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Poems with Fables in Prose

By Frederic Herbert Trench

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61

I

Ho! Ho! the Count was not of those
That care for treasure-trove!
Ploughland and forest, quarry, fell,
Castle and pleasure-grove.
All that his house had heaped, he took
And shared among his mountain folk,
And wasted as they throve;
Then flung the rest, all that he had,
Round the white neck of love!
Ay, in pearls for his young love.
Make no mistake! the squanderer knew
Shrewdly may be as I or you
The virtue that's in gold;
But this despotic man we lost
Had faults and manifold.
He had a something in the brain
Never could bide his proper gain;
He was not of the Clan of Take,
The Clan of Get and Hold!
There, in a savage discontent,
The Count would sit receiving rent:
He took the silver that you brought
And thrust you back the gold.
“I'd hew with you down to the rock,
Down to the rock!” he cried,

62

“Then could you know the man that's stript
And working at your side!”
Well, he stript himself, he showed his thew,
he bared himself in pride,
He dared with you, he shared with you,
And you for him had died!
And you heard his simple gusty laugh,
And felt, and you were sure,
'Twas thirsting for the fire of life
That made and kept him poor;
And that he would keep the fire of life
As pure as fire is pure!
So impetuously, so seriously,
Then grimly, nigh deliriously,
He fought, he played, for love;
But he lost, and vanished utterly.