Page:Poems Dorr.djvu/133

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PAST AND PRESENT
113
   They simply strove, as other men may strive,
   Full, earnest lives in sober strength to live;
   They did the duty nearest to their hand;
   Subdued wild nature as at God's command;
   Laid the broad acres open to the sun,
   And made fair homes in forests dark and dun;
   Built churches, founded schools, established laws,
   Kindly and just and true to freedom's cause;
   Resisted wrong, and with stout hands and hearts,
   In war, as well as peace, played well their parts.
   Their men were brave; their women pure and true;
   Their sons ashamed no honest work to do;
   And while they dreamed no dreams of being great,
   They did great deeds, and conquered hostile Fate.
We laud them, we praise them, we bless them to-day;
At their graves, as their right, tearful homage we pay!
And the laurel-crowned Present comes humbly at last,
And bends by our side at the shrine of the Past.
With the hands that such burdens unshrinking have borne,
From the brow weary cares have so furrowed and worn,
She takes off the chaplet, and lays it with tears,
That she cares not to hide, at the feet of the Years.
Hark! a breath of faint music, a murmur of song!
A form of strange beauty is floating along
On the soft summer air, and the Future draws near,
With a light on her young face, unshadowed and clear.
Two garlands she bears in the arms that not yet
Have toiled 'neath the burden and heat of the day;
Lo! both are of amaranth, fragrant and wet
With the dew of remembrance, and fadeless alway.
Oh! well may we hush our vain babblings—and wait!
He who merits the crown, wears it sooner or late!
On the brow of the Present, the grave of the Past,
The wreaths they have earned shall rest surely at last!