The Giant Cactus of Arizona
The cactus in the desert stands 
 Like time’s inviolate sentinel, 
Watching the sun-washed waste of sands
 Lest they their ancient secrets tell. 
And the lost lore of mournful lands
 It knows alone and guards too well.
Wiser than Sphynx or pyramid, 
 It points a stark hand at the sky, 
And all the stars alight or hid 
 It counts as they go rolling by;
And mysteries the gods forbid
 Darken its heavy memory.
I asked how old the world was—yea,
 And why yon ruddy mountain grew
Out of hell’s fire. By night nor day 
 It answered not, though all it knew, 
But lifted, as it stopped my way, 
 Its wrinkled fingers toward the blue
Inscrutable and stern and still 
 It waits the everlasting doom. 
Races and years may do their will—
 Lo, it will rise above their tomb, 
Till the drugged earth has drunk her fill
 Of light, and falls asleep in gloom.
Harriet Monroe
 
                             
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