Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Comet by Oliver Wendell Holmes
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The Comet

    By Oliver Wendell Holmes



    The Comet! He is on his way,
    And singing as he flies;
    The whizzing planets shrink before
    The spectre of the skies;
    Ah! well may regal orbs burn blue,
    And satellites turn pale,
    Ten million cubic miles of head,
    Ten billion leagues of tail!

    On, on by whistling spheres of light
    He flashes and he flames;
    He turns not to the left nor right,
    He asks them not their names;
    One spurn from his demoniac heel, -
    Away, away they fly,
    Where darkness might be bottled up
    And sold for "Tyrian dye."

    And what would happen to the land,
    And how would look the sea,
    If in the bearded devil's path
    Our earth should chance to be?
    Full hot and high the sea would boil,
    Full red the forests gleam;
    Methought I saw and heard it all
    In a dyspeptic dream!

    I saw a tutor take his tube
    The Comet's course to spy;
    I heard a scream, - the gathered rays
    Had stewed the tutor's eye;
    I saw a fort, - the soldiers all
    Were armed with goggles green;
    Pop cracked the guns! whiz flew the balls!
    Bang went the magazine!

    I saw a poet dip a scroll
    Each moment in a tub,
    I read upon the warping back,
    "The Dream of Beelzebub;"
    He could not see his verses burn,
    Although his brain was fried,
    And ever and anon he bent
    To wet them as they dried.

    I saw the scalding pitch roll down
    The crackling, sweating pines,
    And streams of smoke, like water-spouts,
    Burst through the rumbling mines;
    I asked the firemen why they made
    Such noise about the town;
    They answered not, - but all the while
    The brakes went up and down.

    I saw a roasting pullet sit
    Upon a baking egg;
    I saw a cripple scorch his hand
    Extinguishing his leg;
    I saw nine geese upon the wing
    Towards the frozen pole,
    And every mother's gosling fell
    Crisped to a crackling coal.

    I saw the ox that browsed the grass
    Writhe in the blistering rays,
    The herbage in his shrinking jaws
    Was all a fiery blaze;
    I saw huge fishes, boiled to rags,
    Bob through the bubbling brine;
    And thoughts of supper crossed my soul;
    I had been rash at mine.

    Strange sights! strange sounds! Oh fearful dream!
    Its memory haunts me still,
    The steaming sea, the crimson glare,
    That wreathed each wooded hill;
    Stranger! if through thy reeling brain
    Such midnight visions sweep,
    Spare, spare, oh, spare thine evening meal,
    And sweet shall be thy sleep!



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