The Old Stone Quarry.Where the blind mole bides and the rabbit feeds, And, unmolested, the serpent breeds. Edged with underwood, newly grown, Draped with the cloak that the years have thrown Round the broken gaps in the jagged stone. It was opened___I know not how krug ago___ Opened, and left half-worked, and so In this ragged hollow the rank weeds grow. Why lies it idle, this beautiful stone? Ho, for the pickaxe! One by one Hew out these blocks___here is work undone. There are possible towers in this serpent's den___ Possible homes for homeless men. Who shall build them? and where? and when? Must they lie here still, unmarked, unsought___ Turrets and temples, uncarved, unwrought, Till the end of time? 'Tis a sorrowful thought! All through the heats of the summer hours, The wild bee hums in the unplucked flowers That creep and bloom over unbuilt towers. As I sit here, perched on the grass-grown wall, Down to the hollow the brown leaves fall, Little by little covering all. So month after month, and year after year, The rank weeds creep and the leaves turn sere. And a thicker mantle is weaving here. And a day may come when the passer-by, Threading the underwood, then grown high, Shall see but a hollow, where dead leaves lie. There are human souls that seem to me Like this unwrought stone___for all you see- ls a shapeless quarry of what might be, Lying idle, and overgrown With tangled weeds, like this beautiful stone___ Possible work left undone, Possible victories left unwon. And that is a waste that is worse than this; Sharper the edge of the hidden abyss, Deadlier serpents crawl and hiss. And a day shall come when the desolate scene, Though scanned by eyes that are close and keen, Shall show no trace of its "might have been." __Ellen P. Allerton. |
Walls of Corn and Other Poems
Ellen P. Allerton
(Hiawatha, KS: Harrington Printing Company. 1894)
Pages 172-173