I cannot live with You –
It would be Life –
And Life is over there –
Behind the Shelf
The Sexton keeps the Key to –
Putting up
Our Life – His Porcelain –
Like a Cup –
Discarded of the Housewife –
Quaint – or Broke –
A newer Sevres pleases –
Old Ones crack –
I could not die – with You –
For One must wait
To shut the Other’s Gaze down –
You – could not –
And I – could I stand by
And see You – freeze –
Without my Right of Frost –
Death's privilege?
Nor could I rise – with You –
Because Your Face
Would put out Jesus’ –
That New Grace
Glow plain – and foreign
On my homesick Eye –
Except that You than He
Shone closer by –
They’d judge Us – How –
For You – served Heaven – You know,
Or sought to –
I could not –
Because You saturated Sight –
And I had no more Eyes
For sordid excellence
As Paradise
And were You lost, I would be –
Though My Name
Rang loudest
On the Heavenly fame –
And were You – saved –
And I – condemned to be
Where You were not –
That self – were Hell to Me –
So We must meet apart –
You there – I – here –
With just the Door ajar
That Oceans are – and Prayer –
And that White Sustenance –
Despair –
Reprinted by permission of the publishers and the Trustees of Amherst College from The Poems of Emily Dickinson, Thomas H. Johnson, ed., Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Copyright © 1951, 1955, 1979 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.
Tigers
in the moonlight
catch you
by the eye—
once, at the zoo,
on Christmas
they overcame
their wall
and took
a tormentor
by the throat,
a tiger’s
eye for an eye
as it got taken
down
by a rifle
in the sky
last
of the big
cats
somebody
has its pelt now
somebody
has its meat
in a frost
free Frigidaire
freezer.
To dream
a tiger is
to dream
of change
if it is
walking
toward you
you are
ready if it
leaps
upon you
from the
trees you
are ill
prepared.
Either way
they shimmer
and skulk
we must
not use
these words
bolt
muzzle
grisly
throat.
Copyright © 2025 by D. A. Powell. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on August 18, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.