In Memoriam A. H. H. Obiit Mdcccxxxiii: Part 064

Alfred Lord Tennyson

Dost thou look back on what hath been,
  As some divinely gifted man,
  Whose life in low estate began
And on a simple village green;

Who breaks his birth’s invidious bar,
  And grasps the skirts of happy chance,
  And breasts the blows of circumstance,
And grapples with his evil star;

Who makes by force his merit known
  And lives to clutch the golden keys,
  To mould a mighty state’s decrees,
And shape the whisper of the throne;

And moving up from high to higher,
  Becomes on Fortune’s crowning slope
  The pillar of a people’s hope,
The centre of a world’s desire;

Yet feels, as in a pensive dream,
  When all his active powers are still,
  A distant dearness in the hill,
A secret sweetness in the stream,

The limit of his narrower fate,
  While yet beside its vocal springs
  He play’d at counsellors and kings,
With one that was his earliest mate;

Who ploughs with pain his native lea
  And reaps the labour of his hands,
  Or in the furrow musing stands;
‘Does my old friend remember me?’

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