Friendship

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I VIEWED him well, the visible fat fool,
  And yet I took him in; for I contended,
  Friends are not sent in order of our choosing,
  They come unsuited like the gifts of God.
  I would not do a perfidy to friendship,
  I let him past the private inner gate
  And made him be at home among my treasures
  Like my true friend.


  Now I am ground with a grim torture daily
  That I have been befriended by a fool.
  He forages at will upon my garden,
  He noses all its pretty secrets out,
  And still the fool finds nothing to his liking.
  Meeting a modest velveteen affair,
  Peevish he hangs his sad and silly head:
  "Alas! such unsubstantial gaudy goods!"
  Thus he meets pansies; meeting zinnias,
  He nearly faints at such a rioting:
  "Alas! what fruit will these red wantons bear?"


  And not a perfume spills upon the air
  But his malicious nose suspects a poison,
  As he goes browsing like an ancient ass,
  An old distempered ass.


  I'd almost rather be a friendless man
  And have my house my own. The prying fool
  Asks me the queerest idiotic questions:
  "O friend, is this the harvest of your hands?
  How will you stand before the lord of harvests?
  These are the gardens of your idleness;
  Where is the vineyard, friend?"

© John Crowe Ransom