Here is a tale for children and their grannies:
There was a fool, a man who'd had his chances
But missed them, somehow; lost them, just for fancies,
Tag-ends of things with which he'd crammed crannies
Of his cracked head, as panes are crammed with paper:
Fragments of song and bits of worthless writing,
Which he was never weary of reciting,
Fluttered his mind as night a windy taper.
A witless fool! who lived in some fair Venice
Of his own building where he dreamed of Beauty:
Who swore each weed a flower the sorry pauper!
This would not do. Men said he was a menace
To all mankind; and, as it was their duty,
Clapped him in prison where he died as proper.
The Fool
Madison Julius Cawein
(1)
Poem topics: beauty, children, flower, lost, never, night, song, sorry, head, mind, prison, duty, paper, fool, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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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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