Emily Dickinson – COULD I but ride indefinite

CII

COULD I but ride indefinite,

As doth the meadow-bee,

And visit only where I liked,

And no man visit me,

 

And flirt all day with buttercups,

And marry whom I may,

And dwell a little everywhere,

Or better, run away

 

With no police to follow,

Or chase me if I do,

Till I should jump peninsulas

To get away from you,—

 

I said, but just to be a bee

Upon a raft of air,

And row in nowhere all day long,

And anchor off the bar,—

What liberty! So captives deem

Who tight in dungeons are.

Emily Dickinson – WHAT mystery pervades a well!

XCVI

WHAT mystery pervades a well!

   The water lives so far,

Like neighbor from another world

   Residing in a jar.

 

The grass does not appear afraid;

   I often wonder he

Can stand so close and look so bold

   At what is dread to me.

 

Related somehow they may be,—

   The sedge stands next the sea,

Where he is floorless, yet of fear

   No evidence gives he.

 

But nature is a stranger yet;

   The ones that cite her most

Have never passed her haunted house,

   Nor simplified her ghost.

 

To pity those that know her not

   Is helped by the regret

That those who know her, know her less

   The nearer her they get.

Emily Dickinson – HIGH from the earth I heard a bird

XCIV

HIGH from the earth I heard a bird;

   He trod upon the trees

As he esteemed them trifles,

   And then he spied a breeze,

And situated softly

   Upon a pile of wind

Which in a perturbation

   Nature had left behind.

A joyous-going fellow

   I gathered from his talk,

Which both of benediction

   And badinage partook,

Without apparent burden,

I learned, in leafy wood

He was the faithful father

   Of a dependent brood;

And this untoward transport

   His remedy for care,—

A contrast to our respites.

   How different we are!

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