James and Mary Ford, eds. Every Day in the Year. 1902.
March 26Cecil Rhodes
By Rudyard Kipling (18651936)W
Grief of a day shall fill a day because its creature died.
But we—we reckon not with those whom the mere Fates ordain
This Power that wrought on us, and goes back to the Power again.
The travail of his spirit bred cities in place of speech:
So huge the all-mastering thought that drove; so brief the term allowed.
Nations, not words, he linked to prove his faith before the crowd.
The granite of the Ancient North, great spaces washed with sun.
There shall he patient make his seat, (as when the death he dared,)
And there await a people’s feet in the paths that he prepared.
And unimagined empires draw to council ’neath his skies,
The immense and brooding Spirit still shall quicken and control.
Living, he was the land, and dead, his soul shall be her soul.