Chapter_408

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Charles Main, of Main & Winchester, attend

With friendly ear the chit-chat of a friend

Who knows you not, yet knows that you and he

Travel two roads that have a common end.

We journey forward through the time allowed,

I humbly bending, you erect and proud.

Our heads alike will stable soon the worm⁠—

The one that’s lifted, and the one that’s bowed.

You in your mausoleum shall repose,

I where it pleases Him who sleep bestows;

What matter whether one so little worth

Shall stain the marble or shall feed the rose?

Charles Main, I had a friend who died one day.

A metal casket held his honored clay.

Of cyclopean architecture stood

The splendid vault where he was laid away.

A dozen years, and lo! the roots of grass

Had burst asunder all the joints; the brass,

The gilded ornaments, the carven stones

Lay tumbled all together in a mass.

A dozen years! That taxes your belief.

Make it a thousand if the time’s too brief.

’Twill be the same to you; when you are dead

You cannot even count your days of grief.

Suppose a pompous monument you raise

Till on its peak the solar splendor blaze

While yet about its base the night is black;

But will it give your glory length of days?

Say, when beneath your rubbish has been thrown,

Some rogue to reputation all unknown⁠—

Men’s backs being turned⁠—should lift his thieving hand,

Efface your name and substitute his own,

Whose then would be the monument? To whom

Would be the fame? Forgotten in your gloom⁠—

Your very name forgotten⁠—ah, my friend,

The name is all that’s rescued by the tomb.

For memory of worth and work we go

To other records than a stone can show.

These lacking, naught remains; with these

The stone is needless for the world will know.

Then build your mausoleum if you must,

And creep into it with a perfect trust;

But in the twinkling of an eye the plow

Shall pass without obstruction through your dust.

Another movement of the pendulum,

And, lo! the desert-haunting wolf shall come,

And, seated on the spot, shall howl by night

O’er rotting cities, desolate and dumb.