Selected Poems by Emily Dickinson

        THE GENTIAN WEAVES HER FRINGES

 

            HE gentian weaves her fringes,
            The maple's loom is red.
            My departing blossoms
            Obiate parade.
            
            A brief, but patient illness,
            An hour to prepare;
            And one, below this morning,
            Is where the angels are.
            
            It was a short procession,--
            The bobolink was there,
            An aged bee addressed us,
            And then we knelt in prayer.
            
            We trust that she was willing,--
            We ask that we may be.
            Summer, sister, seraph,
            Let us go with thee!
            
            In the name of the bee
            And of the butterfly
            And of the breeze, amen!