(1) Emily Dickinson – ONE dignity delays for all

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!

Emily Dickinson – HOW the old mountains drip with sunset

CX

HOW the old mountains drip with sunset,

   And the brake of dun!

How the hemlocks are tipped in tinsel

   By the wizard sun!

 

How the old steeples hand the scarlet,

   Till the ball is full,—

Have I the lip of the flamingo

   That I dare to tell?

 

Then, how the fire ebbs like billows,

   Touching all the grass

With a departing, sapphire feature,

   As if a duchess pass!

 

How a small dusk crawls on the village

   Till the houses blot;

And the odd flambeaux no men carry

   Glimmer on the spot!

 

Now it is night in nest and kennel,

   And where was the wood,

Just a dome of abyss is nodding

   Into solitude!—

These are the visions baffled Guido;

   Titian never told;

Domenichino dropped the pencil,

   Powerless to unfold.

Emily Dickinson – OF bronze and blaze

CIX

OF bronze and blaze

The north, to-night!

   So adequate its forms,

So preconcerted with itself,

   So distant to alarms,—

An unconcern so sovereign

   To universe, or me,

It paints my simple spirit

   With tints of majesty,

Till I take vaster attitudes,

   And strut upon my stem,

Disdaining men and oxygen,

   For arrogance of them.

 

My splendors are menagerie;

   But their competeless show

Will entertain the centuries

   When I am, long ago,

An island in dishonored grass,

   Whom none but daisies know.

Emily Dickinson – THE cricket sang

CVI

THE cricket sang,

   And set the sun,

And workmen finished, one by one,

   Their seam the day upon.

 

The low grass loaded with the dew,

The twilight stood as strangers do

With hat in hand, polite and new,

   To stay as if, or go.

 

vastness, as a neighbor, came,—

A wisdom without face or name,

A peace, as hemispheres at home,—

   And so the night became.

Emily Dickinson – YOU’VE seen balloons set, haven’t you?

CV

YOU’VE seen balloons set, haven’t you?

   So stately they ascend

It is as swans discarded you

   For duties diamond.

 

Their liquid feet go softly out

   Upon a sea of blond;

They spurn the air as’t were to mean

   For creatures so renowned.

 

Their ribbons just beyond the eye,

   They struggle some for breath,

And yet the crowd applauds below;

They would not encore death.

 

The gilded creature strains and spins,

   Trips frantic in a tree,

Tears open her imperial veins

   And tumbles in the sea.

 

The crowd retire with an oath

   The dust in streets goes down,

And clerks in counting-rooms observe,

   “’T was only a balloon.”

Emily Dickinson – THE bat is dun with wrinkled wings

CIV

THE bat is dun with wrinkled wings

   Like fallow article,

And not a song pervades his lips,

Or none perceptible.

 

His small umbrella, quaintly halved,

   Describing in the air

An arc alike inscrutable,—

   Elate philosopher!

 

Deputed from what firmament

   Of what astute abode,

Empowered with what malevolence

   Auspiciously withheld.

 

To his adroit Creator

   Ascribe no less the praise;

Beneficent, believe me,

   His eccentricities.

Emily Dickinson – THE moon was but a chin of gold

CIII

THE moon was but a chin of gold

   A night or two ago,

And now she turns her perfect face

   Upon the world below.

 

Her forehead is of amplest blond;

   Her cheek like beryl stone;

Her eye unto the summer dew

   The likest I have known.

 

Her lips of amber never part;

   But what must be the smile

Upon her friend she could bestow

   Were such her silver will!

 

And what a privilege to be

   But the remotest star!

For certainly her way might pass

   Beside your twinkling door.

 

Her bonnet is the firmament,

   The universe her shoe,

The stars the trinkets at her belt,

   Her dimities of blue.

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