The Second Best

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The Second Best
by Matthew Arnold

    Moderate tasks and moderate leisure,
    Quiet living, strict-kept measure
    Both in suffering and in pleasure
    ’Tis for this thy nature yearns.

    But so many books thou readest,
    But so many schemes thou breedest,
    But so many wishes feedest,
    That thy poor head almost turns.

    And (the world’s so madly jangled,
    Human things so fast entangled)
    Nature’s wish must now be strangled
    For that best which she discerns.

    So it must be! yet, while leading
    A strain’d life, while overfeeding,
    Like the rest, his wit with reading,
    No small profit that man earns,

    Who through all he meets can steer him,
    Can reject what cannot clear him,
    Cling to what can truly cheer him!
    Who each day more surely learns

    That an impulse, from the distance
    Of his deepest, best existence,
    To the words ‘Hope, Light, Persistence,’
    Strongly stirs and truly burns!

PD-icon.svg This work published before January 1, 1923 is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.