It watched me in the cradle laid, and from my boyhood-s home
It glared above my shoulder-blade when I wrote my first -pomeâ?;
It-s sidled by me ever since, with greeny eyes aslant-
It is the thing (O, Priest and Prince!) that wants to write, but can-t.
It yells and slobbers, mows and whines, It follows everywhere;
-Tis gloating on these very lines with red and baleful glare.
It murders friendship, love and truth (It makes the -readerâ? pant),
It ruins editorial youth, the Wantaritencant.
Its slime is ever on my work, and ever on my name;
No toil nor trouble does It shirk-for It will write, all the same!
It tantalized when great thoughts burned, in trouble and in want;
It makes it hell for all concerned, the Wantaritencant.
And now that I would gladly die, or rest my weary mind,
I cannot rest to think that I must leave the Thing behind.
Its green rot damns the dead, for sure-that greatest curse extant,
-Twill kill Australian literature, the Wantaritencant!
You cannot kill or keep It still, or ease It off a bit;
It talks about Itself until the world believes in It.
It is a Scare, a Fright, a Ghast, a Gibber, and a Rant,
A future Horror and a Past, the Wantaritencant!
The Wantaritencant
Henry Lawson
(1)
Poem topics: I love you, future, green, home, red, truth, work, world, great, mind, shoulder, youth, horror, love, I miss you, write, trouble, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
Write your comment about The Wantaritencant poem by Henry Lawson
Best Poems of Henry Lawson