Here is a tale for any man or woman:
A fool sought Death; and braved him with his bauble
Among the graves. At last he heard a hobble,
And something passed him, monstrous, super-human.
And by a tomb, that reared a broken column,
He heard it stop. And then Gargantuan laughter
Shattered the hush. Deep silence followed after,
Filled with the stir of bones, cadaverous, solemn.
Then said the fool:'Come! show thyself, old prancer!
I'll have a bout with thee. I, too, can clatter
My wand and motley. Come now! Death and Folly,
See who's the better man.' There was no answer;
Only his bauble broke; a serious matter
To the poor fool who died of melancholy.
Death And The Fool
Madison Julius Cawein
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Poem topics: laughter, poor, silence, woman, human, deep, answer, broken, gargantuan, matter, death, fool, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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Death And The Fool is a poem by Madison Julius Cawein. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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