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1868–1950

THE SIGN

Edgar Lee Masters

There's not a soul on the square, And the snow blows up like a sail, Or dizzily drifts like a drunken man Falling, before the gale.

And when the wind eddies it rifts The snow that lies in drifts; And it skims along the walk and sifts In stairways, doorways all about

The steps of the church in an angry rout. And one would think that a hungry hound Was out in the cold for the sound. But I do not seem to mind

The snow that makes one blind, Nor the crying voice of the wind — I hate to hear the creak of the sign Of Harmon Whitney, attorney at law:

With its rhythmic monotone of awe. And neither a moan nor yet a whine, Nor a cry of pain — one can n't define The sound of a creaking sign.

Especially if the sky be bleak, And no one stirs however you seek, And every time you hear it creak You wonder why they leave it stay

When a man is buried and hidden away Many a day!

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THE SIGN · Edgar Lee Masters · Poetry Cove