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Home  »  An American Anthology, 1787–1900  »  919 The Heroic Age

Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.

By Richard WatsonGilder

919 The Heroic Age

HE speaks not well who doth his time deplore,

Naming it new and little and obscure,

Ignoble and unfit for lofty deeds.

All times were modern in the time of them,

And this no more than others. Do thy part

Here in the living day, as did the great

Who made old days immortal! So shall men,

Gazing long back to this far-looming hour,

Say: “Then the time when men were truly men;

Though wars grew less, their spirits met the test

Of new conditions; conquering civic wrong;

Saving the state anew by virtuous lives;

Guarding the country’s honor as their own,

And their own as their country’s and their sons’;

Defying leaguëd fraud with single truth;

Not fearing loss, and daring to be pure.

When error through the land raged like a pest,

They calmed the madness caught from mind to mind

By wisdom drawn from eld, and counsel sane;

And as the martyrs of the ancient world

Gave Death for man, so nobly gave they Life:

Those the great days, and that the heroic age.”
ATHENS, 1896.