Bred as we, among the mountains,

  Can the sailor understand

  The divine intoxication

  Of the first league out from land?

  VIII.

  Look back on time with kindly eyes,

  He doubtless did his best;

  How softly sinks his trembling sun

  In human nature's west!

  IX.

  A train went through a burial gate,

  A bird broke forth and sang,

  And trilled, and quivered, and shook his throat

  Till all the churchyard rang;

  And then adjusted his little notes,

  And bowed and sang again.

  Doubtless, he thought it meet of him

  To say good-by to men.

  X.

  I died for beauty, but was scarce

  Adjusted in the tomb,

  When one who died for truth was lain

  In an adjoining room.

  He questioned softly why I failed?

  "For beauty," I replied.

  "And I for truth, — the two are one;

  We brethren are," he said.

  And so, as kinsmen met a night,

  We talked between the rooms,

  Until the moss had reached our lips,

  And covered up our names.

  XI.

  "TROUBLED ABOUT MANY THINGS."

  How many times these low feet staggered,

  Only the soldered mouth can tell;

  Try! can you stir the awful rivet?

  Try! can you lift the hasps of steel?

  Stroke the cool forehead, hot so often,

  Lift, if you can, the listless hair;

  Handle the adamantine fingers

  Never a thimble more shall wear.

  Buzz the dull flies on the chamber window;

  Brave shines the sun through the freckled pane;

  Fearless the cobweb swings from the ceiling —

  Indolent housewife, in daisies lain!

  XII.

  REAL.

  I like a look of agony,

  Because I know it 's true;

  Men do not sham convulsion,

  Nor simulate a throe.

  The eyes glaze once, and that is death.

  Impossible to feign

  The beads upon the forehead

  By homely anguish strung.

  XIII.

  THE FUNERAL.

  That short, potential stir

  That each can make but once,

  That bustle so illustrious

  'T is almost consequence,

  Is the eclat of death.

  Oh, thou unknown renown

  That not a beggar would accept,

  Had he the power to spurn!

  XIV.

  I went to thank her,

 

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