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Poems by Emily Dickinson Second Series

Page 5

by Emily Dickinson


  And he unrolled his feathers

  And rowed him softer home

  Than oars divide the ocean,

  Too silver for a seam,

  Or butterflies, off banks of noon,

  Leap, plashless, as they swim.

  XXIV. THE SNAKE.

  A NARROW fellow in the grass

  Occasionally rides;

  You may have met him, -- did you not,

  His notice sudden is.

  The grass divides as with a comb,

  A spotted shaft is seen;

  And then it closes at your feet

  And opens further on.

  He likes a boggy acre,

  A floor too cool for corn.

  Yet when a child, and barefoot,

  I more than once, at morn,

  Have passed, I thought, a whip-lash

  Unbraiding in the sun, --

  When, stooping to secure it,

  It wrinkled, and was gone.

  Several of nature's people

  I know, and they know me;

  I feel for them a transport

  Of cordiality;

  But never met this fellow,

  Attended or alone,

  Without a tighter breathing,

  And zero at the bone.

  XXV. THE MUSHROOM.

  THE mushroom is the elf of plants,

  At evening it is not;

  At morning in a truffled hut

  It stops upon a spot

  As if it tarried always;

  And yet its whole career

  Is shorter than a snake's delay,

  And fleeter than a tare.

  'T is vegetation's juggler,

  The germ of alibi;

  Doth like a bubble antedate,

  And like a bubble hie.

  I feel as if the grass were pleased

  To have it intermit;

  The surreptitious scion

  Of summer's circumspect.

  Had nature any outcast face,

  Could she a son contemn,

  Had nature an Iscariot,

  That mushroom, -- it is him.

  XXVI. THE STORM.

  THERE came a wind like a bugle;

  It quivered through the grass,

  And a green chill upon the heat

  So ominous did pass

  We barred the windows and the doors

  As from an emerald ghost;

  The doom's electric moccason

  That very instant passed.

  On a strange mob of panting trees,

  And fences fled away,

  And rivers where the houses ran

  The living looked that day.

  The bell within the steeple wild

  The flying tidings whirled.

  How much can come

  And much can go,

  And yet abide the world!

  XXVII. THE SPIDER.

  A SPIDER sewed at night

  Without a light

  Upon an arc of white.

  If ruff it was of dame

  Or shroud of gnome,

  Himself, himself inform.

  Of immortality

  His strategy

  Was physiognomy.

  XXVIII.

  I KNOW a place where summer strives

  With such a practised frost,

  She each year leads her daisies back,

  Recording briefly, "Lost."

  But when the south wind stirs the pools

  And struggles in the lanes,

  Her heart misgives her for her vow,

  And she pours soft refrains

  Into the lap of adamant,

  And spices, and the dew,

  That stiffens quietly to quartz,

  Upon her amber shoe.

  XXIX.

  THE one that could repeat the summer day

  Were greater than itself, though he

  Minutest of mankind might be.

  And who could reproduce the sun,

  At period of going down --

  The lingering and the stain, I mean --

  When Orient has been outgrown,

  And Occident becomes unknown,

  His name remain.

  XXX. THE WlND'S VISIT.

  THE wind tapped like a tired man,

  And like a host, "Come in,"

  I boldly answered; entered then

  My residence within

  A rapid, footless guest,

  To offer whom a chair

  Were as impossible as hand

  A sofa to the air.

  No bone had he to bind him,

  His speech was like the push

  Of numerous humming-birds at once

  From a superior bush.

  His countenance a billow,

  His fingers, if he pass,

  Let go a music, as of tunes

  Blown tremulous in glass.

  He visited, still flitting;

  Then, like a timid man,

  Again he tapped -- 't was flurriedly --

  And I became alone.

  XXXI.

  NATURE rarer uses yellow

  Than another hue;

  Saves she all of that for sunsets, --

  Prodigal of blue,

  Spending scarlet like a woman,

  Yellow she affords

  Only scantly and selectly,

  Like a lover's words.

  XXXII. GOSSIP.

  THE leaves, like women, interchange

  Sagacious confidence;

  Somewhat of nods, and somewhat of

  Portentous inference,

  The parties in both cases

  Enjoining secrecy, --

  Inviolable compact

  To notoriety.

  XXXIII. SIMPLICITY.

  HOW happy is the little stone

  That rambles in the road alone,

  And does n't care about careers,

  And exigencies never fears;

  Whose coat of elemental brown

  A passing universe put on;

  And independent as the sun,

  Associates or glows alone,

  Fulfilling absolute decree

  In casual simplicity.

  XXXIV. STORM.

  IT sounded as if the streets were running,

  And then the streets stood still.

  Eclipse was all we could see at the window,

  And awe was all we could feel.

  By and by the boldest stole out of his covert,

  To see if time was there.

  Nature was in her beryl apron,

  Mixing fresher air.

  XXXV. THE RAT.

  THE rat is the concisest tenant.

  He pays no rent, --

  Repudiates the obligation,

  On schemes intent.

  Balking our wit

  To sound or circumvent,

  Hate cannot harm

  A foe so reticent.

  Neither decree

  Prohibits him,

  Lawful as

  Equilibrium.

  XXXVI.

  FREQUENTLY the woods are pink,

  Frequently are brown;

  Frequently the hills undress

  Behind my native town.

  Oft a head is crested

  I was wont to see,

  And as oft a cranny

  Where it used to be.

  And the earth, they tell me,

  On its axis turned, --

  Wonderful rotation

  By but twelve performed!

  XXXVII. A THUNDER-STORM.

  THE wind begun to rock the grass

  With threatening tunes and low, --

  He flung a menace at the earth,

  A menace at the sky.

  The leaves unhooked themselves from trees

  And started all abroad;

  The dust did scoop itself like hands

  And throw away the road.

  The wagons quickened on the streets,

  The thunder hurried slow;

  The lightning showed a yellow beak,
/>
  And then a livid claw.

  The birds put up the bars to nests,

  The cattle fled to barns;

  There came one drop of giant rain,

  And then, as if the hands

  That held the dams had parted hold,

  The waters wrecked the sky,

  But overlooked my father's house,

  Just quartering a tree.

  XXXVIII. WITH FLOWERS.

  SOUTH winds jostle them,

  Bumblebees come,

  Hover, hesitate,

  Drink, and are gone.

  Butterflies pause

  On their passage Cashmere;

  I, softly plucking,

  Present them here!

  XXXIX. SUNSET.

  WHERE ships of purple gently toss

  On seas of daffodil,

  Fantastic sailors mingle,

  And then -- the wharf is still.

  XL.

  SHE sweeps with many-colored brooms,

  And leaves the shreds behind;

  Oh, housewife in the evening west,

  Come back, and dust the pond!

  You dropped a purple ravelling in,

  You dropped an amber thread;

  And now you 're littered all the East

  With duds of emerald!

  And still she plies her spotted brooms,

  And still the aprons fly,

  Till brooms fade softly into stars --

  And then I come away.

  XLI.

  LIKE mighty footlights burned the red

  At bases of the trees, --

  The far theatricals of day

  Exhibiting to these.

  'T was universe that did applaud

  While, chiefest of the crowd,

  Enabled by his royal dress,

  Myself distinguished God.

  XLII. PROBLEMS.

  BRING me the sunset in a cup,

  Reckon the morning's flagons up,

  And say how many dew;

  Tell me how far the morning leaps,

  Tell me what time the weaver sleeps

  Who spun the breadths of blue!

  Write me how many notes there be

  In the new robin's ecstasy

  Among astonished boughs;

  How many trips the tortoise makes,

  How many cups the bee partakes, --

  The debauchee of dews!

  Also, who laid the rainbow's piers,

  Also, who leads the docile spheres

  By withes of supple blue?

  Whose fingers string the stalactite,

  Who counts the wampum of the night,

  To see that none is due?

  Who built this little Alban house

  And shut the windows down so close

  My spirit cannot see?

  Who 'll let me out some gala day,

  With implements to fly away,

  Passing pomposity?

  XLIII. THE JUGGLER OF DAY.

  BLAZING in gold and quenching in purple,

  Leaping like leopards to the sky,

  Then at the feet of the old horizon

  Laying her spotted face, to die;

  Stooping as low as the otter's window,

  Touching the roof and tinting the barn,

  Kissing her bonnet to the meadow, --

  And the juggler of day is gone!

  XLIV. MY CRICKET.

  FARTHER in summer than the birds,

  Pathetic from the grass,

  A minor nation celebrates

  Its unobtrusive mass.

  No ordinance is seen,

  So gradual the grace,

  A pensive custom it becomes,

  Enlarging loneliness.

  Antiquest felt at noon

  When August, burning low,

  Calls forth this spectral canticle,

  Repose to typify.

  Remit as yet no grace,

  No furrow on the glow,

  Yet a druidic difference

  Enhances nature now.

  XLV.

  AS imperceptibly as grief

  The summer lapsed away, --

  Too imperceptible, at last,

  To seem like perfidy.

  A quietness distilled,

  As twilight long begun,

  Or Nature, spending with herself

  Sequestered afternoon.

  The dusk drew earlier in,

  The morning foreign shone, --

  A courteous, yet harrowing grace,

  As guest who would be gone.

  And thus, without a wing,

  Or service of a keel,

  Our summer made her light escape

  Into the beautiful.

  XLVI.

  IT can't be summer, -- that got through;

  It 's early yet for spring;

  There 's that long town of white to cross

  Before the blackbirds sing.

  It can't be dying, -- it's too rouge, --

  The dead shall go in white.

  So sunset shuts my question down

  With clasps of chrysolite.

  XLVII. SUMMER'S OBSEQUIES.

  THE gentian weaves her fringes,

  The maple's loom is red.

  My departing blossoms

  Obviate parade.

  A brief, but patient illness,

  An hour to prepare;

  And one, below this morning,

  Is where the angels are.

  It was a short procession, --

  The bobolink was there,

  An aged bee addressed us,

  And then we knelt in prayer.

  We trust that she was willing, --

  We ask that we may be.

  Summer, sister, seraph,

  Let us go with thee!

  In the name of the bee

  And of the butterfly

  And of the breeze, amen!

  XLVIII. FRINGED GENTIAN.

  GOD made a little gentian;

  It tried to be a rose

  And failed, and all the summer laughed.

  But just before the snows

  There came a purple creature

  That ravished all the hill;

  And summer hid her forehead,

  And mockery was still.

  The frosts were her condition;

  The Tyrian would not come

  Until the North evoked it.

  "Creator! shall I bloom?"

  XLIX. NOVEMBER.

  BESIDES the autumn poets sing,

  A few prosaic days

  A little this side of the snow

  And that side of the haze.

  A few incisive mornings,

  A few ascetic eyes, --

  Gone Mr. Bryant's golden-rod,

  And Mr. Thomson's sheaves.

  Still is the bustle in the brook,

  Sealed are the spicy valves;

  Mesmeric fingers softly touch

  The eyes of many elves.

  Perhaps a squirrel may remain,

  My sentiments to share.

  Grant me, O Lord, a sunny mind,

  Thy windy will to bear!

  L. THE SNOW.

  IT sifts from leaden sieves,

  It powders all the wood,

  It fills with alabaster wool

  The wrinkles of the road.

  It makes an even face

  Of mountain and of plain, --

  Unbroken forehead from the east

  Unto the east again.

  It reaches to the fence,

  It wraps it, rail by rail,

  Till it is lost in fleeces;

  It flings a crystal veil

  On stump and stack and stem, --

  The summer's empty room,

  Acres of seams where harvests were,

  Recordless, but for them.

  It ruffles wrists of posts,

  As ankles of a queen, --

  Then stills its artisans like ghosts,

  Denying they have been.

  LI. THE BLUE JAY.

  NO
brigadier throughout the year

  So civic as the jay.

  A neighbor and a warrior too,

  With shrill felicity

  Pursuing winds that censure us

  A February day,

  The brother of the universe

  Was never blown away.

  The snow and he are intimate;

  I 've often seen them play

  When heaven looked upon us all

  With such severity,

  I felt apology were due

  To an insulted sky,

  Whose pompous frown was nutriment

  To their temerity.

  The pillow of this daring head

  Is pungent evergreens;

  His larder -- terse and militant --

  Unknown, refreshing things;

  His character a tonic,

  His future a dispute;

  Unfair an immortality

  That leaves this neighbor out.

  IV. TIME AND ETERNITY.

  I.

  LET down the bars, O Death!

  The tired flocks come in

  Whose bleating ceases to repeat,

  Whose wandering is done.

  Thine is the stillest night,

  Thine the securest fold;

  Too near thou art for seeking thee,

  Too tender to be told.

  II.

  GOING to heaven!

  I don 't know when,

  Pray do not ask me how, --

  Indeed, I 'm too astonished

  To think of answering you!

  Going to heaven! --

  How dim it sounds!

 

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