Nothing New

The great writers, one piece at a time.

Emily Dickinson · Poems

Poem 213 of 446 · Second Series: Nature

The Mushroom

— ✻ —

The mushroom is the elf of plants, At evening it is not; At morning in a truffled hut It stops upon a spot

As if it tarried always; And yet its whole career Is shorter than a snake's delay, And fleeter than a tare.

'T is vegetation's juggler, The germ of alibi; Doth like a bubble antedate, And like a bubble hie.

I feel as if the grass were pleased To have it intermit; The surreptitious scion Of summer's circumspect.

Had nature any outcast face, Could she a son contemn, Had nature an Iscariot, That mushroom, -- it is him.

Receive Emily Dickinson one poem at a time, every morning.
Subscribe →