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The Taxidermist

Hattie Howard

From other men he stands apart,
  Wrapped in sublimity of thought
  Where futile fancies enter not;
  With starlike purpose pressing on
  Where Agassiz and Audubon
Labored, and sped that noble art
  Yet in its pristine dawn.

Something to conquer, to achieve,
  Makes life well worth the struggle hard;
  Its petty ills to disregard,
  In high endeavor day by day
  With this incentive—that he may
Somehow mankind the richer leave
  When he has passed away.

Forest and field he treads alone,
  Finding companionship in birds,
  In reptiles, rodents, yea, in herds
  Of drowsy cattle fat and sleek;
  For these to him a language speak
To common multitudes unknown
  As tones of classic Greek.

Unthinking creatures and untaught,
  They to his nature answer back
  Something his fellow mortals lack;
  And oft educe from him the sigh
  That they unnoticed soon must die,
Leaving of their existence naught
  To be remembered by.

Man may aspire though in the slough;
  May dream of glory, strive for fame,
  Thirst for the prestige of a name.
  And shall these friends, that so invite
  The study of the erudite,
Ever as he beholds them now
  Perish like sparks of light?

Nay, ’tis his purpose and design
  To keep them: not like mummies old
  Papyrus-mantled fold on fold,
  But elephant, or dove, or swan,
  Its native hue and raiment on,
In effigy of plumage fine,
  Or skin its native tawn.

What God hath wrought thus time shall tell,
  And thus endowment rich and vast
  Be rescued from the buried past;
  And rare reliques that never fade
  Be in the manikin portrayed
Till taxidermy witness well
  The debt to science paid.

Lo! one appeareth unforetold—
  This re-creator, yea, of men;
  Making him feel as born again
  Who looketh up with reverent eyes,
  Through wonders that his soul surprise,
That great Creator to behold
  All-powerful, all-wise.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Poems | Hartford Press, 1904
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