Emily Dickinson wrote more than 1700 published poems and I have not yet finished reading them. They are all thought provoking, not only in content but in style, syntax, grammar and punctuation. Her poems do not have titles, so the first line is necessary for reference. I admire them and read them from time to time, frequently feeling like sharing on here. I wonder if this one reminds anybody of a particular person?
A precious - mouldering pleasure -'tis -
To meet an Antique Book -
In just the Dress his Century wore -
A privilege- I think -
His venerable Hand to take -
And warming in our own -
A passage back - or two - to make
To Times when he - was young -
His quaint opinions - to inspect
His thoughts to ascertain
On Themes concern our mutual mind -
The Literature of Man -
What interested Scholars - most -
What Competitions ran -
When Plato - was a Certainty -
And Sophocles - a Man -
When Sappho - was a living Girl -
And Beatrice wore
The Gown that Dante - deified -
Facts centuries before
He traverses - familiar -
As One should come to Town -
And tell you all your Dreams - were true -
He lived - where Dreams were born -
His presence is Enchantment -
We beg him not to go -
Old Volumes shake their Vellum heads
And tantalize - just so -
Emily Dickinson 1862 Published 1890
A precious - mouldering pleasure -'tis -
To meet an Antique Book -
In just the Dress his Century wore -
A privilege- I think -
His venerable Hand to take -
And warming in our own -
A passage back - or two - to make
To Times when he - was young -
His quaint opinions - to inspect
His thoughts to ascertain
On Themes concern our mutual mind -
The Literature of Man -
What interested Scholars - most -
What Competitions ran -
When Plato - was a Certainty -
And Sophocles - a Man -
When Sappho - was a living Girl -
And Beatrice wore
The Gown that Dante - deified -
Facts centuries before
He traverses - familiar -
As One should come to Town -
And tell you all your Dreams - were true -
He lived - where Dreams were born -
His presence is Enchantment -
We beg him not to go -
Old Volumes shake their Vellum heads
And tantalize - just so -
Emily Dickinson 1862 Published 1890
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