Page:Emily Dickinson Poems - second series (1891).djvu/182

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170 POEMS.

XLVII.
SUMMER'S OBSEQUIES.

THE gentian weaves her fringes,
The maple's loom is red.
My departing blossoms
Obviate 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.