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ne, The loyal partnership of man with wife, Building a throne beyond the throne; All happiness in that common household life By peasant shared with prince,--when toil and health, True parents of true wealth, To its fair close Round the long day, and all are in the nest, And care relaxes to repose, And the blithe restless nursery lulls to rest; Prayer at the mother's knee; and on their beds We kiss the shining heads! --Thrice fortunate he Who o'er himself thus won his masterdom, Earning that rare felicity E'en in the palace walls to find the Home! Who shaped his life in calmness, firm and true, Each day, and all day through, To that high goal Where self, for England's sake, was self-effaced, In silence reining-in his soul On the strait difficult line by wisdom traced, 'Twixt gulf and siren, avalanche and ravine, Guarding the golden mean. Hence, as the days Went by, with insight time-enrich'd and true, O'er Europe's policy-tangled maze He glanced, and touch'd the central shining clue: And when the tides of party roar'd and surged, 'Gainst the state-bulwarks urged By factious aim Masquing beneath some specious patriot cloke, Or flaunting a time-honour'd name,-- Athwart the flood he held an even stroke; Between extremes on her old compass straight Aiding to steer the state. With equal mind, Hence,--sure of those he loved on earth, and then His loved ones sure again to find,-- For Christ's and England's cause, Goodwill to men, To the end he strove, and put the fever by,-- Ready to live or die. --And if in death We were not so alone, who might not quit, Smiling, this tediousness of breath, These bubble joys that flash and burst and flit,-- This tragicomedy of life, where scarce We know if it be farce, A puppet-sight Of nerve-pull'd dolls that o'er the world dance by, Or Good in that unequal fight With Ill . . . who from such theatre would not fly? --But those dear faces round the bed disarm Death of his natural charm! --O Prince, to Her First placed, first honour'd in our love and faith, True stay, true constant counseller, From that first love of boyhood's prime,--to death! O if thy soul on earth permitted gaze In these less-fortunate days When, hour by hour, The million armaments of the world are set
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