Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.
By Harrison SmithMorris1274 Destiny
O
And quick desire is but as morning dew;
And love and life, that linger and are proud,
Dissolve and are again the arching blue.
Or who undo a one-day-earlier bud?
We are but atoms in the larger task
Of law that seeks not to be understood.
The purple of power, and sit above the seed,
While still abroad the acres of the green
Invisible feet leave imprint of their speed?
Trembles, as heaven steadied in a stream.
Not ours to question whence the leafage start,
Or doubt the prescience of a people’s dream.
And move in larger order than we know;
The isolate act interpreted a crime,
In perfect circle, shows the Mind below.
The wiser mother drove her sable kin—
Was it that through our vitiated wheat
A lustier grain should swell the life, grown thin?
The brutal tribe should struggle to a soul,—
That white and black, in interchange of good,
Might grope through ages to a loftier whole?
The ceaseless loom thrids through its slow design;
The waning artifice is woven out,
And simple manhood rears a nobler line.
For bands to hold the Nation from its growth,
And wax in terror at the overplus
Won from dishonor and imperial sloth?
To punish what His providence ordains;
To fix our star forever in its night;
To hold us fettered in our ancient chains?
And He is glad, and blesses. Shall we then
Shrink inward to the dulness of the root,
And vanish from the onward march of men?
Give up the gain and glory, rule, renown,
The orient commerce of the open door,
The conquest, and the wide imperial crown?
For idle gold is but an empty gain:
An empire, reared on ashes of its foe,
Falls, as have fallen the island-walls of Spain.
On better things. Our gain is in the loss:
In love and tears, self victories fulfilled,
In manhood bending to the bitter cross.
Taken in hate that sanctify the heart,
In sympathies and sorrows, and in sounds
That up from all the open waters start;
And clasps the whole world closer into peace;
In East and West enwoven loverwise,
Mated for happy arts and home’s increase.
Its summer task is done, the bough is clean
For Spring’s ascent; the lost is later found
In some new recess of the risen green.
Sets our strange feet on Australasian sands,
Bids us to pluck the races from their night
And build a State from out the brawling bands.
The man or people, if her end be sure;
Her brooding eyes, that ever bend to bless,
Find guerdon for the dead that shall endure.
Heed not the footfall of the eternal tread.
The land that shrinks from Nature’s armed advance
Shall lie dishonored with her wasted dead.
We are but bearers,—it is Nature’s own,—
Runners who speed the way of Destiny,
Yielding the torch whose flame is forward blown.
Who heaves the tidal sea, and rounds the year;
We may return not, though the weak withdraw;
We must move onward to the last frontier.