Dropped into the Ether Acre –
Wearing the Sod Gown –
Bonnet of Everlasting Laces –
Brooch – frozen on –
Horses of Blonde – and Coach of Silver –
Baggage a strapped Pearl –
Journey of Down – and Whip of Diamond –
Riding to meet the Earl –
F286
(1862) 665
When embarking on that final journey to meet one’s
maker, what better conveyance than a silver hearse drawn by white horses? Even
better if the coachman’s whip is made of diamond and the coffin lined with a cosy
and soft feather bed!
The
two stanzas of this clever poem seem reversed. In the first stanza the narrator
has been buried. She has been “Dropped” into an “Ether” grave – which is to say
that she has joined the eternal ethereal substance that floods the universe. The
burial must have taken place years prior for she wears a “Sod Gown” as if the
coffin had decomposed leaving her corpse exposed to the earth. The “Everlasting
Laces” would be the roots of grasses growing over the years. The brooch, once
on her burial dress, would not decompose because it would have been made of metal or porcelain. It
takes the chill of the underworld and is frozen on to what must by now be
bones.
But
in the second stanza the body is being transported in a hearse. How can that be? A moment ago the corpse was "Wearing the Sod Gown." I suspect the poet is thinking in eternal terms. The body may be buried, the
coffin decomposed, but the eternal coachman comes in his own time to take the
liberated soul to meet the heavenly earl. Perhaps this gives the soul time to
truly shed its earthly being – to pare itself down to the inner “Pearl” that is
strapped like a coffin to the coach. (One can’t help but wonder if Dickinson didn’t select both “pearl”
and “earl” more because they rhymed than that either were the best word for the
scene.)
The
meter is trochaic. It makes a particularly strong beginning with the word “Dropped.”
We can practically see the body falling into the grave. That first line quickly
dwindles into the feminine unaccented endings of “Ether Acre.” The second line
provides a vivid contrast to the ether with its ending spondee of “Sod Gown.” The
“strapped Pearl” of the second stanza is a matching spondee and an opposite image. A pearl is the most perfect of gemstones, needing no faceting or polishing. It certainly needs no gown or bonnet. Coming from the ocean and
representing purity and (according to a parable Jesus told) the kingdom of
heaven, it is a far cry from the poor corpse covered with sod.
This
is a short poem but the words and images are so strong that two quite vivid
scenes are sketched. We first see the sad end of the body and then we see the
fantastic journey of the soul.
Great site
ReplyDeleteHey, comment no problem.
ReplyDeleteED wrote this poem to help the director of her TV show, 'Dickinson', explain to the writers how she wanted to be remembered: https://youtu.be/0_EUqlE-mw4