The Color of a Sun
At setting—this and Amber—
Beryl—and this, at Noon—
And when at night—Auroran widths
Fling suddenly on men—
'Tis this—and Witchcraft—nature keeps
A Rank—for Iodine—
-Fr875, J776
Here is Emily Dickinson doing her slippery, jewel-box thing. This poem is so tightly engineered.
At a high level, the poem is trying to name an unnameable color. That color turns out to have the power and mystery of nature. It’s the color of royalty, the color of a sunset, of gemstones like amber and beryl, an aurora and iodine.
At a high level, the poem is trying to name an unnameable color. That color turns out to have the power and mystery of nature. It’s the color of royalty, the color of a sunset, of gemstones like amber and beryl, an aurora and iodine.
amber and beryl, like fire and ice
She’s circling around something constantly changing depending on the light. She keeps saying “this” like she’s pointing at it, but never actually says what “this” is.
The poem, for me, functions as a riddle which in turn functions as a kind of poetic kaleidoscope, the beauty of the words becoming the beauty of the images, like the “ber” of Amber blending into the “Ber” of Beryl. The words themselves have a gem-like flame to them. Amber and beryl turns fleeting light into a royal and lasting treasure, both in sound and image, a trove of words. Or listen to the way the slant rhyme works through so many vowels sounds in Queen/ Sun/ Noon/ Auroran/ men and iodine.
The poem is luminous all around, a dazzling display, an “Auroran width" flung suddenly on the reader in sound.
And when at night—Auroran widths
Fling suddenly on men—
In the last stanza things get downright spooky. Auroras are flung at us, and witchcraft is in the air.
’Tis this—and Witchcraft—nature keeps
A Rank—for Iodine—
The poem cycles through skyscapes, each holding its own “rank,” or a distinguished position, depending on the time of day.
There is the lushness of sunset, but there is also the bright clarity of noon. The color "noon" is blindingly bright and illuminating, and perhaps, in countering the witchcraft, clear and logical. Later in the evening there are the glimmering green curtains of Aurora Borealis.
What to make of the iodine though? Iodine is known for creating a violet vapor. For me that would make it either the last bit of daylight as it blends into darkness or the crack of dawn when midnight blue begins to perk up. I think either are possible here, the first being more eerie, like witchcraft, but the latter being more scientifically alchemical like iodine. Either way the opposites of night and day get transmuted into one another. Both magic and rational science are evoked here in the interplay between witchcraft and iodine.
Iodine was well known during Dickinson’s time as a standard antiseptic used by American Civil War surgeons to treat battlefield wounds. So this may be at play here too, if we see iodine as representing morning light, a kind of healing of the night. Iodine was used to prevent gangrene too, commonly known then as "mortification of the flesh." One can imagine the witchy green of the auroras in the blackened sky as the color of gangrene, and the iodine as a kind of rational cure.
iodine
-/)dam Wade l)eGraff