A Word Made Flesh Is Seldom
Emily Dickinson
1651 A Word made Flesh is seldom And tremblingly partook Nor then perhaps reported But have I not mistook Each one of us has tasted With ecstasies of stealth The very food debated To our specific strength— A Word that breathes distinctly Has not the power to die Cohesive as the Spirit It may expire if He— “Made Flesh and dwelt among us” Could condescension be Like this consent of Language This loved Philology.
Next 10 Poems
- Emily Dickinson : A World Made Penniless By That Departure
- Emily Dickinson : A Wounded Deer-leaps Highest
- Emily Dickinson : Above Oblivion's Tide There Is A Pier
- Emily Dickinson : Abraham To Kill Him-
- Emily Dickinson : Absence Disembodies-so Does Death
- Emily Dickinson : Absent Place-an April Day
- Emily Dickinson : Adrift! A Little Boat Adrift!
- Emily Dickinson : Advance Is Life's Condition
- Emily Dickinson : Afraid! Of Whom Am I Afraid?
- Emily Dickinson : After A Hundred Years
Previous 10 Poems
- Emily Dickinson : A Word Is Dead
- Emily Dickinson : A Word Dropped Careless On A Page
- Emily Dickinson : A Winged Spark Doth Soar About-
- Emily Dickinson : A Wind That Rose
- Emily Dickinson : A Wild Blue Sky Abreast Of Winds
- Emily Dickinson : A Wife-at Daybreak I Shall Be
- Emily Dickinson : A Weight With Needles On The Pounds
- Emily Dickinson : A Visitor In Marl
- Emily Dickinson : A Transport One Cannot Contain
- Emily Dickinson : A Train Went Through A Burial Gate