The wind tapped like a tired man, And like a host, "Come in," I boldly answered; entered then My residence within A rapid, footless guest, To offer whom a chair Were as impossible as hand A sofa to the air. No bone had he to bind him, His speech was like the push Of numerous humming-birds at once From a superior bush. His countenance a billow, His fingers, if he pass, Let go a music, as of tunes Blown tremulous in glass. He visited, still flitting; Then, like a timid man, Again he tapped—'t was flurriedly— Dickinson’s use of figurative language in this poem expresses the idea that the speaker is worried about the wind’s damaging power. the speaker is frightened by the wind’s ghostlike appearance. the speaker dislikes visits from unwanted guests. the speaker enjoys this unexpected visit from the wind.
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