It chanced that Allah, looking round,
When he had made his creatures, found
Half of an Eagle and a pair
Of extra Lion legs to spare.
So, hating waste, he took some glue
And made a Gryphon of the two.
But when his handiwork he eyed,
He frowned--and it was petrified,
Doomed for all time to represent
Impatience on a monument.
Sometimes upon our path to-day
Its living counterpart will stray--
Columbia's Eagle strutting in
An awf'ly English Lion's skin,
With glass in eye and swagg'ring gait:
Behold the Gryphon up to date.
The Gryphon
Oliver Herford
(1)
Poem topics: sometimes, time, skin, allah, stray, waste, Valentine's Day, glass, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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About The Gryphon
The Gryphon is a poem by Oliver Herford. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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