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[XLVII. Standing upon this grave, I view]
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104

[XLVII. Standing upon this grave, I view]

Standing upon this grave, I view
The world with my anointed eyes.
They pass along, a motley crew,
The people, with their works and cries.
Through many a mazy path they run,—
They join, they cross, they part, they meet;
But all their ways converge to one,
That ends beneath my very feet.
The weariest struggler here shall rest,
The fiercest cry here gasp for breath;
The bondman with his lord may jest
In this old commonwealth of death.
So high my dizzy stand is fixed,
I cannot judge men's deeds aright;
They seem in vain confusion mixed,
Mere motion, indistinct to sight.

105

For if yon emmet hoards or spends,
Or this one means to buy or sell,
Or what that other's act intends,
Is more than I can truly tell.
Or if that be a sad parade
Of mourners following the dead,
Or warriors, armed with spear and blade.—
Yon pygmies winding down a thread.
But this I know: a million strands,
Converging to this central place,
Some spider wove, and all the bands
Climb here, with pallor in the face.
Each by his separate thread ascends,
As partial fortune may allot;
But each, with empty hands, here ends,
And in his season is forgot.