Emily Dickinson

The Thought Beneath So Slight a Film

The Thought Beneath So Slight a Film - meaning Summary

Invisible Thought Revealed

This short lyric argues that a delicate covering can make an inner idea more visible. Dickinson suggests that slight veils—like lace or mist—do not hide but reveal the essential shape or motion beneath. The poem uses quiet analogies to claim that subtlety can intensify perception, letting the reader apprehend a deeper thought through what seems at first to obscure it.

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The thought beneath so slight a film Is more distincly seen, As laces just reveal the surge, Or mists the Apennine.

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