Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Village Miser by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Village Miser

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    The dogs made way for him and snarled and ran;
    And little children to their parents clung,
    Big-eyed with fear, when, gruff of look and tongue,
    Bent-backed he passed who had the village ban.
    In old drab coat and trousers, shoes of tan,
    And scarecrow hat, from some odd fashion sprung,
    A threadbare cloak about his shoulders flung,
    Grasping a crooked stick, limped by this man.
    Unspeaking and unspoken to, but oft
    Cursed after for a miser as he passed,
    Or barked at by the dogs who feared his cane.
    One day they found him dead; killed in his loft.
    Among his books, the hoard which he had massed.
    And then they laughed and swore he was insane.



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