Dear March – Come in
Dear March – Come in - meaning Summary
Spring Welcomed Like a Guest
Emily Dickinson personifies March as a welcomed, breathless visitor and speaks to spring with intimate familiarity. The speaker celebrates nature’s awakening—maples blush, colors are redistributed—while admitting March has taken some hues. April’s arrival is treated as an intruder who will be kept out. The poem compresses gratitude, possessiveness, and a playful negotiation with seasons, ending on the idea that judgments feel insignificant in the face of renewal.
Read Complete AnalysesDEAR March, come in! How glad I am! I looked for you before. Put down your hat You must have walked How out of breath you are! Dear March, how are you? And the rest? Did you leave Nature well? Oh, March, come right upstairs with me, I have so much to tell! I got your letter, and the bird’s; The maples never knew That you were coming, I declare, How red their faces grew! But, March, forgive me And all those hills You left for me to hue; There was no purple suitable, You took it all with you. Who knocks? That April! Lock the door! I will not be pursued! He stayed away a year, to call When I am occupied. But trifles look so trivial As soon as you have come, That blame is just as dear as praise And praise as mere as blame.
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