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Poem by Sam Walter Foss


Odium Theologicum


I

They met and they talked where the crossroads meet,
  Four men from the four winds come,
And they talked of the horse, for they loved the theme,
  And never a man was dumb.
The man from the North loved the strength of the horse,
  And the man from the East his pace,
And the man from the South loved the speed of the horse,
  And the man from the West his grace.

So these four men from the four winds come,
  Each paused a space in his course
And smiled in the face of his fellow man
  And lovingly talked of the horse.
Then each man parted and went his way
  As their different courses ran;
And each man journeyed with peace in his heart
  And loving his fellow man.

II

They met the next year where the crossroads meet,
  Four men from the four winds come:
And it chanced as they met that they talked of God,
  And never a man was dumb.
One imagined God in the shape of a man.
  A spirit did one insist.
One said that nature itself was God.
  One said that he didn’t exist.

They lashed each other with tongues that stung,
  That smote as with a rod;
Each glared in the face of his fellow man,
  And wrathfully talked of God.
Then each man parted and went his way,
  As their different courses ran;
And each man journeyed with wrath in his heart,
  And hating his fellow man.



Sam Walter Foss


Sam Walter Foss's other poems:
  1. Toil's Sweet Content
  2. The Poster-Painter's Masterpiece
  3. The Trumpets
  4. The Town of Hay
  5. The True Bible


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