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I would not paint—a picture

505

 

I would not paint—a picture—

I’d rather be the One

Its bright impossibility

To dwell—delicious—on—

And wonder how the fingers feel

Whose rare—celestial—stir—

Evokes so sweet a Torment—

Such sumptuous—Despair—

 

I would not talk, like Cornets—

I’d rather be the One

Raised softly to the Ceilings—

And out, and easy on—

Through Villages of Ether—

Myself endued Balloon

By but a lip of Metal—

The pier to my Pontoon—

 

Nor would I be a Poet—

It’s finer—own the Ear—

Enamored—impotent—content—

The License to revere,

A privilege so awful

What would the Dower be,

Had I the Art to stun myself

With Bolts of Melody!

Written by
Emily Dickinson
1830-1886 / Female / American
Lines·Words
25·105
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