THE
BEGGAR AND THE ANGEL
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AN
angel burdened with self-pity
Came out of heaven to a modern city.
He
saw a beggar on the street,
Where the tides of traffic meet.
A
pair of brass-bound hickory pegs |
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Brought
him his pence instead of legs.
A murky
dog by him did lie,
Poodle, in part, his ancestry.
The
angel stood and thought upon
This poodle-haunted beggar man.
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"My life is grown a bore," said he,
"One long round of sciamachy;
I
think I'll do a little good,
By way of change from angelhood."
He
drew near to the beggar grim, |
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And
gravely thus accosted him:
"How
would you like, my friend, to fly
All day through the translucent sky;
To
knock at the door of the red leaven,
And even to enter the orthodox heaven?
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If you would care to know this joy,
I will surender my employ,
And
take your ills, collect your pelf,
An humble beggar like yourself.
For
ages you these joys may know, |
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While
I shall suffer here below;
And
in the end we both may gain
Access of pleasure from my pain."
The
stationary vagrant said,
"I do not mind, so go ahead."
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The angel told the heavenly charm,
He felt a wing on either arm;
"Good-day,"he
said, "this floating's queer
If I should want to change next year—?"
"Pull
out that feather!" the angel said, |
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"The
one half black and the other half red."
The
cripple cried, "Before you're through
You may get fagged, and if you do,—
"The
angel superciliously—
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"My
transformed friend, don't think of me.
I shall
be happy day and night,
In doing what I think is right."
"So
so," the feathered beggar said,
"Good-bye, I am just overhead." |
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* * * * *
THE angel when he grasped the dish,
Began to criticize his wish.
The
seat was hard as granite rocks,
His real legs were in the box.
His
knees were cramped, his shins were sore, |
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The
lying pegs stuck out before.
In
vain he clinked the dish and whined.
The passers-by seemed deaf and blind.
As
pious looking as Saint Denis,
An urchin stole his catch-penny.
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And even the beggar's drap-fleeced poodle
Began to know him for a noodle.
"It
has an uncelestial scent,
The clothing of this mendicant;"
He
cried, "That trickling down my spine |
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Is
anything but hyaline.
This
day is like a thousand years:
I'd give an age of sighs and tears
To
see with his confectioned grin
One cherub sitting on his chin.
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That cripple was by far too sly—
I wish he'd tumble from the sky,
That
things might be as they were before;
I really cannot stand much more!"
* * * * *
THE
beggar in the angel's guise, |
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Rose
far above the smoky skies.
But
being a beggar, never saw
The charm of the compelling law
That
turned the swinging universe:
'Twas gloomy as an empty purse.
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Often with heaven in his head,
He blundered on a planet dead.
And
when with an immortal fuss,
He singed his wings at Sirius.
He
plucked the feather with his teeth, |
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The
charm was potent and beneath,
He
saw the turmoil of the way
Grown wilder at the close of day,
With
the sad poodle, can in hand,
The angel still at the old stand.
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"My friend," said the angel, hemming
and humming,
"Truly I thought you were never coming."
"That's
an unhandsome thing to say,
Seeing I've only been gone a day.
But
there's nothing in all your brazen sky |
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To
match the cock of that poodle's eye."
"Take
your dish and give me my wings,
'Tis but a fair exchange of things."
* * * * *
THE
beggar felt his garment's rot,
The horn ridge of each callous spot;
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He clinked his can and was content;
His poverty was permanent.
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