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

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    Briar and fennel and chinquapin,
    And rue and ragweed everywhere;
    The field seemed sick as a soul with sin,
    Or dead of an old despair,
    Born of an ancient care.

    The cricket's cry and the locust's whirr,
    And the note of a bird's distress,
    With the rasping sound of a grasshoppér,
    Clung to the loneliness
    Like burrs to a ragged dress.

    So sad the field, so waste the ground,
    So curst with an old despair,
    A woodchuck's burrow, a blind mole's mound,
    And a chipmunk's stony lair,
    Seemed more than it could bear.

    So solemn too, so more than sad,
    So droning-lone with bees
    I wondered what more could Nature add
    To the sum of its miseries
    And then I saw the trees.

    Skeletons gaunt, that gnarled the place,
    Twisted and torn they rose,
    The tortured bones of a perished race
    Of monsters no mortal knows.
    They startled the mind's repose.

    And a man stood there, as still as moss,
    A lichen form that stared;
    And an old blind hound, that seemed at loss,
    Forever around him fared
    With a snarling fang half-bared.

    I looked at the man. I saw him plain.
    Like a dead weed, gray and wan,
    Or a breath of dust. I looked again
    And man and dog were gone
    Like wisps o' the graying dawn. . . .

    Were they a part of the grim death'there?
    Ragweed, fennel, and rue?
    Or forms of the mind, an old despair,
    That there into semblance grew
    Out of the grief I knew?



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