| XXI. |
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| THE FIRST LESSON. |
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| Not in this world to see his face |
| Sounds long, until I read the place |
| Where this is said to be |
| But just the primer to a life |
| Unopened, rare, upon the shelf, |
| Clasped yet to him and me. |
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| And yet, my primer suits me so |
| I would not choose a book to know |
| Than that, be sweeter wise; |
| Might some one else so learned be, |
| And leave me just my A B C, |
| Himself could have the skies. |
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| XXII. |
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| The bustle in a house |
| The morning after death |
| Is solemnest of industries |
| Enacted upon earth, -- |
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| The sweeping up the heart, |
| And putting love away |
| We shall not want to use again |
| Until eternity. |
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| XXIII. |
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| I reason, earth is short, |
| And anguish absolute, |
| And many hurt; |
| But what of that? |
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| I reason, we could die: |
| The best vitality |
| Cannot excel decay; |
| But what of that? |
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| I reason that in heaven |
| Somehow, it will be even, |
| Some new equation given; |
| But what of that? |
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| XXIV. |
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| Afraid? Of whom am I afraid? |
| Not death; for who is he? |
| The porter of my father's lodge |
| As much abasheth me. |
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| Of life? 'T were odd I fear a thing |
| That comprehendeth me |
| In one or more existences |
| At Deity's decree. |
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| Of resurrection? Is the east |
| Afraid to trust the morn |
| With her fastidious forehead? |
| As soon impeach my crown! |
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| XXV. |
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| DYING. |
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| The sun kept setting, setting still; |
| No hue of afternoon |
| Upon the village I perceived, -- |
| From house to house 't was noon. |
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| The dusk kept dropping, dropping still; |
| No dew upon the grass, |
| But only on my forehead stopped, |
| And wandered in my face. |
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| My feet kept drowsing, drowsing still, |
| My fingers were awake; |
| Yet why so little sound myself |
| Unto my seeming make? |
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| How well I knew the light before! |
| I could not see it now. |
| 'T is dying, I am doing; but |
| I'm not afraid to know. |
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| XXVI. |
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| Two swimmers wrestled on the spar |
| Until the morning sun, |
| When one turned smiling to the land. |
| O God, the other one! |
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| The stray ships passing spied a face |
| Upon the waters borne, |
| With eyes in death still begging raised, |
| And hands beseeching thrown. |
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| XXVII. |
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| THE CHARIOT. |
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| Because I could not stop for Death, |
| He kindly stopped for me; |
| The carriage held but just ourselves |
| And Immortality. |
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| We slowly drove, he knew no haste, |
| And I had put away |
| My labor, and my leisure too, |
| For his civility. |
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| We passed the school where children played, |
| Their lessons scarcely done; |
| We passed the fields of gazing grain, |
| We passed the setting sun. |
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| We paused before a house that seemed |
| A swelling of the ground; |
| The roof was scarcely visible, |
| The cornice but a mound. |
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| Since then 't is centuries; but each |
| Feels shorter than the day |
| I first surmised the horses' heads |
| Were toward eternity. |
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| XXVIII. |
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| She went as quiet as the dew |
| From a familiar flower. |
| Not like the dew did she return |
| At the accustomed hour! |
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| She dropt as softly as a star |
| From out my summer's eve; |
| Less skilful than Leverrier |
| It's sorer to believe! |
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| XXIX. |
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| RESURGAM. |
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| At last to be identified! |
| At last, the lamps upon thy side, |
| The rest of life to see! |
| Past midnight, past the morning star! |
| Past sunrise! Ah! what leagues there are |
| Between our feet and day! |
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| XXX. |
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| Except to heaven, she is nought; |
| Except for angels, lone; |
| Except to some wide-wandering bee, |
| A flower superfluous blown; |
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| Except for winds, provincial; |
| Except by butterflies, |
| Unnoticed as a single dew |
| That on the acre lies. |
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| The smallest housewife in the grass, |
| Yet take her from the lawn, |
| And somebody has lost the face |
| That made existence home! |
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| XXXI. |
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| Death is a dialogue between |
| The spirit and the dust. |
| "Dissolve," says Death. The Spirit, "Sir, |
| I have another trust." |
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| Death doubts it, argues from the ground. |
| The Spirit turns away, |
| Just laying off, for evidence, |
| An overcoat of clay. |
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| XXXII. |
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| It was too late for man, |
| But early yet for God; |
| Creation impotent to help, |
| But prayer remained our side. |
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| How excellent the heaven, |
| When earth cannot be had; |
| How hospitable, then, the face |
| Of our old neighbor, God! |
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| XXXIII. |
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| ALONG THE POTOMAC. |
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| When I was small, a woman died. |
| To-day her only boy |
| Went up from the Potomac, |
| His face all victory, |
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| To look at her; how slowly |
| The seasons must have turned |
| Till bullets clipt an angle, |
| And he passed quickly round! |
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| If pride shall be in Paradise |
| I never can decide; |
| Of their imperial conduct, |
| No person testified. |
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| But proud in apparition, |
| That woman and her boy |
| Pass back and forth before my brain, |
| As ever in the sky. |
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| XXXIV. |
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| The daisy follows soft the sun, |
| And when his golden walk is done, |
| Sits shyly at his feet. |
| He, waking, finds the flower near. |
| "Wherefore, marauder, art thou here?" |
| "Because, sir, love is sweet!" |
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| We are the flower, Thou the sun! |
| Forgive us, if as days decline, |
| We nearer steal to Thee, -- |
| Enamoured of the parting west, |
| The peace, the flight, the amethyst, |
| Night's possibility! |
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| XXXV. |
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| EMANCIPATION. |
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| No rack can torture me, |
| My soul's at liberty |
| Behind this mortal bone |
| There knits a bolder one |
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| You cannot prick with saw, |
| Nor rend with scymitar. |
| Two bodies therefore be; |
| Bind one, and one will flee. |
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| The eagle of his nest |
| No easier divest |
| And gain the sky, |
| Than mayest thou, |
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| Except thyself may be |
| Thine enemy; |
| Captivity is consciousness, |
| So's liberty. |
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| XXXVI. |
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| LOST. |
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| I lost a world the other day. |
| Has anybody found? |
| You'll know it by the row of stars |
| Around its forehead bound. |
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| A rich man might not notice it; |
| Yet to my frugal eye |
| Of more esteem than ducats. |
| Oh, find it, sir, for me! |
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| XXXVII. |
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| If I shouldn't be alive |
| When the robins come, |
| Give the one in red cravat |
| A memorial crumb. |
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| If I couldn't thank you, |
| Being just asleep, |
| You will know I'm trying |
| With my granite lip! |
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| XXXVIII. |
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| Sleep is supposed to be, |
| By souls of sanity, |
| The shutting of the eye. |
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| Sleep is the station grand |
| Down which on either hand |
| The hosts o f witness stand! |
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| Morn is supposed to be, |
| By people of degree, |
| The breaking of the day. |
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| Morning has not occurred! |
| That shall aurora be |
| East of eternity; |
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| One wit h the banner gay, |
| One in the red array, -- |
| That is the break of day. |
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| XXXIX. |
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| I shall know why, when time is over, |
| And I have ceased to wonder why; |
| Christ will explain each separate anguish |
| In the fair schoolroom of the sky. |
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| He will tell me what Peter promised, |
| And I, for wonder at his woe, |
| I shall forget the drop of anguish |
| That scalds me now, that scalds me now. |
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| XL. |
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| I never lost as much but twice, |
| And that was in the sod; |
| Twice have I stood a beggar |
| Before the door of God! |
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| Angels, twice descending, |
| Reimbursed my store. |
| Burglar, banker, father, |
| I am poor once more! |
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| I. |
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| I'm nobody! Who are you? |
| Are you nobody, too? |
| Then there 's a pair of us -- don't tell! |
| They 'd banish us, you know. |
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| How dreary to be somebody! |
| How public, like a frog |
| To tell your name the livelong day |
| To an admiring bog! |
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| II. |
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| I bring an unaccustomed wine |
| To lips long parching, next to mine, |
| And summon them to drink. |
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| Crackling with fever, they essay; |
| I turn my brimming eyes away, |
| And come next hour to look. |
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| The hands still hug the tardy glass; |
| The lips I would have cooled, alas! |
| Are so superfluous cold, |
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| I would as soon attempt to warm |
| The bosoms where the frost has lain |
| Ages beneath the mould. |
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| Some other thirsty there may be |
| To whom this would have pointed me |
| Had it remained to speak. |
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| And so I always bear the cup |
| If, haply, mine may be the drop |
| Some pilgrim thirst to slake, -- |
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| If, haply, any say to me, |
| "Unto the little, unto me," |
| When I at last awake. |
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| III. |
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| The nearest dream recedes, unrealized. |
| The heaven we chase |
| Like the June bee |
| Before the school-boy |
| Invites the race; |
| Stoops to an easy clover -- |
| Dips -- evades -- teases -- deploys; |
| Then to the royal clouds |
| Lifts his light pinnace |
| Heedless of the boy |
| Staring, bewildered, at the mocking sky. |
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| Homesick for steadfast honey, |
| Ah! the bee flies not |
| That brews that rare variety. |
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| IV. |
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| We play at paste, |
| Till qualified for pearl, |
| Then drop the paste, |
| And deem ourself a fool. |
| The shapes, though, were similar, |
| And our new hands |
| Learned gem-tactics |
| Practising sands. |
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| V. |
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| I found the phrase to every thought |
| I ever had, but one; |
| And that defies me, -- as a hand |
| Did try to chalk the sun |
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| To races nurtured in the dark; -- |
| How would your own begin? |
| Can blaze be done in cochineal, |
| Or noon in mazarin? |
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| VI. |
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| HOPE. |
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| Hope is the thing with feathers |
| That perches in the soul, |
| And sings the tune without the words, |
| And never stops at all, |
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| And sweetest in the gale is heard; |
| And sore must be the storm |
| That could abash the little bird |
| That kept so many warm. |
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| I 've heard it in the chillest land, |
| And on the strangest sea; |
| Yet, never, in extremity, |
| It asked a crumb of me. |
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| VII. |
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| THE WHITE HEAT. |
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| Dare you see a soul at the white heat? |
| Then crouch within the door. |
| Red is the fire's common tint; |
| But when the vivid ore |
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| Has sated flame's conditions, |
| Its quivering substance plays |
| Without a color but the light |
| Of unanointed blaze. |
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| Least village boasts its blacksmith, |
| Whose anvil's even din |
| Stands symbol for the finer forge |
| That soundless tugs within, |
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| Refining these impatient ores |
| With hammer and with blaze, |
| Until the designated light |
| Repudiate the forge. |
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| VIII. |
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| TRIUMPHANT. |
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| Who never lost, are unprepared |
| A coronet to find; |
| Who never thirsted, flagons |
| And cooling tamarind. |
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| Who never climbed the weary league -- |
| Can such a foot explore |
| The purple territories |
| On Pizarro's shore? |
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| How many legions overcome? |
| The emperor will say. |
| How many colors taken |
| On Revolution Day? |
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| How many bullets bearest? |
| The royal scar hast thou? |
| Angels, write "Promoted" |
| On this soldier's brow! |
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| IX. |
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| THE TEST. |
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| I can wade grief, |
| Whole pools of it, -- |
| I 'm used to that. |
| But the least push of joy |
| Breaks up my feet, |
| And I tip -- drunken. |
| Let no pebble smile, |
| 'T was the new liquor, -- |
| That was all! |
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| Power is only pain, |
| Stranded, through discipline, |
| Till weights will hang. |
| Give balm to giants, |
| And they 'll wilt, like men. |
| Give Himmaleh, -- |
| They 'll carry him! |
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| X. |
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| ESCAPE. |
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| I never hear the word "escape" |
| Without a quicker blood, |
| A sudden expectation, |
| A flying attitude. |
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| I never hear of prisons broad |
| By soldiers battered down, |
| But I tug childish at my bars, -- |
| Only to fail again! |