MAKERS OF HISTORY

By Alfred Denis Godley

Minstrels! who your choicest notes

Keep for men who row in boats,

Mark with what exalted mien

Comes the Hero of the Scene!

He, amid the festal swarm,

Fashion’ s glass and mould of form,

How in shape and how in features

Far surpassing other creatures,

How incomparable to

Common things like me and you!

He in whose transcendent state

All the ages culminate —

Could we ever keep him thus,

How delightful’ twere for us!

Could he,’ mid the admiring throng,

Ever beauteous, ever young,

Still abide for ever pent

In his true environment,

Wear that aureole still which now

Decks his high victorious brow!

Out, alas! that Fortune can’ t

Ever give us what we want!

HE must quit this vernal stage:

HE must sink to middle age

( E’ en the Poet’ s soaring wit

Scarcely can envisage it ):

Go with men of common clay

In to business every day:

Be perhaps a Brewer, or

Haply a Solicitor,—

None the fact to notice that

Haloes once adorned his hat:

Ay! the ways of Fate are odd:

Men are mortal... Ichabod...

Yet shall stay by stream and tree

Something still of what was He,—

Plainly put, his More or Less

Immaterial Consciousness,—

Very fine and very large,

Floating o’ er his College barge:

Always while the world continues

Bards shall sing his thews and sinews,—

Here he rowed and here he ran,

Being rather more than man;—

Thus as ages onward go

Still he’ ll great and greater grow,

Larger still in prose or rhyme

Looming down the aisles of time,

Till he sit, sublime and vast,

’ Mid the Giants of the Past,

Men who lived in days of old

( Ch-tty, W - - dg-te, N-ck-lls, G-ld ),

Lived and rowed in ages dark

Long ere Noah built the Ark,

Very, very famous oars,

Mighty men in Eights and Fours,

Towering o’ er our Browns and Smiths

Huge and grey, like Monoliths.

Thus the Hero’ s happy fate

Keeps in store a blissful state,

All adown the Future dim,

Nearly worthy e’ en of Him!