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A Bird Come Down the Walk |
作者Author /  Emily Dickinson 愛蜜麗•狄更森 |
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A Bird Come Down the Walk
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Poem 328 |
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A bird come down the walk:
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He did not know l saw;
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He bit an angle--worm in halves
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And ate the fellow, raw.
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And then he drank a dew
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5
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From a convenient grass,
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And then hopped sidewise to the wall
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To let a beetle pass
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He danced with rapid eyes
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That hurried all around--
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10
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That looked like frightened beads, I thought
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He stirred his velvet head
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Like one in danger; cautious,
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I offered him a crumb,
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And he unrolled his feathers
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15
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And rowed him softer home
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Than oars divide the ocean,
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Too silver for a seam,
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Or butterflies off banks of noon,
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Leap, splash less, as they swim.
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20
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Annotation |
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