EMILY DICKINSON

“Color—Caste—Denomination”

Emily Dickinson (1830–1886) made no overt comment against slavery in her poetry. Yet in this poem she seems to be concerned about racism and (taking up a charged word that Stowe also used) “caste.” The intimations of racial equality as the natural condition of humankind, and the wrongness of dividing and labeling human beings by race or color, are inescapable.

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Color—Caste—Denomination—

These—are Time’s Affair—

Death’s diviner Classifying

Does not know they are—

As in sleep—all Hue forgotten—

Tenets—put behind—

Death’s large—Democratic fingers

Rub away the Brand—

If Circassian—He is careless—

If He put away

Chrysalis of Blonde—or Umber—

Equal Butterfly—

They emerge from His Obscuring—

What Death—knows so well—

Our minuter intuitions—

Deem unplausible

(1864)