The Mushroom

by Emily Dickinson · (no date)
Published 01/07/1880

THE mushroom is the elf of plants,

      At evening it is not;

At morning in a truffled hut

It stops upon a spot


As if it tarried always;

And yet its whole career.

Is shorter than a snake's delay,

And fleeter than a tare.


'T is vegetation's juggler,

The germ of alibi;

Doth like a bubble antedate,

And like a bubble hie.


I feel as if the grass were pleased

To have it intermit;

The surreptitious scion

Of summer's circumspect.


Had nature any outcast face,

Could she a son contemn,

Had nature an Iscariot,

That mushroom,—it is him.

#emily dickinson #mythic #nature #transience

2 likes

Related poems →

More by Emily Dickinson

Read "The Mushroom" by Emily Dickinson. One of the best and most popular poems on The Poet's Place. Discover more trending, inspiring, and beautiful poetry by Emily Dickinson.