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Chinese Poet Among Barbarians by Louis Untermeyer

January 30, 2011 by Every Writer

Louis Untermeyer by George Grantham Bain (Library of Congress)

Chinese Poet Among Barbarians

by Louis Untermeyer

The rain drives, drives endlessly,

Heavy threads of rain;
The wind beats at the shutters,
The surf drums on the shore;
Drunken telegraph poles lean sideways;
Dank summer cottages gloom hopelessly;
Bleak factory-chimneys are etched on the filmy distance,
Tepid with rain.
It seems I have lived for a hundred years
Among these things;
And it is useless for me now to make complaint against them.
For I know I shall never escape from this dull barbarian country,
Where there is none now left to lift a cool jade winecup,
Or share with me a single human thought.

Filed Under: 1900s

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