Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Desire And Possession 1727 by Jonathan Swift
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Desire And Possession 1727

    By Jonathan Swift



        'Tis strange what different thoughts inspire
    In men, Possession and Desire!
    Think what they wish so great a blessing;
    So disappointed when possessing!
        A moralist profoundly sage
    (I know not in what book or page,
    Or whether o'er a pot of ale)
    Related thus the following tale.
        Possession, and Desire, his brother,
    But still at variance with each other,
    Were seen contending in a race;
    And kept at first an equal pace;
    'Tis said, their course continued long,
    For this was active, that was strong:
    Till Envy, Slander, Sloth, and Doubt,
    Misled them many a league about;
    Seduced by some deceiving light,
    They take the wrong way for the right;
    Through slippery by-roads, dark and deep,
    They often climb, and often creep.
        Desire, the swifter of the two,
    Along the plain like lightning flew:
    Till, entering on a broad highway,
    Where power and titles scatter'd lay,
    He strove to pick up all he found,
    And by excursions lost his ground:
    No sooner got, than with disdain
    He threw them on the ground again;
    And hasted forward to pursue
    Fresh objects, fairer to his view,
    In hope to spring some nobler game;
    But all he took was just the same:
    Too scornful now to stop his pace,
    He spurn'd them in his rival's face.
        Possession kept the beaten road,
    And gather'd all his brother strew'd;
    But overcharged, and out of wind,
    Though strong in limbs, he lagg'd behind.
        Desire had now the goal in sight;
    It was a tower of monstrous height;
    Where on the summit Fortune stands,
    A crown and sceptre in her hands;
    Beneath, a chasm as deep as Hell,
    Where many a bold adventurer fell.
    Desire, in rapture, gazed awhile,
    And saw the treacherous goddess smile;
    But as he climb'd to grasp the crown,
    She knock'd him with the sceptre down!
    He tumbled in the gulf profound;
    There doom'd to whirl an endless round.
        Possession's load was grown so great,
    He sunk beneath the cumbrous weight;
    And, as he now expiring lay,
    Flocks every ominous bird of prey;
    The raven, vulture, owl, and kite,
    At once upon his carcass light,
    And strip his hide, and pick his bones,
    Regardless of his dying groans.



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