A PRECIOUS, mouldering pleasure ’t is | |
To meet an antique book, | |
In just the dress his century wore; | |
A privilege, I think, | |
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His venerable hand to take, | |
And warming in our own, | |
A passage back, or two, to make | |
To times when he was young. | |
|
His quaint opinions to inspect, | |
His knowledge to unfold | |
On what concerns our mutual mind, | |
The literature of old; | |
|
What interested scholars most, | |
What competitions ran | |
When Plato was a certainty, | |
And Sophocles a man; | |
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When Sappho was a living girl, | |
And Beatrice wore | |
The gown that Dante deified. | |
Facts, centuries before, | |
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He traverses familiar, | |
As one should come to town | |
And tell you all your dreams were true: | |
He lived where dreams were born. | |
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His presence is enchantment, | |
You beg him not to go; | |
Old volumes shake their vellum heads | |
And tantalize, just so.
~Emily Dickenson
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