43779.fb2 Shapes of Clay - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 233

Shapes of Clay - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 233

THE MAN BORN BLIND.

  A man born blind received his sight    By a painful operation;  And these are things he saw in the light    Of an infant observation.  He saw a merchant, good and wise.    And greatly, too, respected,  Who looked, to those imperfect eyes,    Like a swindler undetected.  He saw a patriot address    A noisy public meeting.  And said: "Why, that's a calf. I guess.    That for the teat is bleating."  A doctor stood beside a bed    And shook his summit sadly.  "O see that foul assassin!" said    The man who saw so badly.  He saw a lawyer pleading for    A thief whom they'd been jailing,  And said: "That's an accomplice, or    My sight again is failing."  Upon the Bench a Justice sat,    With nothing to restrain him;  "'Tis strange," said the observer, "that    They ventured to unchain him."  With theologic works supplied,    He saw a solemn preacher;  "A burglar with his kit," he cried,    "To rob a fellow creature."  A bluff old farmer next he saw    Sell produce in a village,  And said: "What, what! is there no law    To punish men for pillage?"  A dame, tall, fair and stately, passed,    Who many charms united;  He thanked his stars his lot was cast    Where sepulchers were whited.  He saw a soldier stiff and stern,    "Full of strange oaths" and toddy;  But was unable to discern    A wound upon his body.  Ten square leagues of rolling ground    To one great man belonging,  Looked like one little grassy mound    With worms beneath it thronging.  A palace's well-carven stones,    Where Dives dwelt contented,  Seemed built throughout of human bones    With human blood cemented.  He watched the yellow shining thread    A silk-worm was a-spinning;  "That creature's coining gold." he said,    "To pay some girl for sinning."  His eyes were so untrained and dim    All politics, religions,  Arts, sciences, appeared to him    But modes of plucking pigeons.  And so he drew his final breath,    And thought he saw with sorrow  Some persons weeping for his death    Who'd be all smiles to-morrow.