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[LXXV. A service done to me is naught]
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155

[LXXV. A service done to me is naught]

A service done to me is naught;
The gauds and trinkets of this world
I hold as more than dearly bought
When my contemptuous lip has curled.
The purest fame that man achieves
He wins himself, against our bent;
The grudgéd homage he receives
Is but hard-wrung acknowledgment.
The name that stands through envious time,
Stands unsupported by the race—
In man's despite—a power sublime
That holds in awe the abject base.
What were our Shakespeare's deathless fame,
Dependent on man's jealous praise?
He moves before us, with God's claim
To kinghood flashing from his bays.

156

True greatness reigns by right divine,
Within itself it keeps its state;
With all the votive wreaths we twine,
Ourselves we do but elevate.
Praise is cold service. More than fame
I prize the gift of human love;
And humbly tearful, at its name,
Towards my race I trembling move.
O fount of joy! O well of tears!
I throw myself upon thy brink,—
I, thirsty, famished, weak with fears,
Reel to thy singing waves, and drink!