Read Poems by Emily Dickinson Second Series Page 6


  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 f
eels,

  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 dulness,

  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, moonle
ss, 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!