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1865–1914

PORTENTS

Madison Julius Cawein

Above the world a glare Of sunset — guns and spears; An army, no one hears, Of mist and air:

Long lines of bronze and gold, Huge helmets, each a cloud; And then a fortress old There in the night that phantoms seem to crowd.

A face of flame; a hand Of crimson alchemy Is waved: and, solemnly, At its command,

Opens a fiery well, A burning hole, From which a stream of hell, A river of blood, in frenzy, seems to roll.

And there, upon a throne, Like some vast precipice, Above that River of Dis, Behold a King! alone!

Around whom shapes of blood Take form: each one the peer Of those, who, in the wood Of Dante's Hell froze up the heart with fear.

Then shapes, that breast to breast Gallop to face a foe: And through the crimson glow Th’ imperial crest

Of him whose banner flies Above a world that burns, A raven in the skies, And as it flies into a Death's-Head turns.

The wild trees writhe and twist Their gaunt limbs, wrung with fear: And now into my ear A word seems hissed;

A message, filled with dread, A dark, foreboding word,— “Behold! we are the dead, Who here on Earth lived only by the sword!”

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PORTENTS · Madison Julius Cawein · Poetry Cove