Read Poems by Emily Dickinson First Series Page 5


  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 should n't be alive

  When the robins come,

  Give the one in red cravat

  A memorial crumb.

  If I could n'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!

 


 

  Emily Dickinson, Poems by Emily Dickinson First Series

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