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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
FEUD, by LEW SARETT Poet's Biography First Line: Poor wayworn creature! Oh, sorely harried deer Last Line: Laughing -- one round for you, and one for me. Subject(s): Deer; Hunting; Wolves; Hunters | |||
Poor wayworn creature! Oh, sorely harried deer, What drove you, quivering like a poplar-blade, To refuge with my herd? What holds you here Within my meadow, broken and afraid? Tilting your nose to tainted air, you thrill And freeze to wailing wolves! Fear you the sound Of the coyotes eager for a tender kill? Or yet the baying of the hunter's hound? Let fall your anguish, harried one, and rest; Bed yourself down among your kin, my cattle; Sleep unperturbed. No spoiler shall molest You here this night for I shall wage your battle. There was a day when coyotes in a pack, Wolves of another hue, another breed, With Christ upon their lips, set out to track Me down and drop me, for my blood, my creed. O, hunted creature, once I knew the thud Of padded feet that you put into flight, The bugle-cry, suffused with lust for blood, That trembled in the brazen bell of night. I knew your frenzied rocky run, the burst Of lungs, the rivers of fire in every vein; I knew your foaming lip, your boundless thirst, The rain of molten-hammering in your brain. Abide with me, then, against the wolves' return, For I shall carry on the feud for you; And it shall be, to me, of small concern If the wolf-hearts walk on four soft feet or two. Oh, let them come! And I shall burn their flanks With a blast of hell to end their revelry, And whistle molten silver through their ranks, Laughing -- one round for you, and one for me. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LAMENT OF QUARRY by LEONIE ADAMS KILLDEER by KENNETH SLADE ALLING THE YOUNG FOWLER THAT MISTOOK HIS GAME by PHILIP AYRES A POEM ABOUT THE HOUNDS AND THE HARES by LISEL MUELLER FOUR LITTLE FOXES by LEW SARETT |
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