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Emily Dickinson's Collected Poems

Part Four: Time and Eternity 75. It was not death, for I stood up

It was not death, for I stood up,

And all the dead lie down;

It was not night, for all the bells

Put out their tongues, for noon.


It was not frost, for on my flesh

I felt siroccos crawl, --

Nor fire, for just my marble feet

Could keep a chancel cool.


And yet it tasted like them all;

The figures I have seen

Set orderly, for burial,

Reminded me of mine,


As if my life were shaven

And fitted to a frame,

And could not breathe without a key;

And 't 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 land

To justify despair.

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