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[XIX. Oft when thy duties bound thee down]
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40

[XIX. Oft when thy duties bound thee down]

Oft when thy duties bound thee down
To wearying labor, I, more free,
Fled from the stagnant heat of town,
And sought to lure thee after me.
In vain I tried the oriole's call,
In vain the robin's tender note,
In vain the woodland songsters all
Made music in my swelling throat.
In vain I shook the morning spray
From blossom-boughs, or round thee blew
The odor of the new-mown hay
From hill-sides steaming with the dew.
Or painted nature's sterner moods,—
The flashing cloud, the driving rain,
When through the slant and groaning woods
Roars the terrific hurricane.

41

Or to the mountains bare and bleak,
Through gulfs, through crags, o'er ledges clomb,
And showed how from the cloven peak
The streams plunge out in clouds of foam.
Or lightly touched on pastoral joys,—
The woolly flock, the grazing kine;
What simple things are Damon's toys,
How Chloe's milky buckets shine!
Or with the ocean's moaning cry,
Bewailed thy absence from afar;
Or mounting to the darkening sky,
Gazed at thee from the evening star.
In vain I pled with all my art;
I had no power to move thee then;
Thy joys were in the human heart,
Amidst the press and throng of men.
I pointed to the o'erworked dust
That swells the church-yard mounds: you said,
“'Twere better to wear out than rust:
There is rest enough amongst the dead.”

42

Poor soul, I mourn thy labor lost;
Thy self-denying purpose gained,
But gained at a prodigious cost,—
Thy work denied, thy memory stained.
I may misjudge. Thy life to thee,
Perhaps, was filled with joyous hours,
And seemed as fair an empery
As that o'er which the poet towers.
'Tis for omniscient God alone
To know who grovels, who ascends:
We work His purpose, one by one,
In divers ways, to divers ends.