Delphi Complete Works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (Illustrated) (1102 page)

BOOK: Delphi Complete Works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (Illustrated)
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THE BIGO
T

 
 
 
The foolish Roman fondly thought
   
That gods must be the same to all,
 
Each alien idol might be brought
   
Within their broad Pantheon Hall.
 
The vision of a jealous Jove
   
Was far above their feeble ken;
 
They had no Lord who gave them love,
   
But scowled upon all other men.
 
 
But in our dispensation bright,
   
What noble progress have we made!
 
We know that we are in the light,
   
And outer races in the shade.
 
Our kindly creed ensures us this —
    
That Turk and infidel and Jew
 
Are safely banished from the bliss
   
That’s guaranteed to me and you.
 
 
The Roman mother understood
   
That, if the babe upon her breast
 
Untimely died, the gods were good,
   
And the child’s welfare manifest.
 
With tender guides the soul would go
   
And there, in some Elysian bower,
 
The tiny bud plucked here below
   
Would ripen to the perfect flower.
 
 
Poor simpleton! Our faith makes plain
   
That, if no blest baptismal word
 
Has cleared the babe, it bears the stain
   
Which faithless Adam had incurred.
 
How philosophical an aim!
   
How wise and well-conceived a plan
 
Which holds the new-born babe to blame
   
For all the sins of early man!
 
 
Nay, speak not of its tender grace,
   
But hearken to our dogma wise:
 
Guilt lies behind that dimpled face,
   
And sin looks out from gentle eyes.
 
Quick, quick, the water and the bowl!
   
Quick with the words that lift the load!
 
Oh, hasten, ere that tiny soul
   
Shall pay the debt old Adam owed!
 
 
The Roman thought the souls that erred
   
Would linger in some nether gloom,
 
But somewhere, sometime, would be spared
   
To find some peace beyond the tomb.
 
In those dark halls, enshadowed, vast,
   
They flitted ever, sad and thin,
 
Mourning the unforgotten past
   
Until they shed the taint of sin.
 
 
And Pluto brooded over all
   
Within that land of night and fear,
 
Enthroned in some dark Judgment Hall,
   
A god himself, reserved, austere.
 
How thin and colourless and tame!
   
Compare our nobler scheme with it,
 
The howling souls, the leaping flame,
   
And all the tortures of the pit!
 
 
Foolish half-hearted Roman hell!
   
To us is left the higher thought
 
Of that eternal torture cell
   
Whereto the sinner shall be brought.
 
Out with the thought that God could share
   
Our weak relenting pity sense,
 
Or ever condescend to spare
   
The wretch who gave Him just offence!
 
 
‘Tis just ten thousand years ago
   
Since the vile sinner left his clay,
 
And yet no pity can he know,
   
For as he lies in hell to-day
 
So when ten thousand years have run
   
Still shall he lie in endless night.
 
O God of Love! O Holy One!
   
Have we not read Thy ways aright?
 
 
The godly man in heaven shall dwell,
   
And live in joy before the throne,
 
Though somewhere down in nether hell
   
His wife or children writhe and groan.
 
From his bright Empyrean height
   
He sees the reek from that abyss —
  
What Pagan ever dreamed a sight
   
So holy and sublime as this!
 
 
Poor foolish folk! Had they begun
   
To weigh the myths that they professed,
 
One hour of reason and each one
   
Would surely stand a fraud confessed.
 
Pretending to believe each deed
   
Of Theseus or of Hercules,
 
With fairy tales of Ganymede,
   
And gods of rocks and gods of trees!
 
 
No, no, had they our purer light
   
They would have learned some saner tale
 
Of Balaam’s ass, or Samson’s might,
   
Or prophet Jonah and his whale,
 
Of talking serpents and their ways,
   
Through which our foolish parents strayed,
 
And how there passed three nights and days
   
Before the sun or moon was made!
 
      
·
      
·
      
·
      
·
 
 
O Bigotry, you crowning sin!
   
All evil that a man can do
 
Has earthly bounds, nor can begin
   
To match the mischief done by you —
  
You, who would force the source of love
   
To play your small sectarian part,
 
And mould the mercy from above
   
To fit your own contracted heart.

THE ATHABASCA TRAI
L

 
 
My life is gliding downwards; it speeds swifter to the day
 
When it shoots the last dark cañon to the Plains of Far-away,
 
But while its stream is running through the years that are to be,
 
The mighty voice of Canada will ever call to me.
 
I shall hear the roar of rivers where the rapids foam and tear,
 
I shall smell the virgin upland with its balsam-laden air,
 
And shall dream that I am riding down the winding woody vale
 
With the packer and the packhorse on the Athabasca Trail.
 
 
I have passed the warden cities at the Eastern water-gate
 
Where the hero and the martyr laid the corner stone of State,
 
The habitant, coureur-des-bois, and hardy voyageur —
  
Where lives a breed more strong at need to venture or endure?
 
I have seen the gorge of Erie where the roaring waters run,
 
I have crossed the Inland Ocean, lying golden in the sun,
 
But the last and best and sweetest is the ride by hill and dale
 
With the packer and the packhorse on the Athabasca Trail.
 
 
I’ll dream again of fields of grain that stretch from sky to sky
 
And the little prairie hamlets where the cars go roaring by,
 
Wooden hamlets as I saw them — noble cities still to be,
 
To girdle stately Canada with gems from sea to sea.
 
Mother of a mighty manhood, land of glamour and of hope,
 
From the eastward sea-swept islands to the sunny western slope,
 
Ever more my heart is with you, ever more till life shall fail
 
I’ll be out with pack and packer on the Athabasca Trail.

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