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He—for all He worked so fast

        To finish air, and wave, and shore,

        Knew that this work of His would last

        For ever and for evermore.

        On Saturday night He was content,

        He knew that Monday would not bring

        Need for another firmament,

        Another set of everything.

        But though my work is easier far

        Than making sky and sea and sun,

        It's harder than God's labours are,

        Because my work is never done.

        I sweep and churn, save and contrive,

        I bake and brew, I don't complain,

        But every Monday morning I've

        Last Monday's work to do again.

        I'm good at work—I work away;

        Always the same my work must go;

        The flowers grow different every day,

        That's why I like to see them grow.

        If, up in Heaven, God understood

        He'd let me for my Paradise

        Make all things new and very good

        And never make the same thing twice!

THE JILTED LOVER TO HIS MOTHER

        You needn't pray for me, old lady, I don't want no one's prayer,

        I'm fit and jolly as ever I was—you needn't think I care.

        When I go whistling down the road, when the warm night is falling,

        She needn't think I'm whistling her, it's another girl I'm calling.

        If I pass her house a dozen times, or fifty times a day,

        She needn't think I think of her, my work lies out that way.

        If they should tell her I've grown thin (for that is what they've told me)

        This cursed weather counts for that, and not the girl who sold me.

        And if they say I'm off my feed I still can tip a can;

        If I get drunk what's that to her? I am not her young man.

        I know I've had a lucky let-off—she ain't no class, she ain't,

        For all she looked like a bush o' roses and talked like a story book saint.

        I never give a thought to her. Don't worry your old head,

        I've quite forgot her pretty ways and the cruel things she said,

        There's lots of other gals to be had as any chap can see,

        So you cheer up, you've got no call to go and pray for me.

        But all the same, if you want to pray, you'd best pray God take care of them,

        For if I catch them two together, by hell! I'll swing for the pair of them.

THE WILL TO LIVE

        SINCE Faith is a veil that has nothing behind it,

        And Hope wanders lost where no mortal can find it,

        Since Love is a mirror we break in a minute

        In snatching the image our soul has cast in it,

        What is the use of the Summers and Springs,

        The wave of the woods and the waft of the wings—

        Since all means nothing, and good things and ill

        Make madness,—a mirage tormenting us still?

        Since all the fighting, the ardent endeavour,

        The heart cast bleeding to feed the Ideal,

        Are vain, vain, vain, and the one thing real

        Is that all's vain, for ever and ever;

        Why then, be a man and stand back from the strife,

        Fall by the sword, but keep out of the snare;

        Will but to be—and be willing to bear

        All that the gods may lay on your of life!

        In the far East, where light ever dawns first,

        There has man learned how the Fates may be cheated,

        How by our craft may their strength be defeated,

        Though all our best be no match for their worst!

        Kill the desire that they set in your bosom,

        Long not for fruit when you gaze on the blossom,

        Dream not of flowers when you gaze on the bud,

        Kill all the rebels that shout in your blood.

        Sorrow and sickness, disease and decay—

        These toll the hours of Life's desolate day;

        Hopes unfulfilled and forbidden delight

        These are the dreams of Life's treacherous night.

        So let me image an infinite peace

        Touched with no joy but the ease of release.

        Out of the eddies I climb and I cease

        Keeping, in change for this man's soul of me,

        Something which, by the eternal decree,

        Is as like Nothing as Something can be!

        Not to desire, to admit, to adore,

        Casting the robe of the soul that you wore

        Just as the soul casts the body's robe down.

        This is man's destiny, this is man's crown.

        This is the splendour, the end of the feast;

        This is the light of the Star in the East.

        So, Silence reconciles Life's jarring phrases

        Far in the future, austere and august:

        Meanwhile, the buds of the poplars are falling,

        Spring's on the lawn, and a little voice calling:

        "Daddy, come out! Daddy darling, you must!

        Daddy come out and help Molly pick daisies!"

        And, since one's here, and the Spring's in the garden

        (How many lives hence will that thought earn pardon?)

        Since one's a man and man's heart is insistent,

        And, since Nirvana is doubtful and distant,

        Though life's a hard road and thorny to travel—

        Stones in the borders and grass on the gravel,

        Still there's the wisdom that wise men call folly,

        Still one can go and pick daisies with Molly!

THE BEATIFIC VISION

        OH God! if I do my duty

        And walk in the thorny way,

        Will you pay me with heavens of beauty,

        Millions of lives away?

        Will you give me the music of heaven,

        And the joy that none understands,

        In place of what life would have given

        If

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