The Poems of Henry Van Dyke by Henry Van Dyke
page 79 of 481 (16%)
page 79 of 481 (16%)
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Not for him a sacred dwelling, far above the haunts of men:
He must turn his footsteps backward to the common life again. From a quarry near the river, hollowed out amid the hills, Rose the clattering voice of labour, clanking hammers, clinking drills. Dust, and noise, and hot confusion made a Babel of the spot: There, among the lowliest workers, Felix sought and found his lot. Now he swung the ponderous mallet, smote the iron in the rock-- Muscles quivering, tingling, throbbing--blow on blow and shock on shock; Now he drove the willow wedges, wet them till they swelled and split, With their silent strength, the fragment, sent it thundering down the pit. Now the groaning tackle raised it; now the rollers made it slide; Harnessed men, like beasts of burden, drew it to the river-side. Now the palm-trees must be riven, massive timbers hewn and dressed; Rafts to bear the stones in safety on the rushing river's breast. Axe and auger, saw and chisel, wrought the will of man in wood: 'Mid the many-handed labour Felix toiled, and found it good. Every day the blood ran fleeter through his limbs and round his heart; Every night he slept the sweeter, knowing he had done his part. Dreams of solitary saintship faded from him; but, instead, Came a sense of daily comfort in the toil for daily bread. |
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