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Artemis In Sierra

Bret Harte

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

Poet
Philosopher
Jones of Mariposa


POET

Halt!  Here we are.  Now wheel your mare a trifle
  Just where you stand; then doff your hat and swear
Never yet was scene you might cover with your rifle
  Half as complete or as marvelously fair.

PHILOSOPHER

Dropped from Olympus or lifted out of Tempe,
  Swung like a censer betwixt the earth and sky!
He who in Greece sang of flocks and flax and hemp,—he
  Here might recall them—six thousand feet on high!

POET

Well you may say so.  The clamor of the river,
  Hum of base toil, and man’s ignoble strife,
Halt far below, where the stifling sunbeams quiver,
  But never climb to this purer, higher life!

Not to this glade, where Jones of Mariposa,
  Simple and meek as his flocks we’re looking at,
Tends his soft charge; nor where his daughter Rosa—
    (A shot.)
  Hallo!  What’s that?

PHILOSOPHER

                        A—something thro’ my hat—
Bullet, I think.  You were speaking of his daughter?

POET

Yes; but—your hat you were moving through the leaves;
  Likely he thought it some eagle bent on slaughter.
Lightly he shoots— (A second shot.)

PHILOSOPHER

                     As one readily perceives.
 Still, he improves!  This time YOUR hat has got it,
Quite near the band!  Eh? Oh, just as you please—
  Stop, or go on.

POET

                  Perhaps we’d better trot it
Down through the hollow, and up among the trees.

BOTH

Trot, trot, trot, where the bullets cannot follow;
  Trot down and up again among the laurel trees.

PHILOSOPHER

Thanks, that is better; now of this shot-dispensing
  Jones and his girl—you were saying—

POET

                                        Well, you see—
I—hang it all!—Oh! what’s the use of fencing!
  Sir, I confess it!—these shots were meant for ME.

PHILOSOPHER

Are you mad!

POET

              God knows, I shouldn’t wonder!
  I love this coy nymph, who, coldly—as yon peak
Shines on the river it feeds, yet keeps asunder—
  Long have I worshiped, but never dared to speak.

Till she, no doubt, her love no longer hiding,
  Waked by some chance word her father’s jealousy;
Slips her disdain—as an avalanche down gliding
  Sweeps flocks and kin away—to clear a path for ME.

Hence his attack.

PHILOSOPHER

                   I see.  What I admire
  Chiefly, I think, in your idyl, so to speak,
Is the cool modesty that checks your youthful fire,—
  Absence of self-love and abstinence of cheek!

Still, I might mention, I’ve met the gentle Rosa,—
  Danced with her thrice, to her father’s jealous dread;
And, it is possible, she’s happened to disclose a—
  Ahem!  You can fancy why he shoots at ME instead.

POET

YOU?

PHILOSOPHER

     Me.  But kindly take your hand from your revolver,
  I am not choleric—but accidents may chance.
And here’s the father, who alone can be the solver
  Of this twin riddle of the hat and the romance.

Enter JONES OF MARIPOSA.

POET

Speak, shepherd—mine!

PHILOSOPHER

                       Hail!  Time-and-cartridge waster,
  Aimless exploder of theories and skill!
Whom do you shoot?

JONES OF MARIPOSA

                   Well, shootin’ ain’t my taste, or
  EF I shoot anything—I only shoot to kill.

That ain’t what’s up.  I only kem to tell ye—
  Sportin’ or courtin’—trot homeward for your life!
Gals will be gals, and p’r'aps it’s just ez well ye
  Larned there was one had no wish to be—a wife.

POET

What?

PHILOSOPHER

      Is this true?

JONES OF MARIPOSA

                     I reckon it looks like it.
  She saw ye comin’.  My gun was standin’ by;
She made a grab, and ‘fore I up could strike it,
  Blazed at ye both!  The critter is SO shy!

POET

Who?

JONES OF MARIPOSA

      My darter!

PHILOSOPHER

                  Rosa?

JONES OF MARIPOSA

                         Same!  Good-by!
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Complete Poetical Works | Houghton, Mifflin & Company, 1902
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