Of all the Sounds despatched abroad, | Affiliated Manuscripts

BPL 6 (Fr334B)

ca. 1862, April

Ink | Fair copy

On embossed stationery

Poem enclosed in a message to T. W. Higginson.

Of all the Sounds
despatched abroad,
There′s not a Charge
to me
Like that old measure
in the Boughs –
That phraseless Melody –
The Wind does – working
like a Hand,
Whose fingers Comb
the Sky –
Then quiver down – with
tufts of Tune –
Permitted Gods, and me –

 

 

Recipient

Thomas Wentworth Higginson (b. 1823–d. 1911)

Writer, critic, social activist, friend; with the exception of Susan Gilbert Dickinson, Higginson is Dickinson’s most constant correspondent.

Inclusive dates of correspondence: April 1862-May 1886. Letters: 70; poems: 103.

Address: 16 Harvard Street, Worcester, Mass.

Distance Travelled: 37 miles