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  • Project Gutenberg's Poems: Three Series, Complete, by Emily Dickinson
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  • Title: Poems: Three Series, Complete
  • Author: Emily Dickinson
  • Release Date: May 3, 2004 [EBook #12242]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS: THREE SERIES, COMPLETE ***
  • Produced by Jim Tinsley
  • POEMS
  • by EMILY DICKINSON
  • Edited by two of her friends
  • MABEL LOOMIS TODD and T.W. HIGGINSON
  • PREFACE.
  • The verses of Emily Dickinson belong emphatically to what Emerson
  • long since called "the Poetry of the Portfolio,"--something produced
  • absolutely without the thought of publication, and solely by way of
  • expression of the writer's own mind. Such verse must inevitably
  • forfeit whatever advantage lies in the discipline of public criticism
  • and the enforced conformity to accepted ways. On the other hand, it
  • may often gain something through the habit of freedom and the
  • unconventional utterance of daring thoughts. In the case of the
  • present author, there was absolutely no choice in the matter; she
  • must write thus, or not at all. A recluse by temperament and habit,
  • literally spending years without setting her foot beyond the
  • doorstep, and many more years during which her walks were strictly
  • limited to her father's grounds, she habitually concealed her mind,
  • like her person, from all but a very few friends; and it was with
  • great difficulty that she was persuaded to print, during her
  • lifetime, three or four poems. Yet she wrote verses in great
  • abundance; and though brought curiously indifferent to all
  • conventional rules, had yet a rigorous literary standard of her own,
  • and often altered a word many times to suit an ear which had its own
  • tenacious fastidiousness.
  • Miss Dickinson was born in Amherst, Mass., Dec. 10, 1830, and died
  • there May 15, 1886. Her father, Hon. Edward Dickinson, was the
  • leading lawyer of Amherst, and was treasurer of the well-known
  • college there situated. It was his custom once a year to hold a large
  • reception at his house, attended by all the families connected with
  • the institution and by the leading people of the town. On these
  • occasions his daughter Emily emerged from her wonted retirement and
  • did her part as gracious hostess; nor would any one have known from
  • her manner, I have been told, that this was not a daily occurrence.
  • The annual occasion once past, she withdrew again into her seclusion,
  • and except for a very few friends was as invisible to the world as if
  • she had dwelt in a nunnery. For myself, although I had corresponded
  • with her for many years, I saw her but twice face to face, and
  • brought away the impression of something as unique and remote as
  • Undine or Mignon or Thekla.
  • This selection from her poems is published to meet the desire of her
  • personal friends, and especially of her surviving sister. It is
  • believed that the thoughtful reader will find in these pages a
  • quality more suggestive of the poetry of William Blake than of
  • anything to be elsewhere found,--flashes of wholly original and
  • profound insight into nature and life; words and phrases exhibiting
  • an extraordinary vividness of descriptive and imaginative power, yet
  • often set in a seemingly whimsical or even rugged frame. They are
  • here published as they were written, with very few and superficial
  • changes; although it is fair to say that the titles have been
  • assigned, almost invariably, by the editors. In many cases these
  • verses will seem to the reader like poetry torn up by the roots, with
  • rain and dew and earth still clinging to them, giving a freshness and
  • a fragrance not otherwise to be conveyed. In other cases, as in the
  • few poems of shipwreck or of mental conflict, we can only wonder at
  • the gift of vivid imagination by which this recluse woman can
  • delineate, by a few touches, the very crises of physical or mental
  • struggle. And sometimes again we catch glimpses of a lyric strain,
  • sustained perhaps but for a line or two at a time, and making the
  • reader regret its sudden cessation. But the main quality of these
  • poems is that of extraordinary grasp and insight, uttered with an
  • uneven vigor sometimes exasperating, seemingly wayward, but really
  • unsought and inevitable. After all, when a thought takes one's
  • breath away, a lesson on grammar seems an impertinence. As Ruskin
  • wrote in his earlier and better days, "No weight nor mass nor beauty
  • of execution can outweigh one grain or fragment of thought."
  • ---Thomas Wentworth Higginson
  • TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
  • As is well documented, Emily Dickinson's poems were edited in these
  • early editions by her friends, better to fit the conventions of the
  • times. In particular, her dashes, often small enough to appear
  • as dots, became commas and semi-colons.
  • In the second series of poems published, a facsimile of her
  • handwritten poem which her editors titled "Renunciation" is given,
  • and I here transcribe that manuscript as faithfully as I can,
  • showing _underlined_ words thus.
  • There came a day - at Summer's full -
  • Entirely for me -
  • I thought that such were for the Saints -
  • Where Resurrections - be -
  • The sun - as common - went abroad -
  • The flowers - accustomed - blew,
  • As if no soul - that solstice passed -
  • Which maketh all things - new -
  • The time was scarce profaned - by speech -
  • The falling of a word
  • Was needless - as at Sacrament -
  • The _Wardrobe_ - of our Lord!
  • Each was to each - the sealed church -
  • Permitted to commune - _this_ time -
  • Lest we too awkward show
  • At Supper of "the Lamb."
  • The hours slid fast - as hours will -
  • Clutched tight - by greedy hands -
  • So - faces on two Decks look back -
  • Bound to _opposing_ lands.
  • And so, when all the time had leaked,
  • Without external sound,
  • Each bound the other's Crucifix -
  • We gave no other bond -
  • Sufficient troth - that we shall _rise_,
  • Deposed - at length the Grave -
  • To that new marriage -
  • _Justified_ - through Calvaries - of Love!
  • From the handwriting, it is not always clear which are dashes,
  • which are commas and which are periods, nor it is entirely
  • clear which initial letters are capitalized.
  • However, this transcription may be compared with the edited
  • version in the main text to get a flavor of the changes made
  • in these early editions.
  • ---JT
  • This is my letter to the world,
  • That never wrote to me, --
  • The simple news that Nature told,
  • With tender majesty.
  • Her message is committed
  • To hands I cannot see;
  • For love of her, sweet countrymen,
  • Judge tenderly of me!
  • I. LIFE.
  • I.
  • SUCCESS.
  • [Published in "A Masque of Poets"
  • at the request of "H.H.," the author's
  • fellow-townswoman and friend.]
  • Success is counted sweetest
  • By those who ne'er succeed.
  • To comprehend a nectar
  • Requires sorest need.
  • Not one of all the purple host
  • Who took the flag to-day
  • Can tell the definition,
  • So clear, of victory,
  • As he, defeated, dying,
  • On whose forbidden ear
  • The distant strains of triumph
  • Break, agonized and clear!
  • II.
  • Our share of night to bear,
  • Our share of morning,
  • Our blank in bliss to fill,
  • Our blank in scorning.
  • Here a star, and there a star,
  • Some lose their way.
  • Here a mist, and there a mist,
  • Afterwards -- day!
  • III.
  • ROUGE ET NOIR.
  • Soul, wilt thou toss again?
  • By just such a hazard
  • Hundreds have lost, indeed,
  • But tens have won an all.
  • Angels' breathless ballot
  • Lingers to record thee;
  • Imps in eager caucus
  • Raffle for my soul.
  • IV.
  • ROUGE GAGNE.
  • 'T is so much joy! 'T is so much joy!
  • If I should fail, what poverty!
  • And yet, as poor as I
  • Have ventured all upon a throw;
  • Have gained! Yes! Hesitated so
  • This side the victory!
  • Life is but life, and death but death!
  • Bliss is but bliss, and breath but breath!
  • And if, indeed, I fail,
  • At least to know the worst is sweet.
  • Defeat means nothing but defeat,
  • No drearier can prevail!
  • And if I gain, -- oh, gun at sea,
  • Oh, bells that in the steeples be,
  • At first repeat it slow!
  • For heaven is a different thing
  • Conjectured, and waked sudden in,
  • And might o'erwhelm me so!
  • V.
  • Glee! The great storm is over!
  • Four have recovered the land;
  • Forty gone down together
  • Into the boiling sand.
  • Ring, for the scant salvation!
  • Toll, for the bonnie souls, --
  • Neighbor and friend and bridegroom,
  • Spinning upon the shoals!
  • How they will tell the shipwreck
  • When winter shakes the door,
  • Till the children ask, "But the forty?
  • Did they come back no more?"
  • Then a silence suffuses the story,
  • And a softness the teller's eye;
  • And the children no further question,
  • And only the waves reply.
  • VI.
  • If I can stop one heart from breaking,
  • I shall not live in vain;
  • If I can ease one life the aching,
  • Or cool one pain,
  • Or help one fainting robin
  • Unto his nest again,
  • I shall not live in vain.
  • VII.
  • ALMOST!
  • Within my reach!
  • I could have touched!
  • I might have chanced that way!
  • Soft sauntered through the village,
  • Sauntered as soft away!
  • So unsuspected violets
  • Within the fields lie low,
  • Too late for striving fingers
  • That passed, an hour ago.
  • VIII.
  • A wounded deer leaps highest,
  • I've heard the hunter tell;
  • 'T is but the ecstasy of death,
  • And then the brake is still.
  • The smitten rock that gushes,
  • The trampled steel that springs;
  • A cheek is always redder
  • Just where the hectic stings!
  • Mirth is the mail of anguish,
  • In which it cautions arm,
  • Lest anybody spy the blood
  • And "You're hurt" exclaim!
  • IX.
  • The heart asks pleasure first,
  • And then, excuse from pain;
  • And then, those little anodynes
  • That deaden suffering;
  • And then, to go to sleep;
  • And then, if it should be
  • The will of its Inquisitor,
  • The liberty to die.
  • X.
  • IN A LIBRARY.
  • A precious, mouldering pleasure 't is
  • To meet an antique book,
  • In just the dress his century wore;
  • A privilege, I think,
  • His venerable hand to take,
  • And warming in our own,
  • A passage back, or two, to make
  • To times when he was young.
  • His quaint opinions to inspect,
  • His knowledge to unfold
  • On what concerns our mutual mind,
  • The literature of old;
  • What interested scholars most,
  • What competitions ran
  • When Plato was a certainty.
  • And Sophocles a man;
  • When Sappho was a living girl,
  • And Beatrice wore
  • The gown that Dante deified.
  • Facts, centuries before,
  • He traverses familiar,
  • As one should come to town
  • And tell you all your dreams were true;
  • He lived where dreams were sown.
  • His presence is enchantment,
  • You beg him not to go;
  • Old volumes shake their vellum heads
  • And tantalize, just so.
  • XI.
  • Much madness is divinest sense
  • To a discerning eye;
  • Much sense the starkest madness.
  • 'T is the majority
  • In this, as all, prevails.
  • Assent, and you are sane;
  • Demur, -- you're straightway dangerous,
  • And handled with a chain.
  • XII.
  • I asked no other thing,
  • No other was denied.
  • I offered Being for it;
  • The mighty merchant smiled.
  • Brazil? He twirled a button,
  • Without a glance my way:
  • "But, madam, is there nothing else
  • That we can show to-day?"
  • XIII.
  • EXCLUSION.
  • The soul selects her own society,
  • Then shuts the door;
  • On her divine majority
  • Obtrude no more.
  • Unmoved, she notes the chariot's pausing
  • At her low gate;
  • Unmoved, an emperor is kneeling
  • Upon her mat.
  • I've known her from an ample nation
  • Choose one;
  • Then close the valves of her attention
  • Like stone.
  • XIV.
  • THE SECRET.
  • Some things that fly there be, --
  • Birds, hours, the bumble-bee:
  • Of these no elegy.
  • Some things that stay there be, --
  • Grief, hills, eternity:
  • Nor this behooveth me.
  • There are, that resting, rise.
  • Can I expound the skies?
  • How still the riddle lies!
  • XV.
  • THE LONELY HOUSE.
  • I know some lonely houses off the road
  • A robber 'd like the look of, --
  • Wooden barred,
  • And windows hanging low,
  • Inviting to
  • A portico,
  • Where two could creep:
  • One hand the tools,
  • The other peep
  • To make sure all's asleep.
  • Old-fashioned eyes,
  • Not easy to surprise!
  • How orderly the kitchen 'd look by night,
  • With just a clock, --
  • But they could gag the tick,
  • And mice won't bark;
  • And so the walls don't tell,
  • None will.
  • A pair of spectacles ajar just stir --
  • An almanac's aware.
  • Was it the mat winked,
  • Or a nervous star?
  • The moon slides down the stair
  • To see who's there.
  • There's plunder, -- where?
  • Tankard, or spoon,
  • Earring, or stone,
  • A watch, some ancient brooch
  • To match the grandmamma,
  • Staid sleeping there.
  • Day rattles, too,
  • Stealth's slow;
  • The sun has got as far
  • As the third sycamore.
  • Screams chanticleer,
  • "Who's there?"
  • And echoes, trains away,
  • Sneer -- "Where?"
  • While the old couple, just astir,
  • Fancy the sunrise left the door ajar!
  • XVI.
  • To fight aloud is very brave,
  • But gallanter, I know,
  • Who charge within the bosom,
  • The cavalry of woe.
  • Who win, and nations do not see,
  • Who fall, and none observe,
  • Whose dying eyes no country
  • Regards with patriot love.
  • We trust, in plumed procession,
  • For such the angels go,
  • Rank after rank, with even feet
  • And uniforms of snow.
  • XVII.
  • DAWN.
  • When night is almost done,
  • And sunrise grows so near
  • That we can touch the spaces,
  • It 's time to smooth the hair
  • And get the dimples ready,
  • And wonder we could care
  • For that old faded midnight
  • That frightened but an hour.
  • XVIII.
  • THE BOOK OF MARTYRS.
  • Read, sweet, how others strove,
  • Till we are stouter;
  • What they renounced,
  • Till we are less afraid;
  • How many times they bore
  • The faithful witness,
  • Till we are helped,
  • As if a kingdom cared!
  • Read then of faith
  • That shone above the fagot;
  • Clear strains of hymn
  • The river could not drown;
  • Brave names of men
  • And celestial women,
  • Passed out of record
  • Into renown!
  • XIX.
  • THE MYSTERY OF PAIN.
  • Pain has an element of blank;
  • It cannot recollect
  • When it began, or if there were
  • A day when it was not.
  • It has no future but itself,
  • Its infinite realms contain
  • Its past, enlightened to perceive
  • New periods of pain.
  • XX.
  • I taste a liquor never brewed,
  • From tankards scooped in pearl;
  • Not all the vats upon the Rhine
  • Yield such an alcohol!
  • Inebriate of air am I,
  • And debauchee of dew,
  • Reeling, through endless summer days,
  • From inns of molten blue.
  • When landlords turn the drunken bee
  • Out of the foxglove's door,
  • When butterflies renounce their drams,
  • I shall but drink the more!
  • Till seraphs swing their snowy hats,
  • And saints to windows run,
  • To see the little tippler
  • Leaning against the sun!
  • XXI.
  • A BOOK.
  • He ate and drank the precious words,
  • His spirit grew robust;
  • He knew no more that he was poor,
  • Nor that his frame was dust.
  • He danced along the dingy days,
  • And this bequest of wings
  • Was but a book. What liberty
  • A loosened spirit brings!
  • XXII.
  • I had no time to hate, because
  • The grave would hinder me,
  • And life was not so ample I
  • Could finish enmity.
  • Nor had I time to love; but since
  • Some industry must be,
  • The little toil of love, I thought,
  • Was large enough for me.
  • XXIII.
  • UNRETURNING.
  • 'T was such a little, little boat
  • That toddled down the bay!
  • 'T was such a gallant, gallant sea
  • That beckoned it away!
  • 'T was such a greedy, greedy wave
  • That licked it from the coast;
  • Nor ever guessed the stately sails
  • My little craft was lost!
  • XXIV.
  • Whether my bark went down at sea,
  • Whether she met with gales,
  • Whether to isles enchanted
  • She bent her docile sails;
  • By what mystic mooring
  • She is held to-day, --
  • This is the errand of the eye
  • Out upon the bay.
  • XXV.
  • Belshazzar had a letter, --
  • He never had but one;
  • Belshazzar's correspondent
  • Concluded and begun
  • In that immortal copy
  • The conscience of us all
  • Can read without its glasses
  • On revelation's wall.
  • XXVI.
  • The brain within its groove
  • Runs evenly and true;
  • But let a splinter swerve,
  • 'T were easier for you
  • To put the water back
  • When floods have slit the hills,
  • And scooped a turnpike for themselves,
  • And blotted out the mills!
  • II. LOVE.
  • I.
  • MINE.
  • Mine by the right of the white election!
  • Mine by the royal seal!
  • Mine by the sign in the scarlet prison
  • Bars cannot conceal!
  • Mine, here in vision and in veto!
  • Mine, by the grave's repeal
  • Titled, confirmed, -- delirious charter!
  • Mine, while the ages steal!
  • II.
  • BEQUEST.
  • You left me, sweet, two legacies, --
  • A legacy of love
  • A Heavenly Father would content,
  • Had He the offer of;
  • You left me boundaries of pain
  • Capacious as the sea,
  • Between eternity and time,
  • Your consciousness and me.
  • III.
  • Alter? When the hills do.
  • Falter? When the sun
  • Question if his glory
  • Be the perfect one.
  • Surfeit? When the daffodil
  • Doth of the dew:
  • Even as herself, O friend!
  • I will of you!
  • IV.
  • SUSPENSE.
  • Elysium is as far as to
  • The very nearest room,
  • If in that room a friend await
  • Felicity or doom.
  • What fortitude the soul contains,
  • That it can so endure
  • The accent of a coming foot,
  • The opening of a door!
  • V.
  • SURRENDER.
  • Doubt me, my dim companion!
  • Why, God would be content
  • With but a fraction of the love
  • Poured thee without a stint.
  • The whole of me, forever,
  • What more the woman can, --
  • Say quick, that I may dower thee
  • With last delight I own!
  • It cannot be my spirit,
  • For that was thine before;
  • I ceded all of dust I knew, --
  • What opulence the more
  • Had I, a humble maiden,
  • Whose farthest of degree
  • Was that she might,
  • Some distant heaven,
  • Dwell timidly with thee!
  • VI.
  • If you were coming in the fall,
  • I'd brush the summer by
  • With half a smile and half a spurn,
  • As housewives do a fly.
  • If I could see you in a year,
  • I'd wind the months in balls,
  • And put them each in separate drawers,
  • Until their time befalls.
  • If only centuries delayed,
  • I'd count them on my hand,
  • Subtracting till my fingers dropped
  • Into Van Diemen's land.
  • If certain, when this life was out,
  • That yours and mine should be,
  • I'd toss it yonder like a rind,
  • And taste eternity.
  • But now, all ignorant of the length
  • Of time's uncertain wing,
  • It goads me, like the goblin bee,
  • That will not state its sting.
  • VII.
  • WITH A FLOWER.
  • I hide myself within my flower,
  • That wearing on your breast,
  • You, unsuspecting, wear me too --
  • And angels know the rest.
  • I hide myself within my flower,
  • That, fading from your vase,
  • You, unsuspecting, feel for me
  • Almost a loneliness.
  • VIII.
  • PROOF.
  • That I did always love,
  • I bring thee proof:
  • That till I loved
  • I did not love enough.
  • That I shall love alway,
  • I offer thee
  • That love is life,
  • And life hath immortality.
  • This, dost thou doubt, sweet?
  • Then have I
  • Nothing to show
  • But Calvary.
  • IX.
  • Have you got a brook in your little heart,
  • Where bashful flowers blow,
  • And blushing birds go down to drink,
  • And shadows tremble so?
  • And nobody knows, so still it flows,
  • That any brook is there;
  • And yet your little draught of life
  • Is daily drunken there.
  • Then look out for the little brook in March,
  • When the rivers overflow,
  • And the snows come hurrying from the hills,
  • And the bridges often go.
  • And later, in August it may be,
  • When the meadows parching lie,
  • Beware, lest this little brook of life
  • Some burning noon go dry!
  • X.
  • TRANSPLANTED.
  • As if some little Arctic flower,
  • Upon the polar hem,
  • Went wandering down the latitudes,
  • Until it puzzled came
  • To continents of summer,
  • To firmaments of sun,
  • To strange, bright crowds of flowers,
  • And birds of foreign tongue!
  • I say, as if this little flower
  • To Eden wandered in --
  • What then? Why, nothing, only,
  • Your inference therefrom!
  • XI.
  • THE OUTLET.
  • My river runs to thee:
  • Blue sea, wilt welcome me?
  • My river waits reply.
  • Oh sea, look graciously!
  • I'll fetch thee brooks
  • From spotted nooks, --
  • Say, sea,
  • Take me!
  • XII.
  • IN VAIN.
  • I cannot live with you,
  • It would be life,
  • And life is over there
  • Behind the shelf
  • The sexton keeps the key to,
  • Putting up
  • Our life, his porcelain,
  • Like a cup
  • Discarded of the housewife,
  • Quaint or broken;
  • A newer Sevres pleases,
  • Old ones crack.
  • I could not die with you,
  • For one must wait
  • To shut the other's gaze down, --
  • You could not.
  • And I, could I stand by
  • And see you freeze,
  • Without my right of frost,
  • Death's privilege?
  • Nor could I rise with you,
  • Because your face
  • Would put out Jesus',
  • That new grace
  • Glow plain and foreign
  • On my homesick eye,
  • Except that you, than he
  • Shone closer by.
  • They'd judge us -- how?
  • For you served Heaven, you know,
  • Or sought to;
  • I could not,
  • Because you saturated sight,
  • And I had no more eyes
  • For sordid excellence
  • As Paradise.
  • And were you lost, I would be,
  • Though my name
  • Rang loudest
  • On the heavenly fame.
  • And were you saved,
  • And I condemned to be
  • Where you were not,
  • That self were hell to me.
  • So we must keep apart,
  • You there, I here,
  • With just the door ajar
  • That oceans are,
  • And prayer,
  • And that pale sustenance,
  • Despair!
  • XIII.
  • RENUNCIATION.
  • There came a day at summer's full
  • Entirely for me;
  • I thought that such were for the saints,
  • Where revelations be.
  • The sun, as common, went abroad,
  • The flowers, accustomed, blew,
  • As if no soul the solstice passed
  • That maketh all things new.
  • The time was scarce profaned by speech;
  • The symbol of a word
  • Was needless, as at sacrament
  • The wardrobe of our Lord.
  • Each was to each the sealed church,
  • Permitted to commune this time,
  • Lest we too awkward show
  • At supper of the Lamb.
  • The hours slid fast, as hours will,
  • Clutched tight by greedy hands;
  • So faces on two decks look back,
  • Bound to opposing lands.
  • And so, when all the time had failed,
  • Without external sound,
  • Each bound the other's crucifix,
  • We gave no other bond.
  • Sufficient troth that we shall rise --
  • Deposed, at length, the grave --
  • To that new marriage, justified
  • Through Calvaries of Love!
  • XIV.
  • LOVE'S BAPTISM.
  • I'm ceded, I've stopped being theirs;
  • The name they dropped upon my face
  • With water, in the country church,
  • Is finished using now,
  • And they can put it with my dolls,
  • My childhood, and the string of spools
  • I've finished threading too.
  • Baptized before without the choice,
  • But this time consciously, of grace
  • Unto supremest name,
  • Called to my full, the crescent dropped,
  • Existence's whole arc filled up
  • With one small diadem.
  • My second rank, too small the first,
  • Crowned, crowing on my father's breast,
  • A half unconscious queen;
  • But this time, adequate, erect,
  • With will to choose or to reject.
  • And I choose -- just a throne.
  • XV.
  • RESURRECTION.
  • 'T was a long parting, but the time
  • For interview had come;
  • Before the judgment-seat of God,
  • The last and second time
  • These fleshless lovers met,
  • A heaven in a gaze,
  • A heaven of heavens, the privilege
  • Of one another's eyes.
  • No lifetime set on them,
  • Apparelled as the new
  • Unborn, except they had beheld,
  • Born everlasting now.
  • Was bridal e'er like this?
  • A paradise, the host,
  • And cherubim and seraphim
  • The most familiar guest.
  • XVI.
  • APOCALYPSE.
  • I'm wife; I've finished that,
  • That other state;
  • I'm Czar, I'm woman now:
  • It's safer so.
  • How odd the girl's life looks
  • Behind this soft eclipse!
  • I think that earth seems so
  • To those in heaven now.
  • This being comfort, then
  • That other kind was pain;
  • But why compare?
  • I'm wife! stop there!
  • XVII.
  • THE WIFE.
  • She rose to his requirement, dropped
  • The playthings of her life
  • To take the honorable work
  • Of woman and of wife.
  • If aught she missed in her new day
  • Of amplitude, or awe,
  • Or first prospective, or the gold
  • In using wore away,
  • It lay unmentioned, as the sea
  • Develops pearl and weed,
  • But only to himself is known
  • The fathoms they abide.
  • XVIII.
  • APOTHEOSIS.
  • Come slowly, Eden!
  • Lips unused to thee,
  • Bashful, sip thy jasmines,
  • As the fainting bee,
  • Reaching late his flower,
  • Round her chamber hums,
  • Counts his nectars -- enters,
  • And is lost in balms!
  • III. NATURE.
  • I.
  • New feet within my garden go,
  • New fingers stir the sod;
  • A troubadour upon the elm
  • Betrays the solitude.
  • New children play upon the green,
  • New weary sleep below;
  • And still the pensive spring returns,
  • And still the punctual snow!
  • II.
  • MAY-FLOWER.
  • Pink, small, and punctual,
  • Aromatic, low,
  • Covert in April,
  • Candid in May,
  • Dear to the moss,
  • Known by the knoll,
  • Next to the robin
  • In every human soul.
  • Bold little beauty,
  • Bedecked with thee,
  • Nature forswears
  • Antiquity.
  • III.
  • WHY?
  • The murmur of a bee
  • A witchcraft yieldeth me.
  • If any ask me why,
  • 'T were easier to die
  • Than tell.
  • The red upon the hill
  • Taketh away my will;
  • If anybody sneer,
  • Take care, for God is here,
  • That's all.
  • The breaking of the day
  • Addeth to my degree;
  • If any ask me how,
  • Artist, who drew me so,
  • Must tell!
  • IV.
  • Perhaps you'd like to buy a flower?
  • But I could never sell.
  • If you would like to borrow
  • Until the daffodil
  • Unties her yellow bonnet
  • Beneath the village door,
  • Until the bees, from clover rows
  • Their hock and sherry draw,
  • Why, I will lend until just then,
  • But not an hour more!
  • V.
  • The pedigree of honey
  • Does not concern the bee;
  • A clover, any time, to him
  • Is aristocracy.
  • VI.
  • A SERVICE OF SONG.
  • Some keep the Sabbath going to church;
  • I keep it staying at home,
  • With a bobolink for a chorister,
  • And an orchard for a dome.
  • Some keep the Sabbath in surplice;
  • I just wear my wings,
  • And instead of tolling the bell for church,
  • Our little sexton sings.
  • God preaches, -- a noted clergyman, --
  • And the sermon is never long;
  • So instead of getting to heaven at last,
  • I'm going all along!
  • VII.
  • The bee is not afraid of me,
  • I know the butterfly;
  • The pretty people in the woods
  • Receive me cordially.
  • The brooks laugh louder when I come,
  • The breezes madder play.
  • Wherefore, mine eyes, thy silver mists?
  • Wherefore, O summer's day?
  • VIII.
  • SUMMER'S ARMIES.
  • Some rainbow coming from the fair!
  • Some vision of the world Cashmere
  • I confidently see!
  • Or else a peacock's purple train,
  • Feather by feather, on the plain
  • Fritters itself away!
  • The dreamy butterflies bestir,
  • Lethargic pools resume the whir
  • Of last year's sundered tune.
  • From some old fortress on the sun
  • Baronial bees march, one by one,
  • In murmuring platoon!
  • The robins stand as thick to-day
  • As flakes of snow stood yesterday,
  • On fence and roof and twig.
  • The orchis binds her feather on
  • For her old lover, Don the Sun,
  • Revisiting the bog!
  • Without commander, countless, still,
  • The regiment of wood and hill
  • In bright detachment stand.
  • Behold! Whose multitudes are these?
  • The children of whose turbaned seas,
  • Or what Circassian land?
  • IX.
  • THE GRASS.
  • The grass so little has to do, --
  • A sphere of simple green,
  • With only butterflies to brood,
  • And bees to entertain,
  • And stir all day to pretty tunes
  • The breezes fetch along,
  • And hold the sunshine in its lap
  • And bow to everything;
  • And thread the dews all night, like pearls,
  • And make itself so fine, --
  • A duchess were too common
  • For such a noticing.
  • And even when it dies, to pass
  • In odors so divine,
  • As lowly spices gone to sleep,
  • Or amulets of pine.
  • And then to dwell in sovereign barns,
  • And dream the days away, --
  • The grass so little has to do,
  • I wish I were the hay!
  • X.
  • A little road not made of man,
  • Enabled of the eye,
  • Accessible to thill of bee,
  • Or cart of butterfly.
  • If town it have, beyond itself,
  • 'T is that I cannot say;
  • I only sigh, -- no vehicle
  • Bears me along that way.
  • XI.
  • SUMMER SHOWER.
  • A drop fell on the apple tree,
  • Another on the roof;
  • A half a dozen kissed the eaves,
  • And made the gables laugh.
  • A few went out to help the brook,
  • That went to help the sea.
  • Myself conjectured, Were they pearls,
  • What necklaces could be!
  • The dust replaced in hoisted roads,
  • The birds jocoser sung;
  • The sunshine threw his hat away,
  • The orchards spangles hung.
  • The breezes brought dejected lutes,
  • And bathed them in the glee;
  • The East put out a single flag,
  • And signed the fete away.
  • 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 take 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, --
  • 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,
  • But she slept;
  • Her bed a funnelled stone,
  • With nosegays at the head and foot,
  • That travellers had thrown,
  • Who went to thank her;
  • But she slept.
  • 'T was short to cross the sea
  • To look upon her like, alive,
  • But turning back 't was slow.
  • XV.
  • I've seen a dying eye
  • Run round and round a room
  • In search of something, as it seemed,
  • Then cloudier become;
  • And then, obscure with fog,
  • And then be soldered down,
  • Without disclosing what it be,
  • 'T were blessed to have seen.
  • XVI.
  • REFUGE.
  • The clouds their backs together laid,
  • The north begun to push,
  • The forests galloped till they fell,
  • The lightning skipped like mice;
  • The thunder crumbled like a stuff --
  • How good to be safe in tombs,
  • Where nature's temper cannot reach,
  • Nor vengeance ever comes!
  • XVII.
  • I never saw a moor,
  • I never saw the sea;
  • Yet know I how the heather looks,
  • And what a wave must be.
  • I never spoke with God,
  • Nor visited in heaven;
  • Yet certain am I of the spot
  • As if the chart were given.
  • XVIII.
  • PLAYMATES.
  • God permits industrious angels
  • Afternoons to play.
  • I met one, -- forgot my school-mates,
  • All, for him, straightway.
  • God calls home the angels promptly
  • At the setting sun;
  • I missed mine. How dreary marbles,
  • After playing Crown!
  • XIX.
  • To know just how he suffered would be dear;
  • To know if any human eyes were near
  • To whom he could intrust his wavering gaze,
  • Until it settled firm on Paradise.
  • To know if he was patient, part content,
  • Was dying as he thought, or different;
  • Was it a pleasant day to die,
  • And did the sunshine face his way?
  • What was his furthest mind, of home, or God,
  • Or what the distant say
  • At news that he ceased human nature
  • On such a day?
  • And wishes, had he any?
  • Just his sigh, accented,
  • Had been legible to me.
  • And was he confident until
  • Ill fluttered out in everlasting well?
  • And if he spoke, what name was best,
  • What first,
  • What one broke off with
  • At the drowsiest?
  • Was he afraid, or tranquil?
  • Might he know
  • How conscious consciousness could grow,
  • Till love that was, and love too blest to be,
  • Meet -- and the junction be Eternity?
  • XX.
  • The last night that she lived,
  • It was a common night,
  • Except the dying; this to us
  • Made nature different.
  • We noticed smallest things, --
  • Things overlooked before,
  • By this great light upon our minds
  • Italicized, as 't were.
  • That others could exist
  • While she must finish quite,
  • A jealousy for her arose
  • So nearly infinite.
  • We waited while she passed;
  • It was a narrow time,
  • Too jostled were our souls to speak,
  • At length the notice came.
  • She mentioned, and forgot;
  • Then lightly as a reed
  • Bent to the water, shivered scarce,
  • Consented, and was dead.
  • And we, we placed the hair,
  • And drew the head erect;
  • And then an awful leisure was,
  • Our faith to regulate.
  • XXI.
  • THE FIRST LESSON.
  • Not in this world to see his face
  • Sounds long, until I read the place
  • Where this is said to be
  • But just the primer to a life
  • Unopened, rare, upon the shelf,
  • Clasped yet to him and me.
  • And yet, my primer suits me so
  • I would not choose a book to know
  • Than that, be sweeter wise;
  • Might some one else so learned be,
  • And leave me just my A B C,
  • Himself could have the skies.
  • XXII.
  • The bustle in a house
  • The morning after death
  • Is solemnest of industries
  • Enacted upon earth, --
  • The sweeping up the heart,
  • And putting love away
  • We shall not want to use again
  • Until eternity.
  • XXIII.
  • I reason, earth is short,
  • And anguish absolute,
  • And many hurt;
  • But what of that?
  • I reason, we could die:
  • The best vitality
  • Cannot excel decay;
  • But what of that?
  • I reason that in heaven
  • Somehow, it will be even,
  • Some new equation given;
  • But what of that?
  • XXIV.
  • Afraid? Of whom am I afraid?
  • Not death; for who is he?
  • The porter of my father's lodge
  • As much abasheth me.
  • Of life? 'T were odd I fear a thing
  • That comprehendeth me
  • In one or more existences
  • At Deity's decree.
  • Of resurrection? Is the east
  • Afraid to trust the morn
  • With her fastidious forehead?
  • As soon impeach my crown!
  • XXV.
  • DYING.
  • The sun kept setting, setting still;
  • No hue of afternoon
  • Upon the village I perceived, --
  • From house to house 't was noon.
  • The dusk kept dropping, dropping still;
  • No dew upon the grass,
  • But only on my forehead stopped,
  • And wandered in my face.
  • My feet kept drowsing, drowsing still,
  • My fingers were awake;
  • Yet why so little sound myself
  • Unto my seeming make?
  • How well I knew the light before!
  • I could not see it now.
  • 'T is dying, I am doing; but
  • I'm not afraid to know.
  • XXVI.
  • Two swimmers wrestled on the spar
  • Until the morning sun,
  • When one turned smiling to the land.
  • O God, the other one!
  • The stray ships passing spied a face
  • Upon the waters borne,
  • With eyes in death still begging raised,
  • And hands beseeching thrown.
  • XXVII.
  • THE CHARIOT.
  • Because I could not stop for Death,
  • He kindly stopped for me;
  • The carriage held but just ourselves
  • And Immortality.
  • We slowly drove, he knew no haste,
  • And I had put away
  • My labor, and my leisure too,
  • For his civility.
  • We passed the school where children played,
  • Their lessons scarcely done;
  • We passed the fields of gazing grain,
  • We passed the setting sun.
  • We paused before a house that seemed
  • A swelling of the ground;
  • The roof was scarcely visible,
  • The cornice but a mound.
  • Since then 't is centuries; but each
  • Feels shorter than the day
  • I first surmised the horses' heads
  • Were toward eternity.
  • XXVIII.
  • She went as quiet as the dew
  • From a familiar flower.
  • Not like the dew did she return
  • At the accustomed hour!
  • She dropt as softly as a star
  • From out my summer's eve;
  • Less skilful than Leverrier
  • It's sorer to believe!
  • XXIX.
  • RESURGAM.
  • At last to be identified!
  • At last, the lamps upon thy side,
  • The rest of life to see!
  • Past midnight, past the morning star!
  • Past sunrise! Ah! what leagues there are
  • Between our feet and day!
  • XXX.
  • Except to heaven, she is nought;
  • Except for angels, lone;
  • Except to some wide-wandering bee,
  • A flower superfluous blown;
  • Except for winds, provincial;
  • Except by butterflies,
  • Unnoticed as a single dew
  • That on the acre lies.
  • The smallest housewife in the grass,
  • Yet take her from the lawn,
  • And somebody has lost the face
  • That made existence home!
  • XXXI.
  • Death is a dialogue between
  • The spirit and the dust.
  • "Dissolve," says Death. The Spirit, "Sir,
  • I have another trust."
  • Death doubts it, argues from the ground.
  • The Spirit turns away,
  • Just laying off, for evidence,
  • An overcoat of clay.
  • XXXII.
  • It was too late for man,
  • But early yet for God;
  • Creation impotent to help,
  • But prayer remained our side.
  • How excellent the heaven,
  • When earth cannot be had;
  • How hospitable, then, the face
  • Of our old neighbor, God!
  • XXXIII.
  • ALONG THE POTOMAC.
  • When I was small, a woman died.
  • To-day her only boy
  • Went up from the Potomac,
  • His face all victory,
  • To look at her; how slowly
  • The seasons must have turned
  • Till bullets clipt an angle,
  • And he passed quickly round!
  • If pride shall be in Paradise
  • I never can decide;
  • Of their imperial conduct,
  • No person testified.
  • But proud in apparition,
  • That woman and her boy
  • Pass back and forth before my brain,
  • As ever in the sky.
  • XXXIV.
  • The daisy follows soft the sun,
  • And when his golden walk is done,
  • Sits shyly at his feet.
  • He, waking, finds the flower near.
  • "Wherefore, marauder, art thou here?"
  • "Because, sir, love is sweet!"
  • We are the flower, Thou the sun!
  • Forgive us, if as days decline,
  • We nearer steal to Thee, --
  • Enamoured of the parting west,
  • The peace, the flight, the amethyst,
  • Night's possibility!
  • XXXV.
  • EMANCIPATION.
  • No rack can torture me,
  • My soul's at liberty
  • Behind this mortal bone
  • There knits a bolder one
  • You cannot prick with saw,
  • Nor rend with scymitar.
  • Two bodies therefore be;
  • Bind one, and one will flee.
  • The eagle of his nest
  • No easier divest
  • And gain the sky,
  • Than mayest thou,
  • Except thyself may be
  • Thine enemy;
  • Captivity is consciousness,
  • So's liberty.
  • XXXVI.
  • LOST.
  • I lost a world the other day.
  • Has anybody found?
  • You'll know it by the row of stars
  • Around its forehead bound.
  • A rich man might not notice it;
  • Yet to my frugal eye
  • Of more esteem than ducats.
  • Oh, find it, sir, for me!
  • XXXVII.
  • If I shouldn't be alive
  • When the robins come,
  • Give the one in red cravat
  • A memorial crumb.
  • If I couldn't thank you,
  • Being just asleep,
  • You will know I'm trying
  • With my granite lip!
  • XXXVIII.
  • Sleep is supposed to be,
  • By souls of sanity,
  • The shutting of the eye.
  • Sleep is the station grand
  • Down which on either hand
  • The hosts of witness stand!
  • Morn is supposed to be,
  • By people of degree,
  • The breaking of the day.
  • Morning has not occurred!
  • That shall aurora be
  • East of eternity;
  • One with the banner gay,
  • One in the red array, --
  • That is the break of day.
  • XXXIX.
  • I shall know why, when time is over,
  • And I have ceased to wonder why;
  • Christ will explain each separate anguish
  • In the fair schoolroom of the sky.
  • He will tell me what Peter promised,
  • And I, for wonder at his woe,
  • I shall forget the drop of anguish
  • That scalds me now, that scalds me now.
  • XL.
  • I never lost as much but twice,
  • And that was in the sod;
  • Twice have I stood a beggar
  • Before the door of God!
  • Angels, twice descending,
  • Reimbursed my store.
  • Burglar, banker, father,
  • I am poor once more!
  • POEMS
  • by EMILY DICKINSON
  • Second Series
  • Edited by two of her friends
  • MABEL LOOMIS TODD and T.W. HIGGINSON
  • PREFACE
  • The eagerness with which the first volume of Emily Dickinson's
  • poems has been read shows very clearly that all our alleged modern
  • artificiality does not prevent a prompt appreciation of the
  • qualities of directness and simplicity in approaching the greatest
  • themes,--life and love and death. That "irresistible needle-touch,"
  • as one of her best critics has called it, piercing at once the very
  • core of a thought, has found a response as wide and sympathetic as
  • it has been unexpected even to those who knew best her compelling
  • power. This second volume, while open to the same criticism as to
  • form with its predecessor, shows also the same shining beauties.
  • Although Emily Dickinson had been in the habit of sending
  • occasional poems to friends and correspondents, the full extent of
  • her writing was by no means imagined by them. Her friend "H.H."
  • must at least have suspected it, for in a letter dated 5th
  • September, 1884, she wrote:--
  • MY DEAR FRIEND,-- What portfolios full of verses
  • you must have! It is a cruel wrong to your "day and
  • generation" that you will not give them light.
  • If such a thing should happen as that I should outlive
  • you, I wish you would make me your literary legatee
  • and executor. Surely after you are what is called
  • "dead" you will be willing that the poor ghosts you
  • have left behind should be cheered and pleased by your
  • verses, will you not? You ought to be. I do not think
  • we have a right to withhold from the world a word or
  • a thought any more than a deed which might help a
  • single soul. . . .
  • Truly yours,
  • HELEN JACKSON.
  • The "portfolios" were found, shortly after Emily Dickinson's death,
  • by her sister and only surviving housemate. Most of the poems had
  • been carefully copied on sheets of note-paper, and tied in little
  • fascicules, each of six or eight sheets. While many of them bear
  • evidence of having been thrown off at white heat, still more had
  • received thoughtful revision. There is the frequent addition of
  • rather perplexing foot-notes, affording large choice of words and
  • phrases. And in the copies which she sent to friends, sometimes one
  • form, sometimes another, is found to have been used. Without
  • important exception, her friends have generously placed at the
  • disposal of the Editors any poems they had received from her; and
  • these have given the obvious advantage of comparison among several
  • renderings of the same verse.
  • To what further rigorous pruning her verses would have been
  • subjected had she published them herself, we cannot know. They
  • should be regarded in many cases as merely the first strong and
  • suggestive sketches of an artist, intended to be embodied at some
  • time in the finished picture.
  • Emily Dickinson appears to have written her first poems in the
  • winter of 1862. In a letter to oone of the present Editors the
  • April following, she says, "I made no verse, but one or two, until
  • this winter."
  • The handwriting was at first somewhat like the delicate, running
  • Italian hand of our elder gentlewomen; but as she advanced in
  • breadth of thought, it grew bolder and more abrupt, until in her
  • latest years each letter stood distinct and separate from its
  • fellows. In most of her poems, particularly the later ones,
  • everything by way of punctuation was discarded, except numerous
  • dashes; and all important words began with capitals. The effect of
  • a page of her more recent manuscript is exceedingly quaint and
  • strong. The fac-simile given in the present volume is from one of
  • the earlier transition periods. Although there is nowhere a date,
  • the handwriting makes it possible to arrange the poems with general
  • chronologic accuracy.
  • As a rule, the verses were without titles; but "A Country Burial,"
  • "A Thunder-Storm," "The Humming-Bird," and a few others were named
  • by their author, frequently at the end,--sometimes only in the
  • accompanying note, if sent to a friend.
  • The variation of readings, with the fact that she often wrote in
  • pencil and not always clearly, have at times thrown a good deal of
  • responsibility upon her Editors. But all interference not
  • absolutely inevitable has been avoided. The very roughness of her
  • rendering is part of herself, and not lightly to be touched; for it
  • seems in many cases that she intentionally avoided the smoother and
  • more usual rhymes.
  • Like impressionist pictures, or Wagner's rugged music, the very
  • absence of conventional form challenges attention. In Emily
  • Dickinson's exacting hands, the especial, intrinsic fitness of a
  • particular order of words might not be sacrificed to anything
  • virtually extrinsic; and her verses all show a strange cadence of
  • inner rhythmical music. Lines are always daringly constructed, and
  • the "thought-rhyme" appears frequently,--appealing, indeed, to an
  • unrecognized sense more elusive than hearing.
  • Emily Dickinson scrutinized everything with clear-eyed frankness.
  • Every subject was proper ground for legitimate study, even the
  • sombre facts of death and burial, and the unknown life beyond. She
  • touches these themes sometimes lightly, sometimes almost
  • humorously, more often with weird and peculiar power; but she is
  • never by any chance frivolous or trivial. And while, as one critic
  • has said, she may exhibit toward God "an Emersonian self-possession,"
  • it was because she looked upon all life with a candor as unprejudiced
  • as it is rare.
  • She had tried society and the world, and found them lacking. She
  • was not an invalid, and she lived in seclusion from no
  • love-disappointment. Her life was the normal blossoming of a nature
  • introspective to a high degree, whose best thought could not exist
  • in pretence.
  • Storm, wind, the wild March sky, sunsets and dawns; the birds and
  • bees, butterflies and flowers of her garden, with a few trusted
  • human friends, were sufficient companionship. The coming of the
  • first robin was a jubilee beyond crowning of monarch or birthday of
  • pope; the first red leaf hurrying through "the altered air," an
  • epoch. Immortality was close about her; and while never morbid or
  • melancholy, she lived in its presence.
  • MABEL LOOMIS TODD.
  • AMHERST, MASSACHUSETTS,
  • August, I891.
  • My nosegays are for captives;
  • Dim, long-expectant eyes,
  • Fingers denied the plucking,
  • Patient till paradise,
  • To such, if they should whisper
  • Of morning and the moor,
  • They bear no other errand,
  • And I, no other prayer.
  • I. LIFE.
  • I.
  • I'm nobody! Who are you?
  • Are you nobody, too?
  • Then there 's a pair of us -- don't tell!
  • They 'd banish us, you know.
  • How dreary to be somebody!
  • How public, like a frog
  • To tell your name the livelong day
  • To an admiring bog!
  • II.
  • I bring an unaccustomed wine
  • To lips long parching, next to mine,
  • And summon them to drink.
  • Crackling with fever, they essay;
  • I turn my brimming eyes away,
  • And come next hour to look.
  • The hands still hug the tardy glass;
  • The lips I would have cooled, alas!
  • Are so superfluous cold,
  • I would as soon attempt to warm
  • The bosoms where the frost has lain
  • Ages beneath the mould.
  • Some other thirsty there may be
  • To whom this would have pointed me
  • Had it remained to speak.
  • And so I always bear the cup
  • If, haply, mine may be the drop
  • Some pilgrim thirst to slake, --
  • If, haply, any say to me,
  • "Unto the little, unto me,"
  • When I at last awake.
  • III.
  • The nearest dream recedes, unrealized.
  • The heaven we chase
  • Like the June bee
  • Before the school-boy
  • Invites the race;
  • Stoops to an easy clover --
  • Dips -- evades -- teases -- deploys;
  • Then to the royal clouds
  • Lifts his light pinnace
  • Heedless of the boy
  • Staring, bewildered, at the mocking sky.
  • Homesick for steadfast honey,
  • Ah! the bee flies not
  • That brews that rare variety.
  • IV.
  • We play at paste,
  • Till qualified for pearl,
  • Then drop the paste,
  • And deem ourself a fool.
  • The shapes, though, were similar,
  • And our new hands
  • Learned gem-tactics
  • Practising sands.
  • V.
  • I found the phrase to every thought
  • I ever had, but one;
  • And that defies me, -- as a hand
  • Did try to chalk the sun
  • To races nurtured in the dark; --
  • How would your own begin?
  • Can blaze be done in cochineal,
  • Or noon in mazarin?
  • VI.
  • HOPE.
  • Hope is the thing with feathers
  • That perches in the soul,
  • And sings the tune without the words,
  • And never stops at all,
  • And sweetest in the gale is heard;
  • And sore must be the storm
  • That could abash the little bird
  • That kept so many warm.
  • I 've heard it in the chillest land,
  • And on the strangest sea;
  • Yet, never, in extremity,
  • It asked a crumb of me.
  • VII.
  • THE WHITE HEAT.
  • Dare you see a soul at the white heat?
  • Then crouch within the door.
  • Red is the fire's common tint;
  • But when the vivid ore
  • Has sated flame's conditions,
  • Its quivering substance plays
  • Without a color but the light
  • Of unanointed blaze.
  • Least village boasts its blacksmith,
  • Whose anvil's even din
  • Stands symbol for the finer forge
  • That soundless tugs within,
  • Refining these impatient ores
  • With hammer and with blaze,
  • Until the designated light
  • Repudiate the forge.
  • VIII.
  • TRIUMPHANT.
  • Who never lost, are unprepared
  • A coronet to find;
  • Who never thirsted, flagons
  • And cooling tamarind.
  • Who never climbed the weary league --
  • Can such a foot explore
  • The purple territories
  • On Pizarro's shore?
  • How many legions overcome?
  • The emperor will say.
  • How many colors taken
  • On Revolution Day?
  • How many bullets bearest?
  • The royal scar hast thou?
  • Angels, write "Promoted"
  • On this soldier's brow!
  • IX.
  • THE TEST.
  • I can wade grief,
  • Whole pools of it, --
  • I 'm used to that.
  • But the least push of joy
  • Breaks up my feet,
  • And I tip -- drunken.
  • Let no pebble smile,
  • 'T was the new liquor, --
  • That was all!
  • Power is only pain,
  • Stranded, through discipline,
  • Till weights will hang.
  • Give balm to giants,
  • And they 'll wilt, like men.
  • Give Himmaleh, --
  • They 'll carry him!
  • X.
  • ESCAPE.
  • I never hear the word "escape"
  • Without a quicker blood,
  • A sudden expectation,
  • A flying attitude.
  • I never hear of prisons broad
  • By soldiers battered down,
  • But I tug childish at my bars, --
  • Only to fail again!
  • XI.
  • COMPENSATION.
  • For each ecstatic instant
  • We must an anguish pay
  • In keen and quivering ratio
  • To the ecstasy.
  • For each beloved hour
  • Sharp pittances of years,
  • Bitter contested farthings
  • And coffers heaped with tears.
  • XII.
  • THE MARTYRS.
  • Through the straight pass of suffering
  • The martyrs even trod,
  • Their feet upon temptation,
  • Their faces upon God.
  • A stately, shriven company;
  • Convulsion playing round,
  • Harmless as streaks of meteor
  • Upon a planet's bound.
  • Their faith the everlasting troth;
  • Their expectation fair;
  • The needle to the north degree
  • Wades so, through polar air.
  • XIII.
  • A PRAYER.
  • I meant to have but modest needs,
  • Such as content, and heaven;
  • Within my income these could lie,
  • And life and I keep even.
  • But since the last included both,
  • It would suffice my prayer
  • But just for one to stipulate,
  • And grace would grant the pair.
  • And so, upon this wise I prayed, --
  • Great Spirit, give to me
  • A heaven not so large as yours,
  • But large enough for me.
  • A smile suffused Jehovah's face;
  • The cherubim withdrew;
  • Grave saints stole out to look at me,
  • And showed their dimples, too.
  • I left the place with all my might, --
  • My prayer away I threw;
  • The quiet ages picked it up,
  • And Judgment twinkled, too,
  • That one so honest be extant
  • As take the tale for true
  • That "Whatsoever you shall ask,
  • Itself be given you."
  • But I, grown shrewder, scan the skies
  • With a suspicious air, --
  • As children, swindled for the first,
  • All swindlers be, infer.
  • XIV.
  • The thought beneath so slight a film
  • Is more distinctly seen, --
  • As laces just reveal the surge,
  • Or mists the Apennine.
  • XV.
  • The soul unto itself
  • Is an imperial friend, --
  • Or the most agonizing spy
  • An enemy could send.
  • Secure against its own,
  • No treason it can fear;
  • Itself its sovereign, of itself
  • The soul should stand in awe.
  • XVI.
  • Surgeons must be very careful
  • When they take the knife!
  • Underneath their fine incisions
  • Stirs the culprit, -- Life!
  • XVII.
  • THE RAILWAY TRAIN.
  • I like to see it lap the miles,
  • And lick the valleys up,
  • And stop to feed itself at tanks;
  • And then, prodigious, step
  • Around a pile of mountains,
  • And, supercilious, peer
  • In shanties by the sides of roads;
  • And then a quarry pare
  • To fit its sides, and crawl between,
  • Complaining all the while
  • In horrid, hooting stanza;
  • Then chase itself down hill
  • And neigh like Boanerges;
  • Then, punctual as a star,
  • Stop -- docile and omnipotent --
  • At its own stable door.
  • XVIII.
  • THE SHOW.
  • The show is not the show,
  • But they that go.
  • Menagerie to me
  • My neighbor be.
  • Fair play --
  • Both went to see.
  • XIX.
  • Delight becomes pictorial
  • When viewed through pain, --
  • More fair, because impossible
  • That any gain.
  • The mountain at a given distance
  • In amber lies;
  • Approached, the amber flits a little, --
  • And that 's the skies!
  • XX.
  • A thought went up my mind to-day
  • That I have had before,
  • But did not finish, -- some way back,
  • I could not fix the year,
  • Nor where it went, nor why it came
  • The second time to me,
  • Nor definitely what it was,
  • Have I the art to say.
  • But somewhere in my soul, I know
  • I 've met the thing before;
  • It just reminded me -- 't was all --
  • And came my way no more.
  • XXI.
  • Is Heaven a physician?
  • They say that He can heal,
  • But medicine posthumous
  • Is unavailable.
  • Is Heaven an exchequer?
  • They speak of what we owe;
  • But that negotiation
  • I 'm not a party to.
  • XXII.
  • THE RETURN.
  • Though I get home how late, how late!
  • So I get home, 't will compensate.
  • Better will be the ecstasy
  • That they have done expecting me,
  • When, night descending, dumb and dark,
  • They hear my unexpected knock.
  • Transporting must the moment be,
  • Brewed from decades of agony!
  • To think just how the fire will burn,
  • Just how long-cheated eyes will turn
  • To wonder what myself will say,
  • And what itself will say to me,
  • Beguiles the centuries of way!
  • XXIII.
  • A poor torn heart, a tattered heart,
  • That sat it down to rest,
  • Nor noticed that the ebbing day
  • Flowed silver to the west,
  • Nor noticed night did soft descend
  • Nor constellation burn,
  • Intent upon the vision
  • Of latitudes unknown.
  • The angels, happening that way,
  • This dusty heart espied;
  • Tenderly took it up from toil
  • And carried it to God.
  • There, -- sandals for the barefoot;
  • There, -- gathered from the gales,
  • Do the blue havens by the hand
  • Lead the wandering sails.
  • XXIV.
  • TOO MUCH.
  • I should have been too glad, I see,
  • Too lifted for the scant degree
  • Of life's penurious round;
  • My little circuit would have shamed
  • This new circumference, have blamed
  • The homelier time behind.
  • I should have been too saved, I see,
  • Too rescued; fear too dim to me
  • That I could spell the prayer
  • I knew so perfect yesterday, --
  • That scalding one, "Sabachthani,"
  • Recited fluent here.
  • Earth would have been too much, I see,
  • And heaven not enough for me;
  • I should have had the joy
  • Without the fear to justify, --
  • The palm without the Calvary;
  • So, Saviour, crucify.
  • Defeat whets victory, they say;
  • The reefs in old Gethsemane
  • Endear the shore beyond.
  • 'T is beggars banquets best define;
  • 'T is thirsting vitalizes wine, --
  • Faith faints to understand.
  • XXV.
  • SHIPWRECK.
  • It tossed and tossed, --
  • A little brig I knew, --
  • O'ertook by blast,
  • It spun and spun,
  • And groped delirious, for morn.
  • It slipped and slipped,
  • As one that drunken stepped;
  • Its white foot tripped,
  • Then dropped from sight.
  • Ah, brig, good-night
  • To crew and you;
  • The ocean's heart too smooth, too blue,
  • To break for you.
  • XXVI.
  • Victory comes late,
  • And is held low to freezing lips
  • Too rapt with frost
  • To take it.
  • How sweet it would have tasted,
  • Just a drop!
  • Was God so economical?
  • His table 's spread too high for us
  • Unless we dine on tip-toe.
  • Crumbs fit such little mouths,
  • Cherries suit robins;
  • The eagle's golden breakfast
  • Strangles them.
  • God keeps his oath to sparrows,
  • Who of little love
  • Know how to starve!
  • XXVII.
  • ENOUGH.
  • God gave a loaf to every bird,
  • But just a crumb to me;
  • I dare not eat it, though I starve, --
  • My poignant luxury
  • To own it, touch it, prove the feat
  • That made the pellet mine, --
  • Too happy in my sparrow chance
  • For ampler coveting.
  • It might be famine all around,
  • I could not miss an ear,
  • Such plenty smiles upon my board,
  • My garner shows so fair.
  • I wonder how the rich may feel, --
  • An Indiaman -- an Earl?
  • I deem that I with but a crumb
  • Am sovereign of them all.
  • XXVIII.
  • Experiment to me
  • Is every one I meet.
  • If it contain a kernel?
  • The figure of a nut
  • Presents upon a tree,
  • Equally plausibly;
  • But meat within is requisite,
  • To squirrels and to me.
  • XXIX.
  • MY COUNTRY'S WARDROBE.
  • My country need not change her gown,
  • Her triple suit as sweet
  • As when 't was cut at Lexington,
  • And first pronounced "a fit."
  • Great Britain disapproves "the stars;"
  • Disparagement discreet, --
  • There 's something in their attitude
  • That taunts her bayonet.
  • XXX.
  • Faith is a fine invention
  • For gentlemen who see;
  • But microscopes are prudent
  • In an emergency!
  • XXXI.
  • Except the heaven had come so near,
  • So seemed to choose my door,
  • The distance would not haunt me so;
  • I had not hoped before.
  • But just to hear the grace depart
  • I never thought to see,
  • Afflicts me with a double loss;
  • 'T is lost, and lost to me.
  • XXXII.
  • Portraits are to daily faces
  • As an evening west
  • To a fine, pedantic sunshine
  • In a satin vest.
  • XXXIII.
  • THE DUEL.
  • I took my power in my hand.
  • And went against the world;
  • 'T was not so much as David had,
  • But I was twice as bold.
  • I aimed my pebble, but myself
  • Was all the one that fell.
  • Was it Goliath was too large,
  • Or only I too small?
  • XXXIV.
  • A shady friend for torrid days
  • Is easier to find
  • Than one of higher temperature
  • For frigid hour of mind.
  • The vane a little to the east
  • Scares muslin souls away;
  • If broadcloth breasts are firmer
  • Than those of organdy,
  • Who is to blame? The weaver?
  • Ah! the bewildering thread!
  • The tapestries of paradise
  • So notelessly are made!
  • XXXV.
  • THE GOAL.
  • Each life converges to some centre
  • Expressed or still;
  • Exists in every human nature
  • A goal,
  • Admitted scarcely to itself, it may be,
  • Too fair
  • For credibility's temerity
  • To dare.
  • Adored with caution, as a brittle heaven,
  • To reach
  • Were hopeless as the rainbow's raiment
  • To touch,
  • Yet persevered toward, surer for the distance;
  • How high
  • Unto the saints' slow diligence
  • The sky!
  • Ungained, it may be, by a life's low venture,
  • But then,
  • Eternity enables the endeavoring
  • Again.
  • XXXVI.
  • SIGHT.
  • Before I got my eye put out,
  • I liked as well to see
  • As other creatures that have eyes,
  • And know no other way.
  • But were it told to me, to-day,
  • That I might have the sky
  • For mine, I tell you that my heart
  • Would split, for size of me.
  • The meadows mine, the mountains mine, --
  • All forests, stintless stars,
  • As much of noon as I could take
  • Between my finite eyes.
  • The motions of the dipping birds,
  • The lightning's jointed road,
  • For mine to look at when I liked, --
  • The news would strike me dead!
  • So safer, guess, with just my soul
  • Upon the window-pane
  • Where other creatures put their eyes,
  • Incautious of the sun.
  • XXXVII.
  • Talk with prudence to a beggar
  • Of 'Potosi' and the mines!
  • Reverently to the hungry
  • Of your viands and your wines!
  • Cautious, hint to any captive
  • You have passed enfranchised feet!
  • Anecdotes of air in dungeons
  • Have sometimes proved deadly sweet!
  • XXXVIII.
  • THE PREACHER.
  • He preached upon "breadth" till it argued him narrow, --
  • The broad are too broad to define;
  • And of "truth" until it proclaimed him a liar, --
  • The truth never flaunted a sign.
  • Simplicity fled from his counterfeit presence
  • As gold the pyrites would shun.
  • What confusion would cover the innocent Jesus
  • To meet so enabled a man!
  • XXXIX.
  • Good night! which put the candle out?
  • A jealous zephyr, not a doubt.
  • Ah! friend, you little knew
  • How long at that celestial wick
  • The angels labored diligent;
  • Extinguished, now, for you!
  • It might have been the lighthouse spark
  • Some sailor, rowing in the dark,
  • Had importuned to see!
  • It might have been the waning lamp
  • That lit the drummer from the camp
  • To purer reveille!
  • XL.
  • When I hoped I feared,
  • Since I hoped I dared;
  • Everywhere alone
  • As a church remain;
  • Spectre cannot harm,
  • Serpent cannot charm;
  • He deposes doom,
  • Who hath suffered him.
  • XLI.
  • DEED.
  • A deed knocks first at thought,
  • And then it knocks at will.
  • That is the manufacturing spot,
  • And will at home and well.
  • It then goes out an act,
  • Or is entombed so still
  • That only to the ear of God
  • Its doom is audible.
  • XLII.
  • TIME'S LESSON.
  • Mine enemy is growing old, --
  • I have at last revenge.
  • The palate of the hate departs;
  • If any would avenge, --
  • Let him be quick, the viand flits,
  • It is a faded meat.
  • Anger as soon as fed is dead;
  • 'T is starving makes it fat.
  • XLIII.
  • REMORSE.
  • Remorse is memory awake,
  • Her companies astir, --
  • A presence of departed acts
  • At window and at door.
  • It's past set down before the soul,
  • And lighted with a match,
  • Perusal to facilitate
  • Of its condensed despatch.
  • Remorse is cureless, -- the disease
  • Not even God can heal;
  • For 't is his institution, --
  • The complement of hell.
  • XLIV.
  • THE SHELTER.
  • The body grows outside, --
  • The more convenient way, --
  • That if the spirit like to hide,
  • Its temple stands alway
  • Ajar, secure, inviting;
  • It never did betray
  • The soul that asked its shelter
  • In timid honesty.
  • XLV.
  • Undue significance a starving man attaches
  • To food
  • Far off; he sighs, and therefore hopeless,
  • And therefore good.
  • Partaken, it relieves indeed, but proves us
  • That spices fly
  • In the receipt. It was the distance
  • Was savory.
  • XLVI.
  • Heart not so heavy as mine,
  • Wending late home,
  • As it passed my window
  • Whistled itself a tune, --
  • A careless snatch, a ballad,
  • A ditty of the street;
  • Yet to my irritated ear
  • An anodyne so sweet,
  • It was as if a bobolink,
  • Sauntering this way,
  • Carolled and mused and carolled,
  • Then bubbled slow away.
  • It was as if a chirping brook
  • Upon a toilsome way
  • Set bleeding feet to minuets
  • Without the knowing why.
  • To-morrow, night will come again,
  • Weary, perhaps, and sore.
  • Ah, bugle, by my window,
  • I pray you stroll once more!
  • XLVII.
  • I many times thought peace had come,
  • When peace was far away;
  • As wrecked men deem they sight the land
  • At centre of the sea,
  • And struggle slacker, but to prove,
  • As hopelessly as I,
  • How many the fictitious shores
  • Before the harbor lie.
  • XLVIII.
  • Unto my books so good to turn
  • Far ends of tired days;
  • It half endears the abstinence,
  • And pain is missed in praise.
  • As flavors cheer retarded guests
  • With banquetings to be,
  • So spices stimulate the time
  • Till my small library.
  • It may be wilderness without,
  • Far feet of failing men,
  • But holiday excludes the night,
  • And it is bells within.
  • I thank these kinsmen of the shelf;
  • Their countenances bland
  • Enamour in prospective,
  • And satisfy, obtained.
  • XLIX.
  • This merit hath the worst, --
  • It cannot be again.
  • When Fate hath taunted last
  • And thrown her furthest stone,
  • The maimed may pause and breathe,
  • And glance securely round.
  • The deer invites no longer
  • Than it eludes the hound.
  • L.
  • HUNGER.
  • I had been hungry all the years;
  • My noon had come, to dine;
  • I, trembling, drew the table near,
  • And touched the curious wine.
  • 'T was this on tables I had seen,
  • When turning, hungry, lone,
  • I looked in windows, for the wealth
  • I could not hope to own.
  • I did not know the ample bread,
  • 'T was so unlike the crumb
  • The birds and I had often shared
  • In Nature's dining-room.
  • The plenty hurt me, 't was so new, --
  • Myself felt ill and odd,
  • As berry of a mountain bush
  • Transplanted to the road.
  • Nor was I hungry; so I found
  • That hunger was a way
  • Of persons outside windows,
  • The entering takes away.
  • LI.
  • I gained it so,
  • By climbing slow,
  • By catching at the twigs that grow
  • Between the bliss and me.
  • It hung so high,
  • As well the sky
  • Attempt by strategy.
  • I said I gained it, --
  • This was all.
  • Look, how I clutch it,
  • Lest it fall,
  • And I a pauper go;
  • Unfitted by an instant's grace
  • For the contented beggar's face
  • I wore an hour ago.
  • LII.
  • To learn the transport by the pain,
  • As blind men learn the sun;
  • To die of thirst, suspecting
  • That brooks in meadows run;
  • To stay the homesick, homesick feet
  • Upon a foreign shore
  • Haunted by native lands, the while,
  • And blue, beloved air --
  • This is the sovereign anguish,
  • This, the signal woe!
  • These are the patient laureates
  • Whose voices, trained below,
  • Ascend in ceaseless carol,
  • Inaudible, indeed,
  • To us, the duller scholars
  • Of the mysterious bard!
  • LIII.
  • RETURNING.
  • I years had been from home,
  • And now, before the door,
  • I dared not open, lest a face
  • I never saw before
  • Stare vacant into mine
  • And ask my business there.
  • My business, -- just a life I left,
  • Was such still dwelling there?
  • I fumbled at my nerve,
  • I scanned the windows near;
  • The silence like an ocean rolled,
  • And broke against my ear.
  • I laughed a wooden laugh
  • That I could fear a door,
  • Who danger and the dead had faced,
  • But never quaked before.
  • I fitted to the latch
  • My hand, with trembling care,
  • Lest back the awful door should spring,
  • And leave me standing there.
  • I moved my fingers off
  • As cautiously as glass,
  • And held my ears, and like a thief
  • Fled gasping from the house.
  • LIV.
  • PRAYER.
  • Prayer is the little implement
  • Through which men reach
  • Where presence is denied them.
  • They fling their speech
  • By means of it in God's ear;
  • If then He hear,
  • This sums the apparatus
  • Comprised in prayer.
  • LV.
  • I know that he exists
  • Somewhere, in silence.
  • He has hid his rare life
  • From our gross eyes.
  • 'T is an instant's play,
  • 'T is a fond ambush,
  • Just to make bliss
  • Earn her own surprise!
  • But should the play
  • Prove piercing earnest,
  • Should the glee glaze
  • In death's stiff stare,
  • Would not the fun
  • Look too expensive?
  • Would not the jest
  • Have crawled too far?
  • LVI.
  • MELODIES UNHEARD.
  • Musicians wrestle everywhere:
  • All day, among the crowded air,
  • I hear the silver strife;
  • And -- waking long before the dawn --
  • Such transport breaks upon the town
  • I think it that "new life!"
  • It is not bird, it has no nest;
  • Nor band, in brass and scarlet dressed,
  • Nor tambourine, nor man;
  • It is not hymn from pulpit read, --
  • The morning stars the treble led
  • On time's first afternoon!
  • Some say it is the spheres at play!
  • Some say that bright majority
  • Of vanished dames and men!
  • Some think it service in the place
  • Where we, with late, celestial face,
  • Please God, shall ascertain!
  • LVII.
  • CALLED BACK.
  • Just lost when I was saved!
  • Just felt the world go by!
  • Just girt me for the onset with eternity,
  • When breath blew back,
  • And on the other side
  • I heard recede the disappointed tide!
  • Therefore, as one returned, I feel,
  • Odd secrets of the line to tell!
  • Some sailor, skirting foreign shores,
  • Some pale reporter from the awful doors
  • Before the seal!
  • Next time, to stay!
  • Next time, the things to see
  • By ear unheard,
  • Unscrutinized by eye.
  • Next time, to tarry,
  • While the ages steal, --
  • Slow tramp the centuries,
  • And the cycles wheel.
  • II. LOVE.
  • I.
  • CHOICE.
  • Of all the souls that stand create
  • I have elected one.
  • When sense from spirit files away,
  • And subterfuge is done;
  • When that which is and that which was
  • Apart, intrinsic, stand,
  • And this brief tragedy of flesh
  • Is shifted like a sand;
  • When figures show their royal front
  • And mists are carved away, --
  • Behold the atom I preferred
  • To all the lists of clay!
  • II.
  • I have no life but this,
  • To lead it here;
  • Nor any death, but lest
  • Dispelled from there;
  • Nor tie to earths to come,
  • Nor action new,
  • Except through this extent,
  • The realm of you.
  • III.
  • Your riches taught me poverty.
  • Myself a millionnaire
  • In little wealths, -- as girls could boast, --
  • Till broad as Buenos Ayre,
  • You drifted your dominions
  • A different Peru;
  • And I esteemed all poverty,
  • For life's estate with you.
  • Of mines I little know, myself,
  • But just the names of gems, --
  • The colors of the commonest;
  • And scarce of diadems
  • So much that, did I meet the queen,
  • Her glory I should know:
  • But this must be a different wealth,
  • To miss it beggars so.
  • I 'm sure 't is India all day
  • To those who look on you
  • Without a stint, without a blame, --
  • Might I but be the Jew!
  • I 'm sure it is Golconda,
  • Beyond my power to deem, --
  • To have a smile for mine each day,
  • How better than a gem!
  • At least, it solaces to know
  • That there exists a gold,
  • Although I prove it just in time
  • Its distance to behold!
  • It 's far, far treasure to surmise,
  • And estimate the pearl
  • That slipped my simple fingers through
  • While just a girl at school!
  • IV.
  • THE CONTRACT.
  • I gave myself to him,
  • And took himself for pay.
  • The solemn contract of a life
  • Was ratified this way.
  • The wealth might disappoint,
  • Myself a poorer prove
  • Than this great purchaser suspect,
  • The daily own of Love
  • Depreciate the vision;
  • But, till the merchant buy,
  • Still fable, in the isles of spice,
  • The subtle cargoes lie.
  • At least, 't is mutual risk, --
  • Some found it mutual gain;
  • Sweet debt of Life, -- each night to owe,
  • Insolvent, every noon.
  • V.
  • THE LETTER.
  • "GOING to him! Happy letter! Tell him --
  • Tell him the page I didn't write;
  • Tell him I only said the syntax,
  • And left the verb and the pronoun out.
  • Tell him just how the fingers hurried,
  • Then how they waded, slow, slow, slow;
  • And then you wished you had eyes in your pages,
  • So you could see what moved them so.
  • "Tell him it wasn't a practised writer,
  • You guessed, from the way the sentence toiled;
  • You could hear the bodice tug, behind you,
  • As if it held but the might of a child;
  • You almost pitied it, you, it worked so.
  • Tell him -- No, you may quibble there,
  • For it would split his heart to know it,
  • And then you and I were silenter.
  • "Tell him night finished before we finished,
  • And the old clock kept neighing 'day!'
  • And you got sleepy and begged to be ended --
  • What could it hinder so, to say?
  • Tell him just how she sealed you, cautious,
  • But if he ask where you are hid
  • Until to-morrow, -- happy letter!
  • Gesture, coquette, and shake your head!"
  • VI.
  • The way I read a letter 's this:
  • 'T is first I lock the door,
  • And push it with my fingers next,
  • For transport it be sure.
  • And then I go the furthest off
  • To counteract a knock;
  • Then draw my little letter forth
  • And softly pick its lock.
  • Then, glancing narrow at the wall,
  • And narrow at the floor,
  • For firm conviction of a mouse
  • Not exorcised before,
  • Peruse how infinite I am
  • To -- no one that you know!
  • And sigh for lack of heaven, -- but not
  • The heaven the creeds bestow.
  • VII.
  • Wild nights! Wild nights!
  • Were I with thee,
  • Wild nights should be
  • Our luxury!
  • Futile the winds
  • To a heart in port, --
  • Done with the compass,
  • Done with the chart.
  • Rowing in Eden!
  • Ah! the sea!
  • Might I but moor
  • To-night in thee!
  • VIII.
  • AT HOME.
  • The night was wide, and furnished scant
  • With but a single star,
  • That often as a cloud it met
  • Blew out itself for fear.
  • The wind pursued the little bush,
  • And drove away the leaves
  • November left; then clambered up
  • And fretted in the eaves.
  • No squirrel went abroad;
  • A dog's belated feet
  • Like intermittent plush were heard
  • Adown the empty street.
  • To feel if blinds be fast,
  • And closer to the fire
  • Her little rocking-chair to draw,
  • And shiver for the poor,
  • The housewife's gentle task.
  • "How pleasanter," said she
  • Unto the sofa opposite,
  • "The sleet than May -- no thee!"
  • IX.
  • POSSESSION.
  • Did the harebell loose her girdle
  • To the lover bee,
  • Would the bee the harebell hallow
  • Much as formerly?
  • Did the paradise, persuaded,
  • Yield her moat of pearl,
  • Would the Eden be an Eden,
  • Or the earl an earl?
  • X.
  • A charm invests a face
  • Imperfectly beheld, --
  • The lady dare not lift her veil
  • For fear it be dispelled.
  • But peers beyond her mesh,
  • And wishes, and denies, --
  • Lest interview annul a want
  • That image satisfies.
  • XI.
  • THE LOVERS.
  • The rose did caper on her cheek,
  • Her bodice rose and fell,
  • Her pretty speech, like drunken men,
  • Did stagger pitiful.
  • Her fingers fumbled at her work, --
  • Her needle would not go;
  • What ailed so smart a little maid
  • It puzzled me to know,
  • Till opposite I spied a cheek
  • That bore another rose;
  • Just opposite, another speech
  • That like the drunkard goes;
  • A vest that, like the bodice, danced
  • To the immortal tune, --
  • Till those two troubled little clocks
  • Ticked softly into one.
  • XII.
  • In lands I never saw, they say,
  • Immortal Alps look down,
  • Whose bonnets touch the firmament,
  • Whose sandals touch the town, --
  • Meek at whose everlasting feet
  • A myriad daisies play.
  • Which, sir, are you, and which am I,
  • Upon an August day?
  • XIII.
  • The moon is distant from the sea,
  • And yet with amber hands
  • She leads him, docile as a boy,
  • Along appointed sands.
  • He never misses a degree;
  • Obedient to her eye,
  • He comes just so far toward the town,
  • Just so far goes away.
  • Oh, Signor, thine the amber hand,
  • And mine the distant sea, --
  • Obedient to the least command
  • Thine eyes impose on me.
  • XIV.
  • He put the belt around my life, --
  • I heard the buckle snap,
  • And turned away, imperial,
  • My lifetime folding up
  • Deliberate, as a duke would do
  • A kingdom's title-deed, --
  • Henceforth a dedicated sort,
  • A member of the cloud.
  • Yet not too far to come at call,
  • And do the little toils
  • That make the circuit of the rest,
  • And deal occasional smiles
  • To lives that stoop to notice mine
  • And kindly ask it in, --
  • Whose invitation, knew you not
  • For whom I must decline?
  • XV.
  • THE LOST JEWEL.
  • I held a jewel in my fingers
  • And went to sleep.
  • The day was warm, and winds were prosy;
  • I said: "'T will keep."
  • I woke and chid my honest fingers, --
  • The gem was gone;
  • And now an amethyst remembrance
  • Is all I own.
  • XVI.
  • What if I say I shall not wait?
  • What if I burst the fleshly gate
  • And pass, escaped, to thee?
  • What if I file this mortal off,
  • See where it hurt me, -- that 's enough, --
  • And wade in liberty?
  • They cannot take us any more, --
  • Dungeons may call, and guns implore;
  • Unmeaning now, to me,
  • As laughter was an hour ago,
  • Or laces, or a travelling show,
  • Or who died yesterday!
  • III. NATURE.
  • I.
  • MOTHER NATURE.
  • Nature, the gentlest mother,
  • Impatient of no child,
  • The feeblest or the waywardest, --
  • Her admonition mild
  • In forest and the hill
  • By traveller is heard,
  • Restraining rampant squirrel
  • Or too impetuous bird.
  • How fair her conversation,
  • A summer afternoon, --
  • Her household, her assembly;
  • And when the sun goes down
  • Her voice among the aisles
  • Incites the timid prayer
  • Of the minutest cricket,
  • The most unworthy flower.
  • When all the children sleep
  • She turns as long away
  • As will suffice to light her lamps;
  • Then, bending from the sky
  • With infinite affection
  • And infiniter care,
  • Her golden finger on her lip,
  • Wills silence everywhere.
  • II.
  • OUT OF THE MORNING.
  • Will there really be a morning?
  • Is there such a thing as day?
  • Could I see it from the mountains
  • If I were as tall as they?
  • Has it feet like water-lilies?
  • Has it feathers like a bird?
  • Is it brought from famous countries
  • Of which I have never heard?
  • Oh, some scholar! Oh, some sailor!
  • Oh, some wise man from the skies!
  • Please to tell a little pilgrim
  • Where the place called morning lies!
  • III.
  • At half-past three a single bird
  • Unto a silent sky
  • Propounded but a single term
  • Of cautious melody.
  • At half-past four, experiment
  • Had subjugated test,
  • And lo! her silver principle
  • Supplanted all the rest.
  • At half-past seven, element
  • Nor implement was seen,
  • And place was where the presence was,
  • Circumference between.
  • IV.
  • DAY'S PARLOR.
  • The day came slow, till five o'clock,
  • Then sprang before the hills
  • Like hindered rubies, or the light
  • A sudden musket spills.
  • The purple could not keep the east,
  • The sunrise shook from fold,
  • Like breadths of topaz, packed a night,
  • The lady just unrolled.
  • The happy winds their timbrels took;
  • The birds, in docile rows,
  • Arranged themselves around their prince
  • (The wind is prince of those).
  • The orchard sparkled like a Jew, --
  • How mighty 't was, to stay
  • A guest in this stupendous place,
  • The parlor of the day!
  • V.
  • THE SUN'S WOOING.
  • The sun just touched the morning;
  • The morning, happy thing,
  • Supposed that he had come to dwell,
  • And life would be all spring.
  • She felt herself supremer, --
  • A raised, ethereal thing;
  • Henceforth for her what holiday!
  • Meanwhile, her wheeling king
  • Trailed slow along the orchards
  • His haughty, spangled hems,
  • Leaving a new necessity, --
  • The want of diadems!
  • The morning fluttered, staggered,
  • Felt feebly for her crown, --
  • Her unanointed forehead
  • Henceforth her only one.
  • VI.
  • THE ROBIN.
  • The robin is the one
  • That interrupts the morn
  • With hurried, few, express reports
  • When March is scarcely on.
  • The robin is the one
  • That overflows the noon
  • With her cherubic quantity,
  • An April but begun.
  • The robin is the one
  • That speechless from her nest
  • Submits that home and certainty
  • And sanctity are best.
  • VII.
  • THE BUTTERFLY'S DAY.
  • From cocoon forth a butterfly
  • As lady from her door
  • Emerged -- a summer afternoon --
  • Repairing everywhere,
  • Without design, that I could trace,
  • Except to stray abroad
  • On miscellaneous enterprise
  • The clovers understood.
  • Her pretty parasol was seen
  • Contracting in a field
  • Where men made hay, then struggling hard
  • With an opposing cloud,
  • Where parties, phantom as herself,
  • To Nowhere seemed to go
  • In purposeless circumference,
  • As 't were a tropic show.
  • And notwithstanding bee that worked,
  • And flower that zealous blew,
  • This audience of idleness
  • Disdained them, from the sky,
  • Till sundown crept, a steady tide,
  • And men that made the hay,
  • And afternoon, and butterfly,
  • Extinguished in its sea.
  • VIII.
  • THE BLUEBIRD.
  • Before you thought of spring,
  • Except as a surmise,
  • You see, God bless his suddenness,
  • A fellow in the skies
  • Of independent hues,
  • A little weather-worn,
  • Inspiriting habiliments
  • Of indigo and brown.
  • With specimens of song,
  • As if for you to choose,
  • Discretion in the interval,
  • With gay delays he goes
  • To some superior tree
  • Without a single leaf,
  • And shouts for joy to nobody
  • But his seraphic self!
  • IX.
  • APRIL.
  • An altered look about the hills;
  • A Tyrian light the village fills;
  • A wider sunrise in the dawn;
  • A deeper twilight on the lawn;
  • A print of a vermilion foot;
  • A purple finger on the slope;
  • A flippant fly upon the pane;
  • A spider at his trade again;
  • An added strut in chanticleer;
  • A flower expected everywhere;
  • An axe shrill singing in the woods;
  • Fern-odors on untravelled roads, --
  • All this, and more I cannot tell,
  • A furtive look you know as well,
  • And Nicodemus' mystery
  • Receives its annual reply.
  • X.
  • THE SLEEPING FLOWERS.
  • "Whose are the little beds," I asked,
  • "Which in the valleys lie?"
  • Some shook their heads, and others smiled,
  • And no one made reply.
  • "Perhaps they did not hear," I said;
  • "I will inquire again.
  • Whose are the beds, the tiny beds
  • So thick upon the plain?"
  • "'T is daisy in the shortest;
  • A little farther on,
  • Nearest the door to wake the first,
  • Little leontodon.
  • "'T is iris, sir, and aster,
  • Anemone and bell,
  • Batschia in the blanket red,
  • And chubby daffodil."
  • Meanwhile at many cradles
  • Her busy foot she plied,
  • Humming the quaintest lullaby
  • That ever rocked a child.
  • "Hush! Epigea wakens! --
  • The crocus stirs her lids,
  • Rhodora's cheek is crimson, --
  • She's dreaming of the woods."
  • Then, turning from them, reverent,
  • "Their bed-time 't is," she said;
  • "The bumble-bees will wake them
  • When April woods are red."
  • XI.
  • MY ROSE.
  • Pigmy seraphs gone astray,
  • Velvet people from Vevay,
  • Belles from some lost summer day,
  • Bees' exclusive coterie.
  • Paris could not lay the fold
  • Belted down with emerald;
  • Venice could not show a cheek
  • Of a tint so lustrous meek.
  • Never such an ambuscade
  • As of brier and leaf displayed
  • For my little damask maid.
  • I had rather wear her grace
  • Than an earl's distinguished face;
  • I had rather dwell like her
  • Than be Duke of Exeter
  • Royalty enough for me
  • To subdue the bumble-bee!
  • XII.
  • THE ORIOLE'S SECRET.
  • To hear an oriole sing
  • May be a common thing,
  • Or only a divine.
  • It is not of the bird
  • Who sings the same, unheard,
  • As unto crowd.
  • The fashion of the ear
  • Attireth that it hear
  • In dun or fair.
  • So whether it be rune,
  • Or whether it be none,
  • Is of within;
  • The "tune is in the tree,"
  • The sceptic showeth me;
  • "No, sir! In thee!"
  • XIII.
  • THE ORIOLE.
  • One of the ones that Midas touched,
  • Who failed to touch us all,
  • Was that confiding prodigal,
  • The blissful oriole.
  • So drunk, he disavows it
  • With badinage divine;
  • So dazzling, we mistake him
  • For an alighting mine.
  • A pleader, a dissembler,
  • An epicure, a thief, --
  • Betimes an oratorio,
  • An ecstasy in chief;
  • The Jesuit of orchards,
  • He cheats as he enchants
  • Of an entire attar
  • For his decamping wants.
  • The splendor of a Burmah,
  • The meteor of birds,
  • Departing like a pageant
  • Of ballads and of bards.
  • I never thought that Jason sought
  • For any golden fleece;
  • But then I am a rural man,
  • With thoughts that make for peace.
  • But if there were a Jason,
  • Tradition suffer me
  • Behold his lost emolument
  • Upon the apple-tree.
  • XIV.
  • IN SHADOW.
  • I dreaded that first robin so,
  • But he is mastered now,
  • And I 'm accustomed to him grown, --
  • He hurts a little, though.
  • I thought if I could only live
  • Till that first shout got by,
  • Not all pianos in the woods
  • Had power to mangle me.
  • I dared not meet the daffodils,
  • For fear their yellow gown
  • Would pierce me with a fashion
  • So foreign to my own.
  • I wished the grass would hurry,
  • So when 't was time to see,
  • He 'd be too tall, the tallest one
  • Could stretch to look at me.
  • I could not bear the bees should come,
  • I wished they 'd stay away
  • In those dim countries where they go:
  • What word had they for me?
  • They 're here, though; not a creature failed,
  • No blossom stayed away
  • In gentle deference to me,
  • The Queen of Calvary.
  • Each one salutes me as he goes,
  • And I my childish plumes
  • Lift, in bereaved acknowledgment
  • Of their unthinking drums.
  • XV.
  • THE HUMMING-BIRD.
  • A route of evanescence
  • With a revolving wheel;
  • A resonance of emerald,
  • A rush of cochineal;
  • And every blossom on the bush
  • Adjusts its tumbled head, --
  • The mail from Tunis, probably,
  • An easy morning's ride.
  • XVI.
  • SECRETS.
  • The skies can't keep their secret!
  • They tell it to the hills --
  • The hills just tell the orchards --
  • And they the daffodils!
  • A bird, by chance, that goes that way
  • Soft overheard the whole.
  • If I should bribe the little bird,
  • Who knows but she would tell?
  • I think I won't, however,
  • It's finer not to know;
  • If summer were an axiom,
  • What sorcery had snow?
  • So keep your secret, Father!
  • I would not, if I could,
  • Know what the sapphire fellows do,
  • In your new-fashioned world!
  • XVII.
  • Who robbed the woods,
  • The trusting woods?
  • The unsuspecting trees
  • Brought out their burrs and mosses
  • His fantasy to please.
  • He scanned their trinkets, curious,
  • He grasped, he bore away.
  • What will the solemn hemlock,
  • What will the fir-tree say?
  • XVIII.
  • TWO VOYAGERS.
  • Two butterflies went out at noon
  • And waltzed above a stream,
  • Then stepped straight through the firmament
  • And rested on a beam;
  • And then together bore away
  • Upon a shining sea, --
  • Though never yet, in any port,
  • Their coming mentioned be.
  • If spoken by the distant bird,
  • If met in ether sea
  • By frigate or by merchantman,
  • Report was not to me.
  • XIX.
  • BY THE SEA.
  • I started early, took my dog,
  • And visited the sea;
  • The mermaids in the basement
  • Came out to look at me,
  • And frigates in the upper floor
  • Extended hempen hands,
  • Presuming me to be a mouse
  • Aground, upon the sands.
  • But no man moved me till the tide
  • Went past my simple shoe,
  • And past my apron and my belt,
  • And past my bodice too,
  • And made as he would eat me up
  • As wholly as a dew
  • Upon a dandelion's sleeve --
  • And then I started too.
  • And he -- he followed close behind;
  • I felt his silver heel
  • Upon my ankle, -- then my shoes
  • Would overflow with pearl.
  • Until we met the solid town,
  • No man he seemed to know;
  • And bowing with a mighty look
  • At me, the sea withdrew.
  • XX.
  • OLD-FASHIONED.
  • Arcturus is his other name, --
  • I'd rather call him star!
  • It's so unkind of science
  • To go and interfere!
  • I pull a flower from the woods, --
  • A monster with a glass
  • Computes the stamens in a breath,
  • And has her in a class.
  • Whereas I took the butterfly
  • Aforetime in my hat,
  • He sits erect in cabinets,
  • The clover-bells forgot.
  • What once was heaven, is zenith now.
  • Where I proposed to go
  • When time's brief masquerade was done,
  • Is mapped, and charted too!
  • What if the poles should frisk about
  • And stand upon their heads!
  • I hope I 'm ready for the worst,
  • Whatever prank betides!
  • Perhaps the kingdom of Heaven 's changed!
  • I hope the children there
  • Won't be new-fashioned when I come,
  • And laugh at me, and stare!
  • I hope the father in the skies
  • Will lift his little girl, --
  • Old-fashioned, naughty, everything, --
  • Over the stile of pearl!
  • XXI.
  • A TEMPEST.
  • An awful tempest mashed the air,
  • The clouds were gaunt and few;
  • A black, as of a spectre's cloak,
  • Hid heaven and earth from view.
  • The creatures chuckled on the roofs
  • And whistled in the air,
  • And shook their fists and gnashed their teeth.
  • And swung their frenzied hair.
  • The morning lit, the birds arose;
  • The monster's faded eyes
  • Turned slowly to his native coast,
  • And peace was Paradise!
  • XXII.
  • THE SEA.
  • An everywhere of silver,
  • With ropes of sand
  • To keep it from effacing
  • The track called land.
  • XXIII.
  • IN THE GARDEN.
  • A bird came down the walk:
  • He did not know I saw;
  • He bit an angle-worm in halves
  • And ate the fellow, raw.
  • And then he drank a dew
  • From a convenient grass,
  • And then hopped sidewise to the wall
  • To let a beetle pass.
  • He glanced with rapid eyes
  • That hurried all abroad, --
  • They looked like frightened beads, I thought;
  • He stirred his velvet head
  • Like one in danger; cautious,
  • I offered him a crumb,
  • 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, splashless, 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 WIND'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 doesn'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 've 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!
  • And yet it will be done
  • As sure as flocks go home at night
  • Unto the shepherd's arm!
  • Perhaps you 're going too!
  • Who knows?
  • If you should get there first,
  • Save just a little place for me
  • Close to the two I lost!
  • The smallest "robe" will fit me,
  • And just a bit of "crown;"
  • For you know we do not mind our dress
  • When we are going home.
  • I 'm glad I don't believe it,
  • For it would stop my breath,
  • And I 'd like to look a little more
  • At such a curious earth!
  • I am glad they did believe it
  • Whom I have never found
  • Since the mighty autumn afternoon
  • I left them in the ground.
  • III.
  • At least to pray is left, is left.
  • O Jesus! in the air
  • I know not which thy chamber is, --
  • I 'm knocking everywhere.
  • Thou stirrest earthquake in the South,
  • And maelstrom in the sea;
  • Say, Jesus Christ of Nazareth,
  • Hast thou no arm for me?
  • IV.
  • EPITAPH.
  • Step lightly on this narrow spot!
  • The broadest land that grows
  • Is not so ample as the breast
  • These emerald seams enclose.
  • Step lofty; for this name is told
  • As far as cannon dwell,
  • Or flag subsist, or fame export
  • Her deathless syllable.
  • V.
  • Morns like these we parted;
  • Noons like these she rose,
  • Fluttering first, then firmer,
  • To her fair repose.
  • Never did she lisp it,
  • And 't was not for me;
  • She was mute from transport,
  • I, from agony!
  • Till the evening, nearing,
  • One the shutters drew --
  • Quick! a sharper rustling!
  • And this linnet flew!
  • VI.
  • A death-blow is a life-blow to some
  • Who, till they died, did not alive become;
  • Who, had they lived, had died, but when
  • They died, vitality begun.
  • VII.
  • I read my sentence steadily,
  • Reviewed it with my eyes,
  • To see that I made no mistake
  • In its extremest clause, --
  • The date, and manner of the shame;
  • And then the pious form
  • That "God have mercy" on the soul
  • The jury voted him.
  • I made my soul familiar
  • With her extremity,
  • That at the last it should not be
  • A novel agony,
  • But she and Death, acquainted,
  • Meet tranquilly as friends,
  • Salute and pass without a hint --
  • And there the matter ends.
  • VIII.
  • I have not told my garden yet,
  • Lest that should conquer me;
  • I have not quite the strength now
  • To break it to the bee.
  • I will not name it in the street,
  • For shops would stare, that I,
  • So shy, so very ignorant,
  • Should have the face to die.
  • The hillsides must not know it,
  • Where I have rambled so,
  • Nor tell the loving forests
  • The day that I shall go,
  • Nor lisp it at the table,
  • Nor heedless by the way
  • Hint that within the riddle
  • One will walk to-day!
  • IX.
  • THE BATTLE-FIELD.
  • They dropped like flakes, they dropped like stars,
  • Like petals from a rose,
  • When suddenly across the June
  • A wind with fingers goes.
  • They perished in the seamless grass, --
  • No eye could find the place;
  • But God on his repealless list
  • Can summon every face.
  • X.
  • The only ghost I ever saw
  • Was dressed in mechlin, -- so;
  • He wore no sandal on his foot,
  • And stepped like flakes of snow.
  • His gait was soundless, like the bird,
  • But rapid, like the roe;
  • His fashions quaint, mosaic,
  • Or, haply, mistletoe.
  • His conversation seldom,
  • His laughter like the breeze
  • That dies away in dimples
  • Among the pensive trees.
  • Our interview was transient,--
  • Of me, himself was shy;
  • And God forbid I look behind
  • Since that appalling day!
  • XI.
  • Some, too fragile for winter winds,
  • The thoughtful grave encloses, --
  • Tenderly tucking them in from frost
  • Before their feet are cold.
  • Never the treasures in her nest
  • The cautious grave exposes,
  • Building where schoolboy dare not look
  • And sportsman is not bold.
  • This covert have all the children
  • Early aged, and often cold, --
  • Sparrows unnoticed by the Father;
  • Lambs for whom time had not a fold.
  • XII.
  • As by the dead we love to sit,
  • Become so wondrous dear,
  • As for the lost we grapple,
  • Though all the rest are here, --
  • In broken mathematics
  • We estimate our prize,
  • Vast, in its fading ratio,
  • To our penurious eyes!
  • XIII.
  • MEMORIALS.
  • Death sets a thing significant
  • The eye had hurried by,
  • Except a perished creature
  • Entreat us tenderly
  • To ponder little workmanships
  • In crayon or in wool,
  • With "This was last her fingers did,"
  • Industrious until
  • The thimble weighed too heavy,
  • The stitches stopped themselves,
  • And then 't was put among the dust
  • Upon the closet shelves.
  • A book I have, a friend gave,
  • Whose pencil, here and there,
  • Had notched the place that pleased him, --
  • At rest his fingers are.
  • Now, when I read, I read not,
  • For interrupting tears
  • Obliterate the etchings
  • Too costly for repairs.
  • XIV.
  • I went to heaven, --
  • 'T was a small town,
  • Lit with a ruby,
  • Lathed with down.
  • Stiller than the fields
  • At the full dew,
  • Beautiful as pictures
  • No man drew.
  • People like the moth,
  • Of mechlin, frames,
  • Duties of gossamer,
  • And eider names.
  • Almost contented
  • I could be
  • 'Mong such unique
  • Society.
  • XV.
  • Their height in heaven comforts not,
  • Their glory nought to me;
  • 'T was best imperfect, as it was;
  • I 'm finite, I can't see.
  • The house of supposition,
  • The glimmering frontier
  • That skirts the acres of perhaps,
  • To me shows insecure.
  • The wealth I had contented me;
  • If 't was a meaner size,
  • Then I had counted it until
  • It pleased my narrow eyes
  • Better than larger values,
  • However true their show;
  • This timid life of evidence
  • Keeps pleading, "I don't know."
  • XVI.
  • There is a shame of nobleness
  • Confronting sudden pelf, --
  • A finer shame of ecstasy
  • Convicted of itself.
  • A best disgrace a brave man feels,
  • Acknowledged of the brave, --
  • One more "Ye Blessed" to be told;
  • But this involves the grave.
  • XVII.
  • TRIUMPH.
  • Triumph may be of several kinds.
  • There 's triumph in the room
  • When that old imperator, Death,
  • By faith is overcome.
  • There 's triumph of the finer mind
  • When truth, affronted long,
  • Advances calm to her supreme,
  • Her God her only throng.
  • A triumph when temptation's bribe
  • Is slowly handed back,
  • One eye upon the heaven renounced
  • And one upon the rack.
  • Severer triumph, by himself
  • Experienced, who can pass
  • Acquitted from that naked bar,
  • Jehovah's countenance!
  • XVIII.
  • Pompless no life can pass away;
  • The lowliest career
  • To the same pageant wends its way
  • As that exalted here.
  • How cordial is the mystery!
  • The hospitable pall
  • A "this way" beckons spaciously, --
  • A miracle for all!
  • XIX.
  • I noticed people disappeared,
  • When but a little child, --
  • Supposed they visited remote,
  • Or settled regions wild.
  • Now know I they both visited
  • And settled regions wild,
  • But did because they died, -- a fact
  • Withheld the little child!
  • XX.
  • FOLLOWING.
  • I had no cause to be awake,
  • My best was gone to sleep,
  • And morn a new politeness took,
  • And failed to wake them up,
  • But called the others clear,
  • And passed their curtains by.
  • Sweet morning, when I over-sleep,
  • Knock, recollect, for me!
  • I looked at sunrise once,
  • And then I looked at them,
  • And wishfulness in me arose
  • For circumstance the same.
  • 'T was such an ample peace,
  • It could not hold a sigh, --
  • 'T was Sabbath with the bells divorced,
  • 'T was sunset all the day.
  • So choosing but a gown
  • And taking but a prayer,
  • The only raiment I should need,
  • I struggled, and was there.
  • XXI.
  • If anybody's friend be dead,
  • It 's sharpest of the theme
  • The thinking how they walked alive,
  • At such and such a time.
  • Their costume, of a Sunday,
  • Some manner of the hair, --
  • A prank nobody knew but them,
  • Lost, in the sepulchre.
  • How warm they were on such a day:
  • You almost feel the date,
  • So short way off it seems; and now,
  • They 're centuries from that.
  • How pleased they were at what you said;
  • You try to touch the smile,
  • And dip your fingers in the frost:
  • When was it, can you tell,
  • You asked the company to tea,
  • Acquaintance, just a few,
  • And chatted close with this grand thing
  • That don't remember you?
  • Past bows and invitations,
  • Past interview, and vow,
  • Past what ourselves can estimate, --
  • That makes the quick of woe!
  • XXII.
  • THE JOURNEY.
  • Our journey had advanced;
  • Our feet were almost come
  • To that odd fork in Being's road,
  • Eternity by term.
  • Our pace took sudden awe,
  • Our feet reluctant led.
  • Before were cities, but between,
  • The forest of the dead.
  • Retreat was out of hope, --
  • Behind, a sealed route,
  • Eternity's white flag before,
  • And God at every gate.
  • XXIII.
  • A COUNTRY BURIAL.
  • Ample make this bed.
  • Make this bed with awe;
  • In it wait till judgment break
  • Excellent and fair.
  • Be its mattress straight,
  • Be its pillow round;
  • Let no sunrise' yellow noise
  • Interrupt this ground.
  • XXIV.
  • GOING.
  • On such a night, or such a night,
  • Would anybody care
  • If such a little figure
  • Slipped quiet from its chair,
  • So quiet, oh, how quiet!
  • That nobody might know
  • But that the little figure
  • Rocked softer, to and fro?
  • On such a dawn, or such a dawn,
  • Would anybody sigh
  • That such a little figure
  • Too sound asleep did lie
  • For chanticleer to wake it, --
  • Or stirring house below,
  • Or giddy bird in orchard,
  • Or early task to do?
  • There was a little figure plump
  • For every little knoll,
  • Busy needles, and spools of thread,
  • And trudging feet from school.
  • Playmates, and holidays, and nuts,
  • And visions vast and small.
  • Strange that the feet so precious charged
  • Should reach so small a goal!
  • XXV.
  • Essential oils are wrung:
  • The attar from the rose
  • Is not expressed by suns alone,
  • It is the gift of screws.
  • The general rose decays;
  • But this, in lady's drawer,
  • Makes summer when the lady lies
  • In ceaseless rosemary.
  • XXVI.
  • I lived on dread; to those who know
  • The stimulus there is
  • In danger, other impetus
  • Is numb and vital-less.
  • As 't were a spur upon the soul,
  • A fear will urge it where
  • To go without the spectre's aid
  • Were challenging despair.
  • XXVII.
  • If I should die,
  • And you should live,
  • And time should gurgle on,
  • And morn should beam,
  • And noon should burn,
  • As it has usual done;
  • If birds should build as early,
  • And bees as bustling go, --
  • One might depart at option
  • From enterprise below!
  • 'T is sweet to know that stocks will stand
  • When we with daisies lie,
  • That commerce will continue,
  • And trades as briskly fly.
  • It makes the parting tranquil
  • And keeps the soul serene,
  • That gentlemen so sprightly
  • Conduct the pleasing scene!
  • XXVIII.
  • AT LENGTH.
  • Her final summer was it,
  • And yet we guessed it not;
  • If tenderer industriousness
  • Pervaded her, we thought
  • A further force of life
  • Developed from within, --
  • When Death lit all the shortness up,
  • And made the hurry plain.
  • We wondered at our blindness, --
  • When nothing was to see
  • But her Carrara guide-post, --
  • At our stupidity,
  • When, duller than our dullness,
  • The busy darling lay,
  • So busy was she, finishing,
  • So leisurely were we!
  • XXIX.
  • GHOSTS.
  • One need not be a chamber to be haunted,
  • One need not be a house;
  • The brain has corridors surpassing
  • Material place.
  • Far safer, of a midnight meeting
  • External ghost,
  • Than an interior confronting
  • That whiter host.
  • Far safer through an Abbey gallop,
  • The stones achase,
  • Than, moonless, one's own self encounter
  • In lonesome place.
  • Ourself, behind ourself concealed,
  • Should startle most;
  • Assassin, hid in our apartment,
  • Be horror's least.
  • The prudent carries a revolver,
  • He bolts the door,
  • O'erlooking a superior spectre
  • More near.
  • XXX.
  • VANISHED.
  • She died, -- this was the way she died;
  • And when her breath was done,
  • Took up her simple wardrobe
  • And started for the sun.
  • Her little figure at the gate
  • The angels must have spied,
  • Since I could never find her
  • Upon the mortal side.
  • XXXI.
  • PRECEDENCE.
  • Wait till the majesty of Death
  • Invests so mean a brow!
  • Almost a powdered footman
  • Might dare to touch it now!
  • Wait till in everlasting robes
  • This democrat is dressed,
  • Then prate about "preferment"
  • And "station" and the rest!
  • Around this quiet courtier
  • Obsequious angels wait!
  • Full royal is his retinue,
  • Full purple is his state!
  • A lord might dare to lift the hat
  • To such a modest clay,
  • Since that my Lord, "the Lord of lords"
  • Receives unblushingly!
  • XXXII.
  • GONE.
  • Went up a year this evening!
  • I recollect it well!
  • Amid no bells nor bravos
  • The bystanders will tell!
  • Cheerful, as to the village,
  • Tranquil, as to repose,
  • Chastened, as to the chapel,
  • This humble tourist rose.
  • Did not talk of returning,
  • Alluded to no time
  • When, were the gales propitious,
  • We might look for him;
  • Was grateful for the roses
  • In life's diverse bouquet,
  • Talked softly of new species
  • To pick another day.
  • Beguiling thus the wonder,
  • The wondrous nearer drew;
  • Hands bustled at the moorings --
  • The crowd respectful grew.
  • Ascended from our vision
  • To countenances new!
  • A difference, a daisy,
  • Is all the rest I knew!
  • XXXIII.
  • REQUIEM.
  • Taken from men this morning,
  • Carried by men to-day,
  • Met by the gods with banners
  • Who marshalled her away.
  • One little maid from playmates,
  • One little mind from school, --
  • There must be guests in Eden;
  • All the rooms are full.
  • Far as the east from even,
  • Dim as the border star, --
  • Courtiers quaint, in kingdoms,
  • Our departed are.
  • XXXIV.
  • What inn is this
  • Where for the night
  • Peculiar traveller comes?
  • Who is the landlord?
  • Where the maids?
  • Behold, what curious rooms!
  • No ruddy fires on the hearth,
  • No brimming tankards flow.
  • Necromancer, landlord,
  • Who are these below?
  • XXXV.
  • It was not death, for I stood up,
  • And all the dead lie down;
  • It was not night, for all the bells
  • Put out their tongues, for noon.
  • It was not frost, for on my flesh
  • I felt siroccos crawl, --
  • Nor fire, for just my marble feet
  • Could keep a chancel cool.
  • And yet it tasted like them all;
  • The figures I have seen
  • Set orderly, for burial,
  • Reminded me of mine,
  • As if my life were shaven
  • And fitted to a frame,
  • And could not breathe without a key;
  • And 't was like midnight, some,
  • When everything that ticked has stopped,
  • And space stares, all around,
  • Or grisly frosts, first autumn morns,
  • Repeal the beating ground.
  • But most like chaos, -- stopless, cool, --
  • Without a chance or spar,
  • Or even a report of land
  • To justify despair.
  • XXXVI.
  • TILL THE END.
  • I should not dare to leave my friend,
  • Because -- because if he should die
  • While I was gone, and I -- too late --
  • Should reach the heart that wanted me;
  • If I should disappoint the eyes
  • That hunted, hunted so, to see,
  • And could not bear to shut until
  • They "noticed" me -- they noticed me;
  • If I should stab the patient faith
  • So sure I 'd come -- so sure I 'd come,
  • It listening, listening, went to sleep
  • Telling my tardy name, --
  • My heart would wish it broke before,
  • Since breaking then, since breaking then,
  • Were useless as next morning's sun,
  • Where midnight frosts had lain!
  • XXXVII.
  • VOID.
  • Great streets of silence led away
  • To neighborhoods of pause;
  • Here was no notice, no dissent,
  • No universe, no laws.
  • By clocks 't was morning, and for night
  • The bells at distance called;
  • But epoch had no basis here,
  • For period exhaled.
  • XXXVIII.
  • A throe upon the features
  • A hurry in the breath,
  • An ecstasy of parting
  • Denominated "Death," --
  • An anguish at the mention,
  • Which, when to patience grown,
  • I 've known permission given
  • To rejoin its own.
  • XXXIX.
  • SAVED!
  • Of tribulation these are they
  • Denoted by the white;
  • The spangled gowns, a lesser rank
  • Of victors designate.
  • All these did conquer; but the ones
  • Who overcame most times
  • Wear nothing commoner than snow,
  • No ornament but palms.
  • Surrender is a sort unknown
  • On this superior soil;
  • Defeat, an outgrown anguish,
  • Remembered as the mile
  • Our panting ankle barely gained
  • When night devoured the road;
  • But we stood whispering in the house,
  • And all we said was "Saved"!
  • XL.
  • I think just how my shape will rise
  • When I shall be forgiven,
  • Till hair and eyes and timid head
  • Are out of sight, in heaven.
  • I think just how my lips will weigh
  • With shapeless, quivering prayer
  • That you, so late, consider me,
  • The sparrow of your care.
  • I mind me that of anguish sent,
  • Some drifts were moved away
  • Before my simple bosom broke, --
  • And why not this, if they?
  • And so, until delirious borne
  • I con that thing, -- "forgiven," --
  • Till with long fright and longer trust
  • I drop my heart, unshriven!
  • XLI.
  • THE FORGOTTEN GRAVE.
  • After a hundred years
  • Nobody knows the place, --
  • Agony, that enacted there,
  • Motionless as peace.
  • Weeds triumphant ranged,
  • Strangers strolled and spelled
  • At the lone orthography
  • Of the elder dead.
  • Winds of summer fields
  • Recollect the way, --
  • Instinct picking up the key
  • Dropped by memory.
  • XLII.
  • Lay this laurel on the one
  • Too intrinsic for renown.
  • Laurel! veil your deathless tree, --
  • Him you chasten, that is he!
  • POEMS
  • by EMILY DICKINSON
  • Third Series
  • Edited by
  • MABEL LOOMIS TODD
  • It's all I have to bring to-day,
  • This, and my heart beside,
  • This, and my heart, and all the fields,
  • And all the meadows wide.
  • Be sure you count, should I forget, --
  • Some one the sum could tell, --
  • This, and my heart, and all the bees
  • Which in the clover dwell.
  • 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 1894, 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 letter-writing 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_, 1896.
  • I. LIFE.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • A word 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 invest 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.
  • 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 learnèd angels
  • In scholastic skies!
  • Low amid that glad _Belles lettres_
  • Grant that we may stand,
  • Stars, amid profound Galaxies,
  • At that grand 'Right hand'!
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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. -- 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.
  • 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
  • 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 to-day!
  • 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
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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,
  • 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' to-day,
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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,
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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 over-full;
  • 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 bumble-bees 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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, to-night!
  • 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!
  • 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.
  • 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;
  • Death's single privacy,
  • The only one forestalling 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 to-day
  • 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,
  • 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 to-day.
  • The lilacs, bending many a year,
  • With purple load will hang;
  • The bees will not forget the tune
  • Their old forefathers sang.
  • 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:
  • 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!
  • 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 blue-birds 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?
  • 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.
  • 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 joyous-going 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!
  • 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.
  • 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,
  • 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 meadow-bee,
  • 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
  • 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 summer 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,
  • 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 counting-rooms observe,
  • ''T was only a balloon.'
  • 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, to-night!
  • So adequate its forms,
  • So preconcerted with itself,
  • 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;
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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.
  • 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've 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.
  • 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.
  • 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 three-score and ten.
  • This latest leisure equal lulls
  • The beggar and his queen;
  • Propitiate this democrat
  • By summer's gracious mien.
  • 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 to-day
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Good-by 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!
  • 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 simple-hearted 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?
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • There's been a death in the opposite house
  • As lately as to-day.
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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 BRONTË'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 'Brontë' entered there!
  • 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?
  • 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;
  • Thither I pilot thee, --
  • Land, ho! Eternity!
  • Ashore at last!
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