Page:The city of dreadful night - and other poems (IA cityofdreadfulni00thomrich).pdf/51

 It was the dark delusion of a dream, That living Person conscious and supreme, Whom we must curse for cursing us with life; Whom we must curse because the life He gave Could not be buried in the quiet grave, Could not be killed by poison or by knife.

This little life is all we must endure, The grave's most holy peace is ever sure, We fall asleep and never wake again; Nothing is of us but the mouldering flesh, Whose elements dissolve and merge afresh In earth, air, water, plants, and other men.

We finish thus; and all our wretched race Shall finish with its cycle, and give place To other beings, with their own time-doom: Infinite æons ere our kind began; Infinite æons after the last man Has joined the mammoth in earth's tomb and womb.

We bow down to the universal laws, Which never had for man a special clause Of cruelty or kindness, love or hate: If toads and vultures are obscene to sight, If tigers burn with beauty and with might, Is it by favour or by wrath of Fate?