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Online Texts
for
Craig White's
Literature Courses
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Emily Dickinson
Selected Poetry
[A narrow fellow in the grass]
(riddle poem)
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Emily
Dickinson (1830-86)
(daguerrotype taken app. 1846)
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A narrow fellow in the grass Occasionally rides; You
may have met him,—did you not, His notice sudden is.
The grass
divides as with a comb, A spotted shaft is seen; And then it closes at
your feet And opens further on.
He likes a boggy acre, A floor too
cool for corn. Yet when a child, and barefoot, I more than once, at morn,
Have passed, I thought, a whip-lash Unbraiding in the sun,— When,
stooping to secure it, It wrinkled, and was gone.
Several of nature's
people I know, and they know me; I feel for them a transport Of
cordiality;
But never met this fellow, Attended or alone, Without a
tighter breathing, And zero at the bone.
—
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