Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Rainless by Madison Julius Cawein
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Rainless

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    The locust builds its are of sound
    And tops it with a spire;
    The roadside leaves pant to the ground
    With dust from hoof and tire.

    The insects, day and night, make din,
    And with the heat grow shriller;
    And everywhere great spiders spin,
    And crawls the caterpillar.

    The wells are dry; the creeks are pools;
    Weeds cram their beds with bristles;
    And when a wind breathes, naught it cools,
    The air grows white with thistles.

    For months the drouth has burned and baked
    The wood and field and garden;
    The flower-plots are dead; and, raked,
    Or mown, the meadows harden.

    The Summer, sunk in godlessness,
    From quarter unto quarter,
    Now drags, now lifts a dusty dress,
    That shows a sloven garter.

    The child of Spring, it now appears,
    Has turned a drab, a harlot,
    Death's doxy; Death's, who near her leers
    In rags of gold and scarlet



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