(51) Emily Dickinson – SOME, too fragile for winter winds,

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.

(50) Emily Dickinson – THE only ghost I ever saw

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!

(48) Emily Dickinson – I HAVE not told my garden yet

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!

(47) Emily Dickinson – I READ my sentence steadily

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.

(42) Emily Dickinson – GOING to heaven!

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.

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