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I am alive—I guess

470

 

I am alive—I guess—

The Branches on my Hand

Are full of Morning Glory—

And at my finger’s end—

 

The Carmine—tingles warm—

And if I hold a Glass

Across my Mouth—it blurs it—

Physician’s—proof of Breath—

 

I am alive—because

I am not in a Room—

The Parlor—Commonly—it is—

So Visitors may come—

 

And lean—and view it sidewise—

And add “How cold—it grew”—

And “Was it conscious—when it stepped

In Immortality?”

 

I am alive—because

I do not own a House—

Entitled to myself—precise—

And fitting no one else—

 

And marked my Girlhood’s name—

So Visitors may know

Which Door is mine—and not

Written by
Emily Dickinson
1830-1886 / Female / American
Lines·Words
24·102
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