Page:The Statues in the Block and Other Poems (1881).djvu/82

76 To bear the sordid jeers of cant and trade, And go on hewing for a far ideal,— This were a life worth giving to a cause, If cause be found so worth a martyr life.

But highest life of man, nor work nor sacrifice, But utter seeing of the things that be! To pass amid the hurrying crowds, and watch The hungry race for things of vulgar use; To mark the growth of baser lines in men; To note the bending to a servile rule; To know the natural discord called disease That rots like rust the blood and souls of men; To test the wisdoms and philosophies by touch Of that which is immutable, being clear, The beam God opens to the poet's brain; To see with eyes of pity laboring souls Strive upward to the Freedom and the Truth, And still be backward dragged by fear and ignorance;