This fragment appears in part as a trace (text altered) in a letter to Thomas
Wentworth Higginson (BPL Higg 106) composed
in June 1878 (THJ, RWF). In this case the opening passage of the
text—"If ever you lost | a friend - Master - | you remember you | could
not begin | again because there | was no world -"—constitutes the trace,
and, possibly, a trial beginning to the letter. The concluding passage of the
text—"A breathless Death | is not so cold as | a Death that
breathes"—does not reappear as a trace in this letter or in any other
extant composition, and Dickinson's final intentions toward the passage are
unknown. Less personal or "occasional" than the lines directly addressed to
Higginson, the final lines of the text suggest a change of direction of or
intention towards the fragment. Dickinson may have omitted the lines from the
final draft of the letter to Higginson in order to preserve its consolatory
tone.
< a808.txt.1; fragment_extrageneric >
If ever
you lost a friend - Master - You remember you could not
begin again because there was no world -
A breathless Death is not so cold as a Death that
breathes