Public Domain Poetry And Stories - An Old Fish Pond. by Henry Austin Dobson
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An Old Fish Pond.

    By Henry Austin Dobson



    Green growths of mosses drop and bead
    Around the granite brink;
    And 'twixt the isles of water-weed
    The wood-birds dip and drink.

    Slow efts about the edges sleep;
    Swift-darting water-flies
    Shoot on the surface; down the deep
    Fast-following bubbles rise.

    Look down. What groves that scarcely sway!
    What "wood obscure," profound!
    What jungle!--where some beast of prey
    Might choose his vantage-ground!

    * * * * *

    Who knows what lurks beneath the tide?--
    Who knows what tale? Belike,
    Those "antres vast" and shadows hide
    Some patriarchal Pike;--

    Some tough old tyrant, wrinkle-jawed,
    To whom the sky, the earth,
    Have but for aim to look on awed
    And see him wax in girth;--

    Hard ruler there by right of might;
    An ageless Autocrat,
    Whose "good old rule" is "Appetite,
    And subjects fresh and fat;"--

    While they--poor souls!--in wan despair
    Still watch for signs in him;
    And dying, hand from heir to heir
    The day undawned and dim,

    When the pond's terror too must go;
    Or creeping in by stealth,
    Some bolder brood, with common blow,
    Shall found a Commonwealth.

    * * * * *

    Or say,--perchance the liker this!--
    That these themselves are gone;
    That Amurath in minimis,--
    Still hungry,--lingers on,

    With dwindling trunk and wolfish jaw
    Revolving sullen things,
    But most the blind unequal law
    That rules the food of Kings;--

    The blot that makes the cosmic All
    A mere time-honoured cheat;--
    That bids the Great to eat the Small,
    Yet lack the Small to eat!

    * * * * *

    Who knows! Meanwhile the mosses bead
    Around the granite brink;
    And 'twixt the isles of water-weed
    The wood-birds dip and drink.



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