Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Poems by Emily Dickinson Second Series

    Page 7
    Prev Next


      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!

     

     

     



    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026