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Poem by Robert Lee Frost The Draft Horse With a lantern that wouldn’t burn In too frail a buggy we drove Behind too heavy a horse Through a pitch-dark limitless grove. And a man came out of the trees And took our horse by the head And reaching back to his ribs Deliberately stabbed him dead. The ponderous beast went down With a crack of a broken shaft. And the night drew through the trees In one long invidious draft. The most unquestioning pair That ever accepted fate And the least disposed to ascribe Any more than we had to hate, We assumed that the man himself Or someone he had to obey Wanted us to get down And walk the rest of the way. Robert Lee Frost Robert Lee Frost's other poems: 1586 Views |
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