Impatient of no Child –
The feeblest – or the waywardest –
Her Admonition mild –
In Forest – and the Hill –
By Traveller – be heard –
Restraining Rampant Squirrel –
Or too impetuous Bird –
How fair Her Conversation –
A Summer Afternoon –
Her Household – Her Assembly –
And when the Sun go down –
Her Voice among the Aisles
Incite the timid prayer
Of the minutest Cricket –
The most unworthy Flower –
When all the Children sleep –
She turns as long away
As will suffice to light Her lamps –
Then bending from the Sky –
With infinite Affection –
And infiniter Care –
Her Golden finger on Her lip –
Wills Silence – Everywhere –
-F741, J790, Fascicle 36, 1863
I’ve been putting off saying anything about this poem. Probably because I love it too much and don’t want to say anything to mar it. Not that I COULD mar it, but you know what I mean. However, today is my birthday, so I’m going to just go ahead and indulge myself.
If I’m really indulging myself, I’m imagining this poem in an Emily Dickinson collection for children illustrated by my daughters.
Can you imagine a better poem for a child than this one? It describes for you an ideal mother figure. We know Emily’s mother wasn’t so ideal. In a later letter to Higginson in 1870, she bluntly said that, "I never had a mother. I suppose a mother is one to whom you hurry when you are troubled.”
Not only did Emily find that mother she needed in nature, but here, in describing it so beautifully, so wonderfully, she has made it stick for all future generations to see. Or to use another metaphor, Dickinson gives all future mothers the perfect recipe for their little buns.
(Emily was purportedly a master baker. Check out her recipe for black cake.)
Okay, future mothers, take a note from nature:
Nature – the Gentlest Mother is,
Impatient of no Child –
The feeblest – or the waywardest –
Her Admonition mild –
Be impatient of no child. (Have I ever met a mother who was impatient of no child? Hmm. Let me think. I have been blessed to have known a few with incredible patience, but also several with very little. Patience really is the chiefest virtue.)
This Mother Nature may be patient with all children, even the feeblest and most wayward, but we note that She still admonishes, mildly, when need be. Is that not the mother we all wish for?
In Forest – and the Hill –
By Traveller – be heard –
Restraining Rampant Squirrel –
Or too impetuous Bird –
Rampant squirrels are checked by Mother Nature, and so are impetuous birds. The traveler can hear this in the hills. What is it exactly that the traveler is hearing we may ask? In my imagination the sound of rampant squirrels and birds being admonished must be the sound of them being eaten, or nearly so. It would have to be quite a squawking racket for a passing traveler to hear it, wouldn't it? The rampant squirrel and impetuous birds are checked by bigger animals trying to eat them. This doesn’t seem like such a mild admonishment, but I think Emily is having fun here. Maybe it would be better to say, nature mildly admonishes squirrelkind or birdkind as entire populations are mildly admonished when they lose a few of its numbers. Never mind that mild admonishment from nature may mean a few errant squirrels and birds are picked off. Nature is working on a different scale.
How fair Her Conversation –
A Summer Afternoon –
Her Household – Her Assembly –
And when the Sun go down –
“How fair Her conversation.” Okay, now we’ve switched, in our mutual imaginations, from the squeals and squawks of admonishment, to the beautiful conversations on a summer afternoon. Here you can hear, if you listen very closely, the hare sniffing a carrot, or, louder still, the birds calling their mates across the upper regions of the forests, the breeze playing in the branches. This is the assembly (the family) in Nature's household, a charming way to think of the forest floor.
Her Voice among the Aisles
Incite the timid prayer
Of the minutest Cricket –
The most unworthy Flower –
What aisles is Emily talking about here? The aisles of trees, assuredly, but we also have, with this one word, entered the church. We've been in this church with Emily before. See F238 for one great example, and F21 for another.
When the sun goes down, what do you hear among the aisles of trees? You hear the “timid prayer” of the smallest cricket. Its wonderful to think of a cricket’s insistent chirp as a prayer. A simple line like this one can change the way you hear crickets forevermore. But what sound does the “unworthy” flower make in the evening? Here you have to imagine something extra-auditory, a frequency far beyond the norm.
But I suspect there is a little joke with the idea of the timid prayer of the most unworthy flower. Humans are the silly creatures that see themselves as unworthy, not flowers. The subtle point ED is making here is that there are no unworthy flowers, and, if we could only but see ourselves as flowers we would no longer see ourselves as timid and unworthy.
(This is why it is great to write about ED’s poetry, because in writing about it, you focus your thinking, and in focusing your thinking, you grasp things with your mind’s fingers that you might not otherwise comprehend. Otherwise I probably would've missed this little joke.)
When all the Children sleep –
She turns as long away
As will suffice to light Her lamps –
The image of Mother Nature turning on her lamps, the moon and stars, is adorable. (And ancient. I remember the lines from Beowulf, “both sun and moon, victorious and triumphant,
the lamps of light for those living on land,”.)
I love the line, “as long away as will suffice.” Nature only goes as far as she needs to. But look how far she goes! All the way out to the moon, and then to the stars beyond them. It’s a very long way away that "suffices" for these lamps to be turned on. Make of that what you will.
Okay, so she has turned on the nightlights, to comfort baby, and to give you a soft light in case you should need one the middle of the night.
Then bending from the Sky –
With infinite Affection –
And infiniter Care –
Her Golden finger on Her lip –
Wills Silence – Everywhere –
Oh my. Infinite Affection! What a beautiful thought, that nature has infinite affection for us. Not everyone’s going to buy that idea, I know. Nature can seem quite cruel. (See animals being eaten above.) But this is a poem directing us, in part, in how to live, so let’s just focus for now on how sweet nature can be, like, to begin with the sweetness in the nature of sleep. As Shakespeare put it,
"Sleep that knits up the raveled sleave of care, sore labor's bath, Balm of hurt minds, Chief nourisher in life's feast."
And then look, as if infinite Affection wasn’t enough, we have even infiniter Care. That’s where my reasoning brain shuts off and I just have to wonder. It’s a kind of joke that anything could be infiniter than infinity, but it's also a kind of truth. Care IS infiniter. As Dickinson says in a later letter,“When infinite Space is beheld
And all Dominion shown
The smallest Human Heart’s extent
Reduces it to none.”
The smallest Human Heart’s extent is greater than infinite dominion, for what would infinity mean without love and care?
"With infinite affection and infiniter care." Let's just bask in that motherly ideal. Is it a true one? If Emily, who is one of the toughest skeptics I know of, says so, then there must be something to it.
I take the "golden finger on Her lip" to be the sun reflecting on the moon at night. It Wills silence everywhere. We MUST sleep. Just as we MUST die. A silent sleep may be seen as a metaphor for death, but this death, this willed silence, is one born of infinite affection and infiniter care. This is a stillness I can enter feeling the full brunt of the poet’s love in her reflection of nature.
Thank you for indulging me on my birthday.
-/)dam Wade l)eGraff
-/)dam Wade l)eGraff
Super blue moon over a pond in Nevada MO,
as seen from my mother's house, 8/20/24