Andrew Jackson Downing

1815-1852 / Newburgh, New York

Song of the Sand Storm

I am the pitiless Sand Storm,
The whelp of a tameless breed-
My dam the desert, my sire the air;
I stealthily come from my shadowy lair,
And away, and away I speed!

I lie in the sun on the mesa
Outstretching my yellow length;
I drowse and I purr in a tigerish way,
Then suddenly leap on my terrified prey
With more than a tiger's strength!

I scar the cliffs in my fury,
Effacing their ancient runes;
I polish the skeleton bones that lie
Unnoted, unburied- and scurrying by,
Heap higher the gray sand dunes.

The arrogant sentinel mountains
Make challenge- yet little I reck;
And vainly the obdurate cactus sets
In my pathway a million bayonets-
It never my course can check.

The pace of the caravan quickens
At the thought of my wild caprice;
And the thunder rouses and beats his drums
To tell the world that the Sand Storm comes-
And the songs and the laughter cease!
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