The Swarm Poem by John F. McCullagh

The Swarm



The fields were green; the sky clear blue, the land was fat and fair.
Prosperity was all we knew, and poverty was rare.
I looked with pride upon my fields, the ripening waves of grain,
unaware, that in scant days, so little would remain.

A desert locust, by itself, is not a fearsome thing.
A swarm of eighty million is pure terror taking wing.
The swarm came out of Africa and descended on my fields.
The sky was black with insects, the devastation was surreal.

The fields are black; the sky sad grey, the locusts' feast complete.
Like teenagers with the munchies, these little beasts can eat.
The crops that we had counted on now simply aren't there.
These now are hungry desperate times and happiness is rare.

Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: natural disasters
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
In 1954 a swarm of 80 million locusts traveled from West Africa and descended upon England. The grasshopper like creatures can eat their weight in crops each day and caused widespread misery for their hosts.
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