On all that humble happiness, The world has since foregone, The daylight of contentedness That on those faces shone! With rights, though not too closely scanned, Enjoyed, as far as known, - With pulse of even tone, - Expected nothing more, Had proffered them before. To them was life a simple art Of duties to be done, A race where all must run; They little cared to know, Each with his fronting foe. Man now his Virtue's diadem Puts on, and proudly wears,- Like instincts, unawares: With tasks of every day, As noble boys at play. And what if Nature's fearful wound They did not probe and bare, To watch the misery there, - Their charities more free, Into the evil sea. A man's best things are nearest him, Lie close about his feet; That we are sick to greet; We struggle and aspire.- The air of fresh Desire. Yet, Brothers, who up Reason's hill Advance with hopeful cheer,- As chill as they are clear; The loftier that ye go, Richard Monckton Milnes (1809–1885] DON QUIXOTE BEHIND thy pasteboard, on thy battered hack, Austin Dobson (1840 A PRAYER LORD, not for light in darkness do we pray, Be otherwise. Not for a clearer vision of the things Of time and fate. Not for a fuller knowledge of the end Shall be repaid. Not these, O Lord. We would not break the bars Thy wisdom sets about us; we shall climb Unfettered to the secrets of the stars In thy good time. We do not crave the high perception swift The good from ill. Not these, O Lord. For these thou hast revealed. The hour to sleep. Not these. We know the hemlock from the rose, The pure from stained, the noble from the base, The tranquil holy light of truth that glows On Pity's face. We know the paths wherein our feet should press, With more than these. Grant us the will to fashion as we feel, To strike the blow. Knowledge we ask not-knowledge thou hast lent; John Drinkwater (18 BATTLE CRY MORE than half beaten, but fearless, Facing the storm and the night; Here in the lull of the fight, God of the fighting Clan, Give me the heart of a Man! What though I live with the winners, Or perish with those who fall? Fighting the fight is all. Snapped is my blade, O Lord! O spare me this stub of a sword! Give me no pity, nor spare me; Calm not the wrath of my Foe. Bleeding, half-beaten-I go. Not for the fear of the night O spare me the heart to fight! Red is the mist about me; Deep is the wound in my side; O terrible Foe, thou hast lied! God of the fighting Clan, John G. Neihardt (1881 RABIA RABIA, sick upon her bed, Malik, from a deeper sense “He who loves his Master's choice And replied, “O men of grace! Will not, in his prayer, recall That he is chastised at all.” From the Arabic, by James Freeman Clarke (1810-1888] THE JOYFUL WISDOM From "The Angel in the House" And wake the foolish from his dream, And must not only be, but seem. |