Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Wanderer by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Wanderer

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    Between the death of day and birth of night,
    By War's red light,
    I met with one in trailing sorrows clad,
    Whose features had
    The look of Him who died to set men right.
    Around him many horrors, like great worms,
    Terrific forms,
    Crawled, helmed like hippogriff and rosmarine,
    Gaunt and obscene,
    Urged on to battle with a thousand arms.
    Columns of steel, and iron belching flame,
    Before them came:
    And cities crumbled; and amid them trod
    Havoc, their god,
    With Desolation that no tongue may name.
    And out of Heaven came a burning breath,
    And on it Death,
    Riding: before him, huge and bellowing herds
    Of beasts, like birds,
    Bat-winged and demon, nothing conquereth.
    Hag-lights went by, and Fear that shrieks and dies;
    And mouths, with cries
    Of famine; and the madness of Despair;
    And everywhere
    Curses, like kings, with ever-burning eyes.
    And, lo! the shadow shook and cried a name,
    That grew a flame
    Above the world, and said, "Give heed! give heed!
    See how they bleed!
    My wounds! my wounds! Was it for this I came?
    "Where is the love for which I shed my blood?
    And where the good
    I preached and died for? Lo! ye have denied
    And crucified
    Me here again, who swore me brotherhood!"
    Then overhead the vault of night was rent:
    The firmament
    Winged thunder over of aerial craft;
    And Battle laughed
    Titanic laughter as its way it went.



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