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Poem by Harriet Monroe


The Meeting


The ox-team and the automobile
Stood face to face on the long red road,
The long red road was narrow
At the turn of the hill,
And below was the sun-dancing river
Afoam over the rocks.

The mild-mannered beasts stood par, chewing their cud.
The stubble-bearded man from the mountains,
Rustier than his wagon,
Unmoving eyed the proud chauffeur.
The little ragged girl,
With sun-bleached hair,
Sitting on a ahrd, yellow-powdrey bag,
Looked across at the smart motor hats of the ladies,
And their chiffon scarfs
That the light breeze fingered.
The proud chauffeur blew his horn,
But nothing moved-
Except the foaming, sun-dancing river down below.

Then he jerked his head,
And turned the wheel,
And slowly, carefully,
The automobile moved back over the long red road.

And the mild-mannered beasts lifted their feet,
And the stubble-bearded man flipped his rein,
Ad the ragged little girl looked ahead up the hill,
And the ox-team lumbered and limped over the long red road.



Harriet Monroe


Harriet Monroe's other poems:
  1. Battle-Flags of Illinois
  2. Rubens
  3. On the Porch
  4. In the Beginning
  5. For a Child


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Katherine Mansfield The Meeting ("We started speaking")
  • John Clare The Meeting ("Here we meet, too soon to part")

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