Read Poems by Emily Dickinson First Series Page 4


  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 éclat 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

  Unopcncd, 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 tamps 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 S
pirit, "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;