“The Man with the Hoe”: a Reply

“Let us a little permit Nature to take her own way: she better understands her own affairs than we.” —MONTAIGNE, Of Experience. NATURE reads not our labels, “great” and “small”; Accepts she one and all Who, striving, win and hold the vacant place; All are of royal race. Him, there, rough-cast, with rigid arm and limb, The Mother moulded him, Of his rude realm ruler and demigod, Lord of the rock and clod. With Nature is no “better” and no “worse,” On this bared head no curse. Humbled it is and bowed; so is he crowned Whose kingdom is the ground. Diverse the burdens on the one stern road Where bears each back its load; Varied the toil, but neither high nor low. With pen or sword or hoe, He that has put out strength, lo, he is strong; Of him with spade or song Nature but questions,—“This one, shall he stay?” She answers “Yea,” or “Nay,” “Well, ill, he digs, he sings;” and he bides on, Or shudders, and is gone. Strength shall he have, the toiler, strength and grace, So fitted to his place As he leaned, there, an oak where sea winds blow, Our brother with the hoe. No blot, no monster, no unsightly thing, The soil’s long-lineaged king; His changeless realm, he knows it and commands; Erect enough he stands, Tall as his toil. Nor does he bow unblest: Labor he has, and rest. Need was, need is, and need will ever be For him and such as he; Cast for the gap, with gnarlèd arm and limb, The Mother moulded him,— Long wrought, and moulded him with mother’s care, Before she set him there. And aye she gives him, mindful of her own, Peace of the plant, the stone; Yea, since above his work he may not rise, She makes the field his skies. See! she that bore him, and metes out the lot, He serves her. Vex him not To scorn the rock whence he was hewn, the pit And what was digged from it; Lest he no more in native virtue stand, The earth-sword in his hand, But follow sorry phantoms to and fro, And let a kingdom go.

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Poems of Sentiment: VI. Labor and Rest

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