The Muse Among the Motors

Contradictions

Longfellow

Rudyard Kipling


THE DROWSY carrier sways
    To the drowsy horses’ tramp.
His axles winnow the sprays
Of the hedge where the rabbit plays
    In the light of his single lamp.

He hears a roar behind,
    A howl, a hoot, and a yell,
A headlight strikes him blind
And a stench o’erpowers the wind
    Like a blast from the mouth of Hell.

He mends his swingle-bar,
    And loud his curses ring;
But a mother watching afar
Hears the hum of the doctor’s car
    Like the beat of an angel’s wing!

So, to the poet’s mood,
    Motor or carrier’s van,
Properly understood,
Are neither evil nor good—
    Ormuzd not Ahriman!


The Muse Among the Motors - Contents


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