Safe in their Alabaster chambers, | Affiliated Manuscripts

(Fr124[A])

ca. 1862, spring

Original MS lost or destroyed | The Springfield Daily Republican

Poem sent to Susan Gilbert Dickinson.

Original manuscript lost or destroyed

The Sleeping.

Safe in their alabaster chambers,

Untouched by morning,

And untouched by noon,

Sleep the meek members of the Resurrection,

Rafter of satin, and roof of stone.

 

Light laughs the breeze

In her castle above them,

Babbles the bee in a stolid ear,

Pipe the sweet birds in ignorant cadences:

Ah! what sagacity perished here!

Pelham Hill, June, 1861.

 

Recipient

Lucretia Gunn Dickinson Bullard (b. 1806–d. 1885)

Dickinson’s paternal aunt.

Inclusive dates of correspondence: 1864. Letters, 3; poems, 2.

Samuel Bowles (b. 1826–d. 1878)

Editor, Springfield Republican, married to Mary Schermerhorn Bowles.

Inclusive dates of correspondence: 1859-1877. Letters, 35; poems, 40.

Address: 182 Central Street, Springfield, Mass.

Distance Travelled: 26.9 miles

The Springfield Daily Republican