II

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II

A King of Craft

Here lies Sam Chamberlain; his fatal smile

Survives its wielder for a little while

In nightmares of the prudent few who fled

The Judas kisses that it heralded⁠—

Those all are dreamless who stood still to view

The smile that stayed them for the stab that slew.

Against his God his warfare now is o’er:

His bloodless heart (no colder than before)

No longer with a mute ambition swells

To run a half-a-hundred little Hells.

With ever a polite, perfidious art⁠—

A dove in manner and a snake in heart,

This titmouse Machiavelli ne’er again

Will feel the urge, the passion and the strain

To prove it true that one may smile and smile

And be a Chamberlain the blessed while.

Sharp at both ends, his secret soul

Was like a double-headed mole

Equipped with equal nose to prod

This way or that beneath the sod.

Conjecture fitted to confound

If seen a moment out of ground⁠—

Its former, as its future, route

The matter of a vain dispute,

Save where a dunghill’s lure supplied

Its aid the riddle to decide.

When that occurred (his nearer nose

Pointing the way with happier throes)

He sought it as a bee the rose.

And as that robber daubs its thighs

With pollen till it cannot rise,

So he, with glutted mind, remained

Inert, and Christ arose and reigned.

We raise the stone, we carve the solemn word,

The sign of promise and the symbol grim;

His voice and vice are in the land unheard⁠—

Yet all is doubtful that relates to him.

No more he twirls his smile to work us woe;

We saw him put a fathom under sod:

Flung down at last⁠—but so was Aaron’s rod.

We hope he’s dead, but only this we know:

He does not smile. O glory be to God!