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SECRETS.

SECRETS.The skies can’t keep their secret!
They tell it to the hills –
The hills just tell the orchards –
And they the daffodils!

A bird, by chance, that goes that way
Soft overheard the whole.
If I should bribe the little bird,
Who knows but she would tell?

I think I won’t, however,
It’s finer not to know;
If summer were an axiom,
What sorcery had snow?

So keep your secret, Father!
I would not, if I could,
Know what the sapphire fellows do,
In your new-fashioned world!

The official Daily Dickinson 2008 Calendar is available, featuring poems and pictures that have been featured on this site.

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IN SHADOW.

IN SHADOW.I dreaded that first robin so,
But he is mastered now,
And I ‘m accustomed to him grown, –
He hurts a little, though.

I thought if I could only live
Till that first shout got by,
Not all pianos in the woods
Had power to mangle me.

I dared not meet the daffodils,
For fear their yellow gown
Would pierce me with a fashion
So foreign to my own.

I wished the grass would hurry,
So when ‘t was time to see,
He ‘d be too tall, the tallest one
Could stretch to look at me.

I could not bear the bees should come,
I wished they ‘d stay away
In those dim countries where they go:
What word had they for me?

They ‘re here, though; not a creature failed,
No blossom stayed away
In gentle deference to me,
The Queen of Calvary.

Each one salutes me as he goes,
And I my childish plumes
Lift, in bereaved acknowledgment
Of their unthinking drums.

The official Daily Dickinson 2008 Calendar is available, featuring poems and pictures that have been featured on this site.

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At the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh Advance-Titan, Tyler Maas imagines a date with Emily Dickinson.

Tyler arrives dressed in “Zubaz pants and vintage Green Bay Packers T-shirt”, and is burdened by a little too much knowledge about “the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles . . . [and] . . . BSB and N’Sync . . . [and] . . . [t]he XFL . . . [and] . . . Darva Conger . . . [and] . . . gigapets and tamigachis”, but he tries, goodness knows. He even lets her know that he thinks “her poem “My Life had stood – a Loaded Gun” is pretty badass.”

Alas, Tyler doesn’t consummate his love for Dickinson; “[t]here will be no kiss, no sweat-soaked linen or hearty pancake breakfast. No words shall weave a poem in my likeness nor kids bear my name.”

Not a bad little story for a slow Wednesday-before-Thanksgiving read . . .

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MELODIES UNHEARD.Musicians wrestle everywhere:
All day, among the crowded air,
I hear the silver strife;
And — waking long before the dawn –
Such transport breaks upon the town
I think it that “new life!”

It is not bird, it has no nest;
Nor band, in brass and scarlet dressed,
Nor tambourine, nor man;
It is not hymn from pulpit read, –
The morning stars the treble led
On time’s first afternoon!

Some say it is the spheres at play!
Some say that bright majority
Of vanished dames and men!
Some think it service in the place
Where we, with late, celestial face,
Please God, shall ascertain!

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Jeanette Winterson (herself a bit of a celebrity) writes in the Times Online of the conflict between celebrity and creativity. She imagines an “American Idol”-style competition for young writers, and suggests that the successful competitor “should be good-looking, funny, talkative, personable, the right shape for an Armani suit, and a bit of a psychopath.”

Some writers would probably have thrived in this setting; Winterson suggests that Byron, Dickens, and Gertrude Stein would have found something to like in the arrangement (and I’d add Twain, I think, and probably Emerson). Others, like Wordsworth, “would have had a nervous breakdown or gone to join D.H.Lawrence in Mexico.” As ever, Dickinson is mentioned in passing as the shorthand example for shyness.

But there’s quite a bit more to Dickinson’s relationship to fame (or, as it has devolved over the last 121 years since her death, mere notoriety) than simple shyness. It wasn’t that she feared attention or hid from the world; fame was a game that she chose not to play. In I’m nobody, she used her deft humor to mock those who are driven by fame:

How dreary to be somebody!
How public, like a frog
To tell your name the livelong day
To an admiring bog

There’s a “Don’t give up!” list circulating around the blogosphere (you can see it here, here, and here, for example) that includes the observation that “Emily Dickinson had only seven poems published in her lifetime.” What this list fails to note, of course, is that publishing her poems seems not to have been a very high priority for Dickinson; it was the writing of them, not the publishing of them, that mattered. She was none too keen on having them see the light of day. Rather than a model for the unpublished writer striving to break into print, Dickinson is an example of the amateur who does what she loves for no reward but joy. How dreadfully out of step!

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enduringly useful

Robert Pinsky, former United States Poet Laureate and poetry editor at Slate, discusses the task of popularizing poetry in a country where poetry is dead. Pinsky’s interests are wide-ranging, though: in addition to championing Dickinson (and Sylvia Plath, Langston Hughes, and Walt Whitman), he praises “The Simpsons” and “The Colbert Report” (“I think we’re in a great period of comedy, maybe our greatest period of comedy in American history”), Big Mama Thornton, Buddy Guy, and Professor Longhair.

Of particular interest is his useful distinction between a great song and a great poem:

The crucial distinction for me between something that may be a great song and poetry is, Does it depend upon the performer? The poem must sound like a poem in the voice of anyone who chooses to say it aloud.

To see and hear great poems in many voices, take a look at Pinsky’s Favorite Poem Project, which features normal folks reflecting on and reciting great words.

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THE HEMLOCK.

THE HEMLOCK.I think the hemlock likes to stand
Upon a marge of snow;
It suits his own austerity,
And satisfies an awe

That men must slake in wilderness,
Or in the desert cloy, –
An instinct for the hoar, the bald,
Lapland’s necessity.

The hemlock’s nature thrives on cold;
The gnash of northern winds
Is sweetest nutriment to him,
His best Norwegian wines.

To satin races he is nought;
But children on the Don
Beneath his tabernacles play,
And Dnieper wrestlers run.

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APOCALYPSE.

APOCALYPSE.I’m wife; I’ve finished that,
That other state;
I’m Czar, I’m woman now:
It’s safer so.

How odd the girl’s life looks
Behind this soft eclipse!
I think that earth seems so
To those in heaven now.

This being comfort, then
That other kind was pain;
But why compare?
I’m wife! stop there!

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