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Poetry

Lem Ward was handing out copies of a poem by a friend [unnamed]
who had watched a pair of Canada geese die in mutual embrace.
Remorse
A hunter shot at a flock of geese That flew within his reach.
Two were stopped in their rapid flight And fell on the sandy beach.
The male bird lay at the water's edge And just before he died
He faintly called to his wounded mate And she dragged herself to his side.
She bent her head and crooned to him In a way distressed and wild
Caressing her one and only mate As a Mother would a child.
Then covering him with her broken wing And gasping with failing breath
She laid her head against his breast, A feeble honk ... then death.
This story is true, though crudely told. I was the man in the case.
I stood knee deep in the drizzle and cold And the hot tears burned my face.
I buried the birds in the sand where they lay, Wrapped in my hunting coat,
And I threw my gun and belt in the Bay When I crossed in the open boat.
Hunters will call me a right poor sport And scoff at the thing I did;
But that day something broke in my heart, And shoot again? God forbid!
�Editor's note: When a
goose gets sick, or is wounded by gunshot and falls out, two geese fall
out of formation and follow him down to help and protect him. They stay
with him until he is either able to fly or until he is dead. Sometimes
they die, too.
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