Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Birthday Of Daniel Webster (January 18, 1856) by Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Birthday Of Daniel Webster (January 18, 1856)

    By Oliver Wendell Holmes



    When life hath run its largest round
    Of toil and triumph, joy and woe,
    How brief a storied page is found
    To compass all its outward show!

    The world-tried sailor tires and droops;
    His flag is rent, his keel forgot;
    His farthest voyages seem but loops
    That float from life's entangled knot.

    But when within the narrow space
    Some larger soul hath lived and wrought,
    Whose sight was open to embrace
    The boundless realms of deed and thought, -

    When, stricken by the freezing blast,
    A nation's living pillars fall,
    How rich the storied page, how vast,
    A word, a whisper, can recall!

    No medal lifts its fretted face,
    Nor speaking marble cheats your eye,
    Yet, while these pictured lines I trace,
    A living image passes by:

    A roof beneath the mountain pines;
    The cloisters of a hill-girt plain;
    The front of life's embattled lines;
    A mound beside the heaving main.

    These are the scenes: a boy appears;
    Set life's round dial in the sun,
    Count the swift arc of seventy years,
    His frame is dust; his task is done.

    Yet pause upon the noontide hour,
    Ere the declining sun has laid
    His bleaching rays on manhood's power,
    And look upon the mighty shade.

    No gloom that stately shape can hide,
    No change uncrown its brow; behold I
    Dark, calm, large-fronted, lightning-eyed,
    Earth has no double from its mould.

    Ere from the fields by valor won
    The battle-smoke had rolled away,
    And bared the blood-red setting sun,
    His eyes were opened on the day.

    His land was but a shelving strip
    Black with the strife that made it free
    He lived to see its banners dip
    Their fringes in the Western sea.

    The boundless prairies learned his name,
    His words the mountain echoes knew,
    The Northern breezes swept his fame
    From icy lake to warm bayou.

    In toil he lived; in peace he died;
    When life's full cycle was complete,
    Put off his robes of power and pride,
    And laid them at his Master's feet.

    His rest is by the storm-swept waves
    Whom life's wild tempests roughly trie
    Whose heart was like the streaming eaves
    Of ocean, throbbing at his side.

    Death's cold white hand is like the snow
    Laid softly on the furrowed hill,
    It hides the broken seams below,
    And leaves the summit brighter still.

    In vain the envious tongue upbraids;
    His name a nation's heart shall keep
    Till morning's latest sunlight fades
    On the blue tablet of the deep.



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