death, stood up,And dead lie down;It night, bellsPut tongues, noon.It — Emily Dickinson, Nobody! You?

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It was not death, for I stood up,And all the dead lie down;It was not night, for all the bellsPut out their tongues, for noon.It was not frost, for on my fleshI felt siroccos crawl,Nor fire, for just my marble feetCould keep a chancel cool.And yet it tasted like them all;The figures I have seenSet orderly, for burial,Reminded me of mine,As if my life were shavenAnd fitted to a frame,And could not breathe without a key;And I 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 landTo justify despair.

Emily Dickinson, I'm Nobody! Who Are You?

Related Authors: Emily Dickinson | I'm Nobody! Who Are You?

Related Topics: poetry

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