THE
MENDICANTS
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WE
are as mendicants who wait
Along the roadside in the sun.
Tatters of yesterday and shreds
Of morrow clothe us every one.
And
some are dotards, who believe
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And
glory in the days of old;
While some are dreamers, harping still
Upon an unknown age of gold.
Hopeless
or witless! Not one heeds,
As lavish Time comes down the way
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And
tosses in the suppliant hat
One great new-minted gold To-day.
Ungrateful
heart and grudging thanks,
His beggar's wisdom only sees
Housing and bread and beer enough;
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| He
knows no other things than these.
O
foolish ones, put by your care!
Where wants are many, joys are few;
And at the wilding springs of peace,
God keeps an open house for you.
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But that some some Fortunatus' gift
Is lying there within his hand,
Most costly than a pot of pearls,
His dulness does not understand.
And
so his creature heart is filled;
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His
shrunken self goes starved away.
Let him wear brand-new garments still,
Who has a threadbare soul, I say.
But
there be others, happier few,
The vagabondish sons of God,
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Who
know the by-ways and the flowers,
And care not how the world may plod.
They
idle down the traffic lands,
And loiter through the woods with spring;
To them the glory of the earth
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Is
but to hear a bluebird sing.
They
too receive each one his Day;
But their wise heart knows many things
Beyond the sating of desire,
Above the dignity of kings.
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One I remember kept his coin,
And laughing flipped it in the air;
But when two strolling pipe-players
Came by, he tossed it to the pair.
Spendthrift
of joy, his childish heart
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Danced
to their wild outlandish bars;
Then supperless he laid him down
That night, and slept beneath the stars. |
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