Here went a horse with heavy laboring stride
Along the woodland side;
Deep in the clay his iron hoof-marks show,
Patient and slow,
Where with his human burden yesterday
He passed this way.
Would that this wind that tramples 'round me here,
Among the sad and sere
Of winter-weary forests, were a steed,
Mighty indeed,
And tameless as the tempest of its pace,
Upon whom man might place.
The boundless burden of his mortal cares,
Life's griefs, despairs,
And ruined dreams that bow the spirit so!
And let him go
Bearing them far from the sad world, ah me!
Leaving it free.
As in that Age of Gold, of which men tell,
When Earth was glad and gods came here to dwell.
In Clay
Madison Julius Cawein
Suggested Poems
Explore a curated selection of verses that share themes, styles, and emotional resonance with the poem you've just read.