In the pasture a shire whose broad muscles once drew a hayrake, a plough, can't hold the weight of his great head and neck -- he will be fed to the foxes. And the Clydesdales and saddle nags that stray along the fence with limps and sagging bellies, with rheumy eyes (one has no tail). But the foxes not having known field or woods, bred, born in long rows of hutches, will die to adorn some woman's neck. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PORPHYRIA'S LOVER by ROBERT BROWNING DIXIE by DANIEL DECATUR EMMETT BEETHOVEN'S THIRD SYMPHONY by RICHARD HOVEY AT A SOLEMN MUSIC by JOHN MILTON SISTER HELEN by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI MAKE FRIENDS by ALI IBN ABU TALIB |