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[XLVIII. Before the scornful face of death]
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106

[XLVIII. Before the scornful face of death]

Before the scornful face of death,
How small and purposeless appear
The works that cost us panting breath,
And caught the world's applauding cheer!
The man I loved toiled out his day,
His plans he laid, his aims he won;
He saw, before he passed away,
His fruitage rounding in the sun.
What though his enemies despise
The ended story of his cares?
I doubt not his seraphic eyes
Now scorn the labor more than theirs.
To the freed intellect, whose stand
And outlook is eternity,
These twinkling worlds are grains of sand
That tumble in an airy sea:

107

The finite senses' highest flight,
Mere aspiration after good,—
A blind man reaching for the light
He feels, but never understood.
And he, perchance, stands side by side,
And smiles upon the deeds he did,
With him who, in a kindred pride,
Built the sky-cleaving pyramid.
For what are earthly ills and joys,
Before the soul's eternal gaze,
If not remembered as the toys
She played with in her childish days?
What aim of man is high or low,
What perishes, or what survives,
In the great shock and overflow
That levels all our temporal lives?
We worms spin less or greater cells,
We fashion webs in which to die;
What are the reptile's empty shells
Unto the air-borne butterfly?

108

A purpose runs throughout the plan;
I doubt it not; though I but see,
In what we call the life of man,
The gambols of his infancy;
A childish effort to achieve,
A mocking play with straw and sand,
Which all the frightened children leave,
Forgot in sleep, at death's command.
For if we dwell in peace or strife,
Or found a throne, or sing a lay,
Is little in the coming life,
So we but worship and obey.