Unmarked, a Glory
I HEARD two youths make moan, and say
Each his wish, upon a day.
Stood the first beside his plough :
Angrily he wiped his brow,
And, “ Ah ! ” he cried, “ that I might be
What else I might, so I were free
To live my life, and cast behind
These mindless tasks that cramp the mind,
These shackles of the commonplace
That crush out all life’s finer grace!
Each his wish, upon a day.
Stood the first beside his plough :
Angrily he wiped his brow,
And, “ Ah ! ” he cried, “ that I might be
What else I might, so I were free
To live my life, and cast behind
These mindless tasks that cramp the mind,
These shackles of the commonplace
That crush out all life’s finer grace!
” The second lifted up his head,
Heavy with toil, and sadly said :
“ Would I might leave the town for aye!
Surely, beneath the open day,
Among the hills, I should not pine
That naught worth having might be mine ;
That all that life to me could give
Was to make ready still to live ! ”
Then saw I how about them lay,
Unmarked, a glory, all the day.
The one scarce looked beyond his plough,
Although it seamed a mountain’s brow,
And half the world, below, outspread
Its mystic meanings, all unread !
The other let mankind go by,
Nor dreamed the things he sought were nigh ;
He saw a thousand faces shine,
With eyes that knew not the divine;
And walked the streets where life was lived,
Longing for life — and hopeless grieved !
Heavy with toil, and sadly said :
“ Would I might leave the town for aye!
Surely, beneath the open day,
Among the hills, I should not pine
That naught worth having might be mine ;
That all that life to me could give
Was to make ready still to live ! ”
Then saw I how about them lay,
Unmarked, a glory, all the day.
The one scarce looked beyond his plough,
Although it seamed a mountain’s brow,
And half the world, below, outspread
Its mystic meanings, all unread !
The other let mankind go by,
Nor dreamed the things he sought were nigh ;
He saw a thousand faces shine,
With eyes that knew not the divine;
And walked the streets where life was lived,
Longing for life — and hopeless grieved !
F. Whitmore.