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    The Poet And His Book

    by Edna St. Vincent Millay
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    Page 1 of 2
    Down, you mongrel, Death!
    Back into your kennel!
    I have stolen breath
    In a stalk of fennel!
    You shall scratch and you shall whine
    Many a night, and you shall worry
    Many a bone, before you bury
    One sweet bone of mine!

    When shall I be dead?
    When my flesh is withered,
    And above my head
    Yellow pollen gathered
    All the empty afternoon?
    When sweet lovers pause and wonder
    Who am I that lie thereunder,
    Hidden from the moon?

    This my personal death?--
    That lungs be failing
    To inhale the breath
    Others are exhaling?
    This my subtle spirit's end?--
    Ah, when the thawed winter splashes
    Over these chance dust and ashes,
    Weep not me, my friend!

    Me, by no means dead
    In that hour, but surely
    When this book, unread,
    Rots to earth obscurely,
    And no more to any breast,
    Close against the clamorous swelling
    Of the thing there is no telling,
    Are these pages pressed!

    When this book is mould,
    And a book of many
    Waiting to be sold
    For a casual penny,
    In a little open case,
    In a street unclean and cluttered,
    Where a heavy mud is spattered
    From the passing drays,

    Stranger, pause and look;
    From the dust of ages
    Lift this little book,
    Turn the tattered pages,
    Read me, do not let me die!
    Search the fading letters, finding

    Steadfast in the broken binding
    All that once was I!

    When these veins are weeds,
    When these hollowed sockets
    Watch the rooty seeds
    Bursting down like rockets,
    And surmise the spring again,
    Or, remote in that black cupboard,
    Watch the pink worms writhing upward
    At the smell of rain,

    Boys and girls that lie
    Whispering in the hedges,
    Do not let me die,
    Mix me with your pledges;
    Boys and girls that slowly walk
    In the woods, and weep, and quarrel,
    Staring past the pink wild laurel,
    Mix me with your talk,

    Do not let me die!
    Farmers at your raking,
    When the sun is high,
    While the hay is making,
    When, along the stubble strewn,
    Withering on their stalks uneaten,
    Strawberries turn dark and sweeten
    In the lapse of noon;

    Shepherds on the hills,
    In the pastures, drowsing
    To the tinkling bells
    Of the brown sheep browsing;
    Sailors crying through the storm;
    Scholars at your study; hunters
    Lost amid the whirling winter's
    Whiteness uniform;

    Men that long for sleep;
    Men that wake and revel;--
    If an old song leap
    To your senses' level
    At such moments, may it be
    Sometimes, though a moment only,
    Some forgotten, quaint and homely
    Vehicle of me!

    Women at your toil,
    Women at your leisure
    Till the kettle
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