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[III. Let him who dares usurp God's right]
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12

[III. Let him who dares usurp God's right]

Let him who dares usurp God's right
To sit in judgment on the dead,
Be sure no trace of sinful blight
Corrupts his heart or wrongs his head.
Let him be sure that all is fair
Within his round of sin-born clay;
That penance long and fast and prayer
Have purged his grosser parts away.
He should be guilt and passion free
To whom this awful cause is given,
And like Elijah stand, when he
Stepped in the flesh from earth to heaven.
With humble soul, and reverence deep,
He should approach the holy gloom;
And lowly kneel, and lowly weep:
Not, like a vandal, burst the tomb.

13

And when the coffin-lid is raised,
Where lies the dumb, defenceless man,
Let him remember those who praised,
And count his virtues if he can.
We judge the act and consequence,
We blindly hit the truth perchance;
But God looks through this film of sense;
He weighs the heart and circumstance.
What in our eyes is glaring crime,
In God's may be a thing to bless;
Our eyes see ill through space and time;
We cannot know, we can but guess.
Let him who judges have a fear
Lest hearts be wrung and eyes made dim,
And tremble lest an orphan's tear
May curse his sacrilege and him.
And when the final verdict 's made,
Stretch not the law to meet the case;
Stern Justice lays aside her blade
When gazing in a dead man's face.

14

Keeping this solemn charge at heart,
Draw near the grave, and lay it bare;
Assume your self-appointed part;—
Now judge the dead man, if you dare!