The poems of Madison Cawein | ||
416
AT THE SIGN OF THE SKULL
It's “Gallop and go!” and “Slow, now, slow!”
With every man in this life below—
But the things of the world are a fleeting show.
With every man in this life below—
But the things of the world are a fleeting show.
The post-chaise Time that all must take
Is old with clay and dust;
Two horses strain its rusty brake
Named Pleasure and Disgust.
Is old with clay and dust;
Two horses strain its rusty brake
Named Pleasure and Disgust.
Our baggage totters on its roof,
Of Vanity and Care,
As Hope, the post-boy, spurs each hoof,
Or heavy-eyed Despair.
Of Vanity and Care,
As Hope, the post-boy, spurs each hoof,
Or heavy-eyed Despair.
And now a comrade with us rides,
Love, haply, or Remorse;
And that dim traveler besides,
Gaunt Memory on a horse.
Love, haply, or Remorse;
And that dim traveler besides,
Gaunt Memory on a horse.
And be we king or be we kern
Who ride the roads of Sin,
No matter how the roads may turn
They lead us to that Inn:
Who ride the roads of Sin,
417
They lead us to that Inn:
Unto that Inn within that land
Of silence and of gloom,
Whose ghastly Landlord takes our hand
And leads us to our room.
Of silence and of gloom,
Whose ghastly Landlord takes our hand
And leads us to our room.
It's “Gallop and go!” and “Slow, now, slow!”
With every man in this life below—
But the things of the world are a fleeting show.
With every man in this life below—
But the things of the world are a fleeting show.
The poems of Madison Cawein | ||