If
I shouldn't be alive
When
the Robins come,
Give
the one in Red Cravat,
A
Memorial crumb –
If
I couldn't thank you,
Being
fast asleep,
You
will know I'm trying
With
my Granite lip!
-
F210 (1861) 161
This
is among Dickinson’s most droll poems and one of my favorites. Thinking of a
grave stone as a “Granite lip” has changed the way I view cemeteries. It’s as
there is a subterranean crowd all trying to speak but struggling to get the
sound out.
Her
regret about missing the robins once she dies is consistent with several of her
poems celebrating the “Troubadour” of spring. And of course most all robins
have a “Red Cravat,” so she’s really hoping that they will all – not just a
particular one – be given a “Memorial crumb” in her honor.
American Robin with red Cravat (Arthur Morris/CORBIS)S Photo Credit: © Arthur Morris/CORBIS |
There
are some nice poetic touches in these two playful stanzas. The hard “c” sound
in the final word of the last three lines of stanza one lend a pleasing
crispness: come, Cravat, and crumb. “Come” and “Crumb” make a very nice rhyme
and are even more tightly bound by the intervening slant rhyme of “one.” The “v”
in Cravat recalls the “v” in “alive.” There are numerous “m” sounds that
complement the crisp “c” sounds: come, Memorial, and crumb. I love the sound of
“Memorial crumb” – it murmurs between the lips in a way, sadly, that the
Granite lip could never master.
The
second stanza begins with an echo of the first: “If I shouldn’t” and “If I
couldn’t.” Ending the poem on a word like “lip” is just a bit outrageous after
images of robins and death – and “Granite lip” is just plain funny, especially
since the poem up until then has the sound of a formal letter.
Just came across this through a different strand of the Internet and used it here:
ReplyDeletehttp://ayearinthepark.typepad.com/prospect_a_year_in_the_pa/2012/04/when-the-robins-come.html
you're giving us a vain hope
DeleteI appreciate when you draw attention to the sonics of the poem. And this is a wry observation: "I love the sound of “Memorial crumb” – it murmurs between the lips in a way, sadly, that the Granite lip could never master."
ReplyDeleteYes, love the RC consonant cluster: Robins Come, Red CRavat, CRumb.
ReplyDeleteDon't take those lips for granite!
Cute!
DeleteIt’s hard to decide whether ED’s lifelong relationship with death was an affair or a marriage, but her fascination never faltered. Her poems are proof of her commitment and her final letter, to her cousins Frances and Louise Norcross, simply said ,
ReplyDelete“May 1886
“Little Cousins,
Called back.
Emily.”
She died on the 15th.
a memorial crumb
DeleteHer famous last letter referred to a sentimental novel, "Called Back" (1883) by Hugh Conway.
Delete(Sharon Leiter: Critical Companion to Emily Dickinson)
Thanks for that info on the novel -- if I ever knew that reference I have forgotten it.
Delete