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ame. Still are God's dumb creatures tortured, Racial hatreds never cease, And man's greatest self-delusion Is the shibboleth of "Peace." Hence, while youth, with hope and courage, Loudly vents its noble rage; Age, profoundly disillusioned, Sad and silent leaves the stage. Round the classic Inland Ocean, Where the Roman world held sway, Storied shores are iridescent With the splendor of decay; Persia, Syria, Egypt, Athens, Proud Byzantium, Carthage, Spain,-- In their mournful desolation Hear the old sea's sad refrain:-- "Rising, falling, waxing, waning, Men and nations come and go; Reaching glory, then declining, As the ebb succeeds the flow. "All florescence is but fleeting: Each in turn enjoys its day, Hath its seed-time, bud and flower, And as surely fades away. "Growth, maturity, decadence,-- Form mankind's unchanging role, And the dead past's sombre ruins Are prophetic of the whole." "Nay," you cry in bitter protest, "Shall man have no perfect end, No millennial culmination, Toward which all the ages tend? "Must all races prove decadent? Shall not one produce in time Perfect types of men and women In a world devoid of crime?" Scan the lurid past, and tell us On what ground you base your hopes! Does an endless line of failures Warrant brighter horoscopes? Hath not every race and nation Sunk from grandeur to decay? What shall save us, then, from ruin? Are we better men than they? "Great inventors", say you? Granted; Such material gifts are ours; Every age hath some distinction, Every race its special powers. But the progress is not lasting, And the special powers decline; Man's advance is never constant In one grand, unbroken line. Nor is ground, once lost, recovered; Greece and Rome are not replaced! All the sites of pagan learning Still lie desolate and waste. What know we,--except in physics--, That the ancients did not know? Are we wiser than the sages Of two thousand years ago? More devout than Hebrew prophets? More upright than Antonine? More accomplished than the Grecians, Or than Buddha more divine? And if such men could not hinder Fate's resistless rise and fall, How can we expect exemption From the common lot of all? Let us frankly face the prospect That man's progress here may fail; That the race may never triumph, But again descend the scale, Till the last surviving savage To his glacial cave retires, And earth's tragic drama close
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