The solitary huntsman
No coat of pink doth wear,
But midnight black from cap to spur
Upon his midnight mare.
He drones a tuneless jingle
In lieu of tally-ho:
“I’ll catch a fox
And put him in a box
And never let him go.”
The solitary huntsman,
He follows silent hounds.
No horn proclaims his joyless sport,
And never a hoofbeat sounds.
His hundred hounds, his thousands,
Their master’s will they know:
To catch a fox
And put him in a box
And never let him go.
For all the fox’s doubling
They track him to his den.
The chase may fill a morning,
Or threescore years and ten.
The huntsman never sated
Screaks to his saddlebow,
“I’ll catch another fox
And put him in a box
And never let him go.”
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Comments2Wow, gave me chills. Amazing how hunting could sound so ominous and dark.
Just finished reading this Ogden Nash poem agan, hadn't read it since I was a kid. It's a bit darker than I remember, but I'm kinda not seein' the big appeal. Feels a bit repetitive, ya know? Anyone else know if there's supposed to be deeper meanin to it or s'it just about a hunter and a fox? Maybe I'm missin' somethin.