Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Fragments On Nature And Life - Life by Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Fragments On Nature And Life - Life

    By Ralph Waldo Emerson



    A train of gay and clouded days
    Dappled with joy and grief and praise,
    Beauty to fire us, saints to save,
    Escort us to a little grave.



    No fate, save by the victim's fault, is low,
    For God hath writ all dooms magnificent,
    So guilt not traverses his tender will.



    Around the man who seeks a noble end,
    Not angels but divinities attend.



    From high to higher forces
    The scale of power uprears,
    The heroes on their horses,
    The gods upon their spheres.



    This shining moment is an edifice
    Which the Omnipotent cannot rebuild.



    Roomy Eternity
    Casts her schemes rarely,
    And an aeon allows
    For each quality and part
    Of the multitudinous
    And many-chambered heart.



    The beggar begs by God's command,
    And gifts awake when givers sleep,
    Swords cannot cut the giving hand
    Nor stab the love that orphans keep.



    In the chamber, on the stairs,
    Lurking dumb,
    Go and come
    Lemurs and Lars.



    Such another peerless queen
    Only could her mirror show.



    Easy to match what others do,
    Perform the feat as well as they;
    Hard to out-do the brave, the true,
    And find a loftier way:
    The school decays, the learning spoils
    Because of the sons of wine;
    How snatch the stripling from their toils?--
    Yet can one ray of truth divine
    The blaze of revellers' feasts outshine.



    Of all wit's uses the main one
    Is to live well with who has none.



    The tongue is prone to lose the way,
    Not so the pen, for in a letter
    We have not better things to say,
    But surely say them better.



    She walked in flowers around my field
    As June herself around the sphere.



    Friends to me are frozen wine;
    I wait the sun on them should shine.



    You shall not love me for what daily spends;
    You shall not know me in the noisy street,
    Where I, as others, follow petty ends;
    Nor when in fair saloons we chance to meet;
    Nor when I'm jaded, sick, anxious or mean.
    But love me then and only, when you know
    Me for the channel of the rivers of God
    From deep ideal fontal heavens that flow.



    To and fro the Genius flies,
    A light which plays and hovers
    Over the maiden's head
    And dips sometimes as low as to her eyes.
    Of her faults I take no note,
    Fault and folly are not mine;
    Comes the Genius,--all's forgot,
    Replunged again into that upper sphere
    He scatters wide and wild its lustres here.



    Love
    Asks nought his brother cannot give;
    Asks nothing, but does all receive.
    Love calls not to his aid events;
    He to his wants can well suffice:
    Asks not of others soft consents,
    Nor kind occasion without eyes;
    Nor plots to ope or bolt a gate,
    Nor heeds Condition's iron walls,--
    Where he goes, goes before him Fate;
    Whom he uniteth, God installs;
    Instant and perfect his access
    To the dear object of his thought,
    Though foes and land and seas between
    Himself and his love intervene.



    The brave Empedocles, defying fools,
    Pronounced the word that mortals hate to hear--
    "I am divine, I am not mortal made;
    I am superior to my human weeds."
    Not Sense but Reason is the Judge of truth;
    Reason's twofold, part human, part divine;
    That human part may be described and taught,
    The other portion language cannot speak.



    Tell men what they knew before;
    Paint the prospect from their door.



    Him strong Genius urged to roam,
    Stronger Custom brought him home.



    That each should in his house abide.
    Therefore was the world so wide.



    Thou shalt make thy house
    The temple of a nation's vows.
    Spirits of a higher strain
    Who sought thee once shall seek again.
    I detected many a god
    Forth already on the road,
    Ancestors of beauty come
    In thy breast to make a home.



    The archangel Hope
    Looks to the azure cope,
    Waits through dark ages for the morn,
    Defeated day by day, but unto victory born.

    As the drop feeds its fated flower,
    As finds its Alp the snowy shower,
    Child of the omnific Need,
    Hurled into life to do a deed,
    Man drinks the water, drinks the light.



    Ever the Rock of Ages melts
    Into the mineral air,
    To be the quarry whence to build
    Thought and its mansions fair.



    Go if thou wilt, ambrosial flower,
    Go match thee with thy seeming peers;
    I will wait Heaven's perfect hour
    Through the innumerable years.



    Yes, sometimes to the sorrow-stricken
    Shall his own sorrow seem impertinent,
    A thing that takes no more root in the world
    Than doth the traveller's shadow on the rock.



    But if thou do thy best,
    Without remission, without rest,
    And invite the sunbeam,
    And abhor to feign or seem
    Even to those who thee should love
    And thy behavior approve;
    If thou go in thine own likeness,
    Be it health, or be it sickness;
    If thou go as thy father's son,
    If thou wear no mask or lie,
    Dealing purely and nakedly,--

    *            *            *



    Ascending thorough just degrees
    To a consummate holiness,
    As angel blind to trespass done,
    And bleaching all souls like the sun.



    From the stores of eldest matter,
    The deep-eyed flame, obedient water,
    Transparent air, all-feeding earth,
    He took the flower of all their worth,
    And, best with best in sweet consent,
    Combined a new temperament.



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