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[CII. We poets hang upon the wheel]
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203

[CII. We poets hang upon the wheel]

We poets hang upon the wheel
Of Time's advancement; do our most
To hide his inroads, and reveal
The splendors which the world has lost.
Ruins with ivy-leaves we twine,
We flower the path of crippled Use,
And, sometimes, hold as half divine
What others count as old abuse.
We see regality in kings,
And something like a sacred power
In sceptred hands and jewelled rings:
We will not trust the present hour.
So Science and her sneering tribe
A cry of fierce derision raise;
And ever have a taunt or gibe
To fling against our harmless ways.

204

We but lament. We cannot lay
A feather to impede their force;
Creation is become their prey;
They claw and rend her soulless corse.
We but lament. We miss God's hand
Upon our radiant mother's brow.
Tearful, and full of fear, we stand;
Tearful, and full of fear, we bow.
Science and Avarice, arm in arm,
Stride proudly through our abject time;
And in their footsteps, wrangling, swarm
Their own begotten broods of crime.
We cannot flatter. Since our seed
First flowered within the Chian isle,
No poet's song was raised to feed
The famished passions of the vile.
Hopeless but endless war we urge
Wherever guilt uplifts its face:—
Witness, in my right hand, this scourge,
Red with the blood-drops of the base!