Because l could not stop for Death
|
|
He kindly stopped for me;
|
|
The carriage held but Just ourselves
|
|
And Immortality
|
|
We slowly drove, he knew no haste,
|
5
|
And I had put away
|
|
My labor, and my leisure too
|
|
For his civility,
|
|
We passed the school, when children strove
|
|
At recess, in the ring;
|
10
|
We passed the fields of gazing grain,
|
|
We passed the setting sun.
|
|
Or rather he passed us
|
|
The dews drew quivering and chill,
|
|
For only gossamer my gown
|
15
|
My tippet only tulle.
|
|
We paused before a house that seemed
|
|
A swelling of the ground!
|
|
The roof was s scarcely visible,
|
|
The cornice in the ground.
|
20
|
Since then 'tis centuries and yet
|
|
Feels shorter. The day
|
|
I first surmised the horses' death
|
|
were toward eternity.
|
|