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Home  »  The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse  »  Wilfred Scawen Blunt (1840–1922)

Arthur Quiller-Couch, comp. The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse. 1922.

With Esther

Wilfred Scawen Blunt (1840–1922)

HE who has once been happy is for aye

Out of destruction’s reach. His fortune then

Holds nothing secret; and Eternity,

Which is a mystery to other men,

Has like a woman given him its joy.

Time is his conquest. Life, if it should fret,

Has paid him tribute. He can bear to die,

He who has once been happy! When I set

The world before me and survey its range,

Its mean ambitions, its scant fantasies,

The shreds of pleasure which for lack of change

Men wrap around them and call happiness,

The poor delights which are the tale and sum

Of the world’s courage in its martyrdom;

When I hear laughter from a tavern door,

When I see crowds agape and in the rain

Watching on tiptoe and with stifled roar

To see a rocket fired or a bull slain,

When misers handle gold, when orators

Touch strong men’s hearts with glory till they weep,

When cities deck their streets for barren wars

Which have laid waste their youth, and when I keep

Calmly the count of my own life and see

On what poor stuff my manhood’s dreams were fed

Till I too learn’d what dole of vanity

Will serve a human soul for daily bread,

—Then I remember that I once was young

And lived with Esther the world’s gods among.