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The Mosquito Knows

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D. H. Lawrence
1885 –
1930

The mosquito knows full well, small as he is
he’s a beast of prey.
But after all
he only takes his bellyful,
he doesn’t put my blood in the bank.

This poem is in the public domain. Published in Poem-a-Day on July 5, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.

D. H. Lawrence

David Herbert Lawrence, novelist, short-story writer, poet, and essayist, was born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, England, on September 11, 1885. Though better known as a novelist, Lawrence's first-published works (in 1909) were poems, and his poetry, especially his evocations of the natural world, have since had a significant influence on many poets on both sides of the Atlantic.

About D. H. Lawrence
Themes
Animals
Audio
Money
Public Domain
Social Justice
Theft
About this Poem

“The Mosquito Knows” was published in D. H. Lawrence’s Pansies: Poems (Alfred A. Knopf, 1929), the penultimate collection to be released before his death. About the poem, Thomas Allen Smailes, a scholar of D. H. Lawrence, writes in his book Some Comments on the Verse of D. H. Lawrence (University of Port Elizabeth, 1970), “There is chagrin in ‘The Mosquito Knows.’ The lines gain strength from their quiet reasonableness. The ‘bellyful’ makes human greed disgusting by contrast. Lawrence sees only one way of bringing this human parasitism to an end.”

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More by this poet

Self-Pity

I never saw a wild thing
sorry for itself.
A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough
without ever having felt sorry for itself.

D. H. Lawrence
1929

Whales Weep Not!

They say the sea is cold, but the sea contains
the hottest blood of all, and the wildest, the most urgent.

All the whales in the wider deeps, hot are they, as they urge
on and on, and dive beneath the icebergs.
The right whales, the sperm-whales, the hammer-heads, the killers
there they blow, there they blow, hot wild white breath out of
   the sea!

And they rock, and they rock, through the sensual ageless ages
on the depths of the seven seas, 
and through the salt they reel with drunk delight
and in the tropics tremble they with love
and roll with massive, strong desire, like gods.
T
D. H. Lawrence
1964

The Elephant is Slow to Mate

The elephant, the huge old beast,
     is slow to mate;
he finds a female, they show no haste
     they wait

for the sympathy in their vast shy hearts
     slowly, slowly to rouse
as they loiter along the river-beds
     and drink and browse

and dash in panic through the brake
     of forest with the herd,
and sleep in massive silence, and wake
     together, without a word.

So slowly the great hot elephant hearts
     grow full of desire,
and the great beasts mate in secret at last,
     hiding their fire.

Oldest they are and the wisest of beasts
     so they know at last
how to wa
D. H. Lawrence
1964
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The Wolf

Like a grey shadow lurking in the light,
He ventures forth along the edge of night ;
With silent foot he scouts the coulie’s rim
And scents the carrion awaiting him.
His savage eyeballs lurid with a flare
Seen but in unfed beasts which leave their lair
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Emily Pauline Johnson
1917

On Buying and Selling

And a merchant said, Speak to us of Buying and Selling.
     And he answered and said:
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     It is in exchanging the gifts of the earth that you shall find abundance and be satisfied.
     Yet unless the exchange be in love and kindly justice, it will but lead some to greed and others to hunger.

     When in the market place you toilers of the sea and fields and vineyards meet the weavers and the potters and the gatherers of spices,—
     Invoke then the master spirit of the earth, to c
Kahlil Gibran
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The Vampyre

"Why looks my lord so deadly pale?
   Why fades the crimson from his cheek?
What can my dearest husband ail?
   Thy heartfelt cares, O Herman, speak!

"Why, at the silent hour of rest,
   Dost thou in sleep so sadly mourn?
Has tho' with heaviest grief oppress'd,
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"Why heaves thy breast? — why throbs thy heart?
   O speak!
John Stagg
1810

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