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Read the poem: “The Snake”

by Emily Dickinson

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American LiteratureAmerican PoetryEmily Dickinson
< < < The Sleeping Flowers
The Snow > > >


The Snake


A narrow fellow in the grass

Occasionally rides;

You may have met him, — did you not,

His notice sudden is.


The grass divides as with a comb,

A spotted shaft is seen;

And then it closes at your feet

And opens further on.


He likes a boggy acre,

A floor too cool for corn.

Yet when a child, and barefoot,

I more than once, at morn,


Have passed, I thought, a whip-lash

Unbraiding in the sun, —

When, stooping to secure it,

It wrinkled, and was gone.


Several of nature’s people

I know, and they know me;

I feel for them a transport

Of cordiality;


But never met this fellow,

Attended or alone,

Without a tighter breathing,

And zero at the bone.



< < < The Sleeping Flowers
The Snow > > >

American LiteratureAmerican PoetryEmily Dickinson



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