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[I. 'Tis not my purpose to explain]
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7

[I. 'Tis not my purpose to explain]

'Tis not my purpose to explain
The truths here dimly set in view;
These hieroglyphics of the brain
Are meant for others to undo.
I hang my painted pictures high,
I paint them ill, or paint them well;
If they say nothing to the eye,
Then I have nothing more to tell.
Thus much, howe'er, to all be known:
The man, of men most loved by me,
Raised up a ruin till it shone
Before men's eyes a prodigy.
And all men praised the wondrous spot,
And marvelled daily more and more;
The only fault was he forgot
To drive the vermin from the door.

8

The knaves who found safe shelter there,
Who owed him more than they could pay,
Were eaten up with envious care
Because their chief was more than they.
But, cowards shrewd, they hid their thought,
And fetched and carried at his nod,
Until his soul was upward caught
By the dread, sudden hand of God.
In life they played their cunning parts,
They lauded everything he did;
In death they—bold, heroic hearts—
Stabbed at him through the coffin-lid!
They searched his mansion through and through,
With wolfish hate in every glance;
Of all they saw they nothing knew,
And charged him with their ignorance.
Here was some work left incomplete,
There something showed the touch of time;
They could not fill his empty seat,—
They made his very death a crime.

9

Then slander followed, hints of guilt,
The murmur grew a general roar;
And, in the very house he built,
They drove his children from the door.
Now partly in my scorn of wrong,
But chiefly for the wronged one's love,
I lift my voice, and through my song
I hear an answer from above.
If you who judge, charge any leaf
With thoughts too wild or words too plain,
Then say, the man is mad with grief;
These villains struck through heart and brain.