A BURNING glass of
burnish'd brass,
The
calm sea caught the noontide rays,
And sunny slopes of
golden grass
And
wastes of weed-flower seem to blaze.
Beyond the shining
silver-greys,
Beyond the shades of denser bloom,
The sky-line girt
with glowing haze,
The
farthest faintest forest gloom,
And the everlasting
hills that loom.
We heard the sound
beneath the mound,
We
scared the swamp hawk hovering nigh—
We had not sought
for what we found—
He
lay as dead men only lie,
With wan cheek
whitening in the sky,
Through the wild heath flowers, white and red.
The dumb brute that
had seen him die,
Close crouching, howl'd beside the head,
Brute burial service
o'er the dead.
The brow was rife
with seams of strife—
A
lawless death made doubly plain
The ravage of a
reckless life ;
The
havoc of a hurricane
Of passions through
that breadth of brain,
Like headlong horses that had run
Riot, regardless of
the rein—
'Madman, he might have lived and done
Better than most
men,' whisper'd one.
The beams and blots
that Heaven allots
To
every life with life begin.
Fool! would you
change the leopard's spots.
Or
blanch the Etheopian's skin ?
What more could he
have hoped to win,
What better things have thought to gain,
So shapen—so
conceived in sin ?
No
life is wholly void and vain,
Just and unjust
share sun and rain.
Were new life sent,
and life misspent,
Wiped out (if such to God seemed good),
Would he (being as
he was) repent,
Or
could he, even if he would,
Who heeded not
things understood
(Though dimly) even in savage lands
By some who worship
stone or wood,
Or
bird or beast, or who stretch hands
Sunward on shining
Eastern sands ?
And crime has cause.
Nay, never pause
Idly to feel a pulseless wrist ;
Brace up the
massive, square-shaped jaws,
Unclench the stubborn, stiff'ning fist,
And close those eyes
through film and mist
That kept the old defiant glare ;
And answer, wise
Psychologist,
Whose science claims some little share
Of truth, what
better things lay there ?
Aye ! thought and
mind were there,—some kind
Of
faculty that men mistake
For talent when
their wits are blind,—
An
aptitude to mar and break
What others
diligently make.
This was the worst and best of him—
Wise with the
cunning of the snake,
Brave with the she wolf's courage grim,
Dying hard and dumb,
torn limb from limb.
And you, Brown,
you're a doctor ; cure
You
can't, but you can kill, and he—
'Witness his
mark'—he signed last year,
And
now he signs John Smith, J.P.
We'll hold our
inquest now, we three ;
I'll be your coroner for once ;
I think old Oswald
ought to be
Our
foreman—Jones is such a dunce,—
There's more brain
in the bloodhound's sconce.
No man may shirk the
allotted work,
The
deed to do, the death to die ;
At least I think
so,—neither Turk,
Nor
Jew, nor infidel am I,—
And yet I wonder
when I try
To
solve one question, may or must,
And shall I solve it
by and by,
Beyond the dark, beneath the dust ?
I trust so, and I
only trust.
Aye, what they will,
such trifles kill,
Comrade, for one good deed of yours,
Your history shall
not help to fill
The
mouths of many brainless boors.
It may be death
absolves or cures
The
sin of life. 'Twere hazardous
To assert so. If the
sin endures,
Say
only, 'God, who has judged him thus,
Be merciful to him
and us.'