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Dead In The Sierras

Joaquin Miller

His footprints have failed us,
Where berries are red,
And madroños are rankest,—
The hunter is dead!

  The grizzly may pass
By his half-open door;
May pass and repass
On his path, as of yore;

  The panther may crouch
In the leaves on his limb;
May scream and may scream,—
It is nothing to him.

  Prone, bearded, and breasted
Like columns of stone;
And tall as a pine—
As a pine overthrown!

  His camp-fires gone,
What else can be done
Than let him sleep on
Till the light of the sun?

  Ay, tombless! what of it?
Marble is dust,
Cold and repellent;
And iron is rust.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From An American Anthology, 1787-1900 | Houghton Mifflin, 1900
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