A throe upon the features — Solitaire

Emily Dickinson's death poems are never about the decease of life, but romantic and fun. To prove this, all her death related poems should be solved.

A throe upon the features-1
A hurry in the breath-
An ecstasy of parting
Denominated "Death"-

An anguish at the mention 5
Which when to patience grown,
I've known permission given
To rejoin its own.
(F.105/J.71)
[1] throe, features:: pain in following a game's specific rules.
[3] ecstasy:: an unconscious state of sensible objects. parting:: discontinuity of cards.
[4] Death:: failure in a game.
[6] patience:: a game of cards, in which the cards are taken as they come from the pack or set, and the object is to arrange them in some systematic order; usually for one person alone in which case also called solitaire (OED 5).
[8] rejoin:: to connect the card. own:: same type.

The Empress, it is well known, was fond of the game of patience. Every evening the packs of cards were placed upon the table, and patience proceeded, while that of the spectators was sorely tried. ─ Memoirs of Napoleon, His Court and Family (1854)