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<h3> BEAVER POND MEADOW </h3>
<p class="poem">
Thou art my Dismal Swamp, my Everglades:<br/>
Thou my Campagna, where the bison wades<br/>
Through shallow, steaming pools, and the sick air<br/>
Decays. Thou my Serbonian Bog art, where<br/>
O'er leagues of mud, black vomit of the Nile,<br/>
Crawls in the sun the myriad crocodile.<br/>
Or thou my Cambridge or my Lincoln fen<br/>
Shalt be—a lonely land where stilted men<br/>
Stalking across the surface waters go,<br/>
Casting long shadows, and the creaking, slow<br/>
Canal-barge, laden with its marshy hay,<br/>
Disturbs the stagnant ditches twice a day.<br/>
Thou hast thy crocodiles: on rotten logs<br/>
Afloat, the turtles swarm and bask: the frogs,<br/>
When come the pale, cold twilights of the spring,<br/>
Like distant sleigh-bells through the meadows ring.<br/>
The school-boy comes on holidays to take<br/>
The musk-rat in its hole, or kill the snake,<br/>
Or fish for bull-heads in the pond at night.<br/>
The hog-snout's swollen corpse, with belly white,<br/>
I find upon the footway through the sedge,<br/>
Trodden by tramps along the water's edge.<br/>
Not thine the breath of the salt marsh below<br/>
Where, when the tide is out, the mowers go<br/>
Shearing the oozy plain, that reeks with brine<br/>
More tonic than the incense of the pine.<br/>
Thou art the sink of all uncleanliness,<br/>
A drain for slaughter-pens, a wilderness<br/>
Of trenches, pockets, quagmires, bogs where rank<br/>
The poison sumach grows, and in the tank<br/>
The water standeth ever black and deep<br/>
Greened o'er with scum: foul pottages, that steep<br/>
And brew in that dark broth, at night distil<br/>
Malarious fogs bringing the fever chill.<br/>
Yet grislier horrors thy recesses hold:<br/>
The murdered peddler's body five days old<br/>
Among the yellow lily-pads was found<br/>
In yonder pond: the new-born babe lay drowned<br/>
And throttled on the bottom of this moat,<br/>
Near where the negro hermit keeps his boat;<br/>
Whose wigwam stands beside the swamp; whose meals<br/>
It furnishes, fat pouts and mud-spawned eels.<br/>
Even so thou hast a kind of beauty, wild,<br/>
Unwholesome—thou the suburb's outcast child,<br/>
Behind whose grimy skin and matted hair<br/>
Warm nature works and makes her creature fair.<br/>
Summer has wrought a blue and silver border<br/>
Of iris flags and flowers in triple order<br/>
Of the white arrowhead round Beaver Pond,<br/>
And o'er the milkweeds in the swamp beyond<br/>
Tangled the dodder's amber-colored threads.<br/>
In every fosse the bladderwort's bright heads<br/>
Like orange helmets on the surface show.<br/>
Richer surprises still thou hast: I know<br/>
The ways that to thy penetralia lead,<br/>
Where in black bogs the sundew's sticky bead<br/>
Ensnares young insects, and that rosy lass,<br/>
Sweet Arethusa, blushes in the grass.<br/>
Once on a Sunday when the bells were still,<br/>
Following the path under the sandy hill<br/>
Through the old orchard and across the plank<br/>
That bridges the dead stream, past many a rank<br/>
Of cat-tails, midway in the swamp I found<br/>
A small green mead of dry but spongy ground,<br/>
Entrenched about on every side with sluices<br/>
Full to the brim of thick lethean juices,<br/>
The filterings of the marsh. With line and hook<br/>
Two little French boys from the trenches took<br/>
Frogs for their Sunday meal and gathered messes<br/>
Of pungent salad from the water-cresses.<br/>
A little isle of foreign soil it seemed,<br/>
And listening to their outland talk, I dreamed<br/>
That yonder spire above the elm-tops calm<br/>
Rose from the village chestnuts of La Balme.<br/>
Yes, many a pretty secret hast thou shown<br/>
To me, O Beaver Pond, walking alone<br/>
On summer afternoons, while yet the swallow<br/>
Skimmed o'er each flaggy plash and gravelly shallow;<br/>
Or when September turned the swamps to gold<br/>
And purple. But the year is growing old:<br/>
The golden-rod is rusted, and the red<br/>
That streaked October's frosty cheek is dead;<br/>
Only the sumach's garnet pompons make<br/>
Procession through the melancholy brake.<br/>
Lo! even now the autumnal wind blows cool<br/>
Over the rippled waters of thy pool,<br/>
And red autumnal sunset colors brood<br/>
Where I alone and all too late intrude.<br/></p>
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