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Read the poem: “The Moon”

by Emily Dickinson

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American LiteratureAmerican PoetryEmily Dickinson
< < < The Monument
The moon is distant from the sea > > >


The Moon


The moon was but a chin of gold

   A night or two ago,

And now she turns her perfect face

   Upon the world below.


Her forehead is of amplest blond;

   Her cheek like beryl stone;

Her eye unto the summer dew

   The likest I have known.


Her lips of amber never part;

   But what must be the smile

Upon her friend she could bestow

   Were such her silver will!


And what a privilege to be

   But the remotest star!

For certainly her way might pass

   Beside your twinkling door.


Her bonnet is the firmament,

   The universe her shoe,

The stars the trinkets at her belt,

   Her dimities of blue.



< < < The Monument
The moon is distant from the sea > > >

American LiteratureAmerican PoetryEmily Dickinson



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