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Rh But don't you think it's far more gay

To see them slowly leave the way

And limp and lose themselves and fall?

O, that's the nicest thing of all.

I love to see this sight, for then

I know they are becoming men,

And they are tiring of the shrine

Where things are really not divine.

I do not know if it seems brave

The youthful spirit to enslave,

And hedge about lest it should grow.

I don't know if it's better so

In the long end. I only know

That when I have a son of mine,

He shan't be made to droop and pine,

Bound down and forced by rule and rod

To serve a God who is no God.

But I'll put custom on the shelf

And make him find his God himself.

Perhaps he'll find Him in a tree

Some hollow trunk, where you can see.

Perhaps the daisies in the sod

Will open out and show him God.

Or will he meet him in the roar

Of breakers as they beat the shore?

Or in the spiky stars that shine?

Or in the rain (where I found mine)?

Or in the city's giant moan?

—A God who will be all his own,

To whom he can address a prayer

And love him for he is so fair,

And see with eyes that are not dim

And build a temple meet for him."

Yes, the actual world is more hospitable and more inspiring than the scenery, the panorama that English conventions paint and hang round the young, in part to help and prepare them, but in part also to delude them and disguise our own fears and failures. Truth provides a roomier house than the average Englishman has hired Rh