Emily Dickinson Poem

He touched me, so I live to know

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He touched me, so I live to know

That such a day, permitted so,

I groped upon his breast—

It was a boundless place to me

And silenced, as the awful sea

Puts minor streams to rest.

 

And now, I’m different from before,

As if I breathed superior air—

Or brushed a Royal Gown—

My feet, too, that had wandered so—

My Gypsy face—transfigured now—

To tenderer Renown—

 

Into this Port, if I might come,

Rebecca, to Jerusalem,

Would not so ravished turn—

Nor Persian, baffled at her shrine

Lift such a Crucifixial sign

To her imperial Sun.

He was weak, and I was strong
He told a homely tale

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