|  There lowly in the vigorous summer | 
       | His form began its senseless change, | 
       | And made my senses waver dim | 
       | Seeing nature ferocious in him. | 
       | Inspecting close his maggots' might | 
       | And seething cauldron of his being, | 
       | Half with loathing, half with a strange love, | 
       | I poked him with an angry stick. | 
       | The fever arose, became a flame | 
       | And Vigour circumscribed the skies, | 
       | Immense energy in the sun, | 
       | And through my frame a sunless trembling. | 
       | My stick had done nor good nor harm. | 
       | Then stood I silent in the day | 
       | Watching the object, as before; | 
       | And kept my reverence for knowledge | 
       | Trying for control, to be still, | 
       | To quell the passion of the blood; | 
       | Until I had bent down on my knees | 
       | Praying for joy in the sight of decay. | 
       | And so I left;  and I returned | 
       | In Autumn strict of eye, to see | 
       | The sap gone out of the groundhog, | 
       | But the bony sodden hulk remained. | 
       | But the year had lost its meaning, | 
       | And in intellectual chains | 
       | I lost both love and loathing, | 
       | Mured up in the wall of wisdom. | 
       | Another summer took the fields again | 
       | Massive and burning, full of life, | 
       | But when I chanced upon the spot | 
       | There was only a little hair left, | 
       | And bones bleaching in the sunlight | 
       | Beautiful as architecture; | 
       | I watched them like a geometer, | 
       | And cut a walking stick from a brich. | 
       | It has been three years, now. | 
       | There is no sign of the groundhog. | 
       | I stood there in the whirling summer, | 
       | My hand capped a withered heart, | 
       | And thought of China and of Greece, | 
       | Of Alexander in his tent; | 
       | Of Montaigne in his tower, | 
       | Of Saint Theresa in her wild lament. |