Version
I
He
did
not
wear
his
scarlet
coat,
For
blood
and
wine
are
red,
And
blood
and
wine
were
on
his
hands
When
they
found
him
with
the
dead,
The
poor
dead
woman
whom
he
loved,
And
murdered
in
her
bed.
He
walked
amongst
the
Trial
Men
In
a
suit
of
shabby
grey;
A
cricket
cap
was
on
his
head,
And
his
step
seemed
light
and
gay;
But
I
never
saw
a
man
who
looked
So
wistfully
at
the
day.
I
never
saw
a
man
who
looked
With
such
a
wistful
eye
Upon
that
little
tent
of
blue
Which
prisoners
call
the
sky,
And
at
every
drifting
cloud
that
went
With
sails
of
silver
by.
I
walked,
with
other
souls
in
pain,
Within
another
ring,
And
was
wondering
if
the
man
had
done
A
great
or
little
thing,
When
a
voice
behind
me
whispered
low,
"That
fellows
got
to
swing."
Dear
Christ!
the
very
prison
walls
Suddenly
seemed
to
reel,
And
the
sky
above
my
head
became
Like
a
casque
of
scorching
steel;
And,
though
I
was
a
soul
in
pain,
My
pain
I
could
not
feel.
I
only
knew
what
hunted
thought
Quickened
his
step,
and
why
He
looked
upon
the
garish
day
With
such
a
wistful
eye;
The
man
had
killed
the
thing
he
loved
And
so
he
had
to
die.
Yet
each
man
kills
the
thing
he
loves
By
each
let
this
be
heard,
Some
do
it
with
a
bitter
look,
Some
with
a
flattering
word,
The
coward
does
it
with
a
kiss,
The
brave
man
with
a
sword!
Some
kill
their
love
when
they
are
young,
And
some
when
they
are
old;
Some
strangle
with
the
hands
of
Lust,
Some
with
the
hands
of
Gold:
The
kindest
use
a
knife,
because
The
dead
so
soon
grow
cold.
Some
love
too
little,
some
too
long,
Some
sell,
and
others
buy;
Some
do
the
deed
with
many
tears,
And
some
without
a
sigh:
For
each
man
kills
the
thing
he
loves,
Yet
each
man
does
not
die.
He
does
not
die
a
death
of
shame
On
a
day
of
dark
disgrace,
Nor
have
a
noose
about
his
neck,
Nor
a
cloth
upon
his
face,
Nor
drop
feet
foremost
through
the
floor
Into
an
empty
place
He
does
not
sit
with
silent
men
Who
watch
him
night
and
day;
Who
watch
him
when
he
tries
to
weep,
And
when
he
tries
to
pray;
Who
watch
him
lest
himself
should
rob
The
prison
of
its
prey.
He
does
not
wake
at
dawn
to
see
Dread
figures
throng
his
room,
The
shivering
Chaplain
robed
in
white,
The
Sheriff
stern
with
gloom,
And
the
Governor
all
in
shiny
black,
With
the
yellow
face
of
Doom.
He
does
not
rise
in
piteous
haste
To
put
on
convict-clothes,
While
some
coarse-mouthed
Doctor
gloats,
and
notes
Each
new
and
nerve-twitched
pose,
Fingering
a
watch
whose
little
ticks
Are
like
horrible
hammer-blows.
He
does
not
know
that
sickening
thirst
That
sands
one's
throat,
before
The
hangman
with
his
gardener's
gloves
Slips
through
the
padded
door,
And
binds
one
with
three
leathern
thongs,
That
the
throat
may
thirst
no
more.
He
does
not
bend
his
head
to
hear
The
Burial
Office
read,
Nor,
while
the
terror
of
his
soul
Tells
him
he
is
not
dead,
Cross
his
own
coffin,
as
he
moves
Into
the
hideous
shed.
He
does
not
stare
upon
the
air
Through
a
little
roof
of
glass;
He
does
not
pray
with
lips
of
clay
For
his
agony
to
pass;
Nor
feel
upon
his
shuddering
cheek
The
kiss
of
Caiaphas.
II.
Six
weeks
our
guardsman
walked
the
yard,
In
a
suit
of
shabby
grey:
His
cricket
cap
was
on
his
head,
And
his
step
seemed
light
and
gay,
But
I
never
saw
a
man
who
looked
So
wistfully
at
the
day.
I
never
saw
a
man
who
looked
With
such
a
wistful
eye
Upon
that
little
tent
of
blue
Which
prisoners
call
the
sky,
And
at
every
wandering
cloud
that
trailed
Its
raveled
fleeces
by.
He
did
not
wring
his
hands,
as
do
Those
witless
men
who
dare
To
try
to
rear
the
changeling
Hope
In
the
cave
of
black
Despair:
He
only
looked
upon
the
sun,
And
drank
the
morning
air.
He
did
not
wring
his
hands
nor
weep,
Nor
did
he
peek
or
pine,
But
he
drank
the
air
as
though
it
held
Some
healthful
anodyne;
With
open
mouth
he
drank
the
sun
As
though
it
had
been
wine!
And
I
and
all
the
souls
in
pain,
Who
tramped
the
other
ring,
Forgot
if
we
ourselves
had
done
A
great
or
little
thing,
And
watched
with
gaze
of
dull
amaze
The
man
who
had
to
swing.
And
strange
it
was
to
see
him
pass
With
a
step
so
light
and
gay,
And
strange
it
was
to
see
him
look
So
wistfully
at
the
day,
And
strange
it
was
to
think
that
he
Had
such
a
debt
to
pay.
For
oak
and
elm
have
pleasant
leaves
That
in
the
spring-time
shoot:
But
grim
to
see
is
the
gallows-tree,
With
its
adder-bitten
root,
And,
green
or
dry,
a
man
must
die
Before
it
bears
its
fruit!
The
loftiest
place
is
that
seat
of
grace
For
which
all
worldlings
try:
But
who
would
stand
in
hempen
band
Upon
a
scaffold
high,
And
through
a
murderer's
collar
take
His
last
look
at
the
sky?
It
is
sweet
to
dance
to
violins
When
Love
and
Life
are
fair:
To
dance
to
flutes,
to
dance
to
lutes
Is
delicate
and
rare:
But
it
is
not
sweet
with
nimble
feet
To
dance
upon
the
air!
So
with
curious
eyes
and
sick
surmise
We
watched
him
day
by
day,
And
wondered
if
each
one
of
us
Would
end
the
self-same
way,
For
none
can
tell
to
what
red
Hell
His
sightless
soul
may
stray.
At
last
the
dead
man
walked
no
more
Amongst
the
Trial
Men,
And
I
knew
that
he
was
standing
up
In
the
black
dock's
dreadful
pen,
And
that
never
would
I
see
his
face
In
God's
sweet
world
again.
Like
two
doomed
ships
that
pass
in
storm
We
had
crossed
each
other's
way:
But
we
made
no
sign,
we
said
no
word,
We
had
no
word
to
say;
For
we
did
not
meet
in
the
holy
night,
But
in
the
shameful
day.
A
prison
wall
was
round
us
both,
Two
outcast
men
were
we:
The
world
had
thrust
us
from
its
heart,
And
God
from
out
His
care:
And
the
iron
gin
that
waits
for
Sin
Had
caught
us
in
its
snare.
III
In
Debtors'
Yard
the
stones
are
hard,
And
the
dripping
wall
is
high,
So
it
was
there
he
took
the
air
Beneath
the
leaden
sky,
And
by
each
side
a
Warder
walked,
For
fear
the
man
might
die.
Or
else
he
sat
with
those
who
watched
His
anguish
night
and
day;
Who
watched
him
when
he
rose
to
weep,
And
when
he
crouched
to
pray;
Who
watched
him
lest
himself
should
rob
Their
scaffold
of
its
prey.
The
Governor
was
strong
upon
The
Regulations
Act:
The
Doctor
said
that
Death
was
but
A
scientific
fact:
And
twice
a
day
the
Chaplain
called
And
left
a
little
tract.
And
twice
a
day
he
smoked
his
pipe,
And
drank
his
quart
of
beer:
His
soul
was
resolute,
and
held
No
hiding-place
for
fear;
He
often
said
that
he
was
glad
The
hangman's
hands
were
near.
But
why
he
said
so
strange
a
thing
No
Warder
dared
to
ask:
For
he
to
whom
a
watcher's
doom
Is
given
as
his
task,
Must
set
a
lock
upon
his
lips,
And
make
his
face
a
mask.
Or
else
he
might
be
moved,
and
try
To
comfort
or
console:
And
what
should
Human
Pity
do
Pent
up
in
Murderers'
Hole?
What
word
of
grace
in
such
a
place
Could
help
a
brother's
soul?
With
slouch
and
swing
around
the
ring
We
trod
the
Fool's
Parade!
We
did
not
care:
we
knew
we
were
The
Devil's
Own
Brigade:
And
shaven
head
and
feet
of
lead
Make
a
merry
masquerade.
We
tore
the
tarry
rope
to
shreds
With
blunt
and
bleeding
nails;
We
rubbed
the
doors,
and
scrubbed
the
floors,
And
cleaned
the
shining
rails:
And,
rank
by
rank,
we
soaped
the
plank,
And
clattered
with
the
pails.
We
sewed
the
sacks,
we
broke
the
stones,
We
turned
the
dusty
drill:
We
banged
the
tins,
and
bawled
the
hymns,
And
sweated
on
the
mill:
But
in
the
heart
of
every
man
Terror
was
lying
still.
So
still
it
lay
that
every
day
Crawled
like
a
weed-clogged
wave:
And
we
forgot
the
bitter
lot
That
waits
for
fool
and
knave,
Till
once,
as
we
tramped
in
from
work,
We
passed
an
open
grave.
With
yawning
mouth
the
yellow
hole
Gaped
for
a
living
thing;
The
very
mud
cried
out
for
blood
To
the
thirsty
asphalte
ring:
And
we
knew
that
ere
one
dawn
grew
fair
Some
prisoner
had
to
swing.
Right
in
we
went,
with
soul
intent
On
Death
and
Dread
and
Doom:
The
hangman,
with
his
little
bag,
Went
shuffling
through
the
gloom
And
each
man
trembled
as
he
crept
Into
his
numbered
tomb.
That
night
the
empty
corridors
Were
full
of
forms
of
Fear,
And
up
and
down
the
iron
town
Stole
feet
we
could
not
hear,
And
through
the
bars
that
hide
the
stars
White
faces
seemed
to
peer.
He
lay
as
one
who
lies
and
dreams
In
a
pleasant
meadow-land,
The
watcher
watched
him
as
he
slept,
And
could
not
understand
How
one
could
sleep
so
sweet
a
sleep
With
a
hangman
close
at
hand?
But
there
is
no
sleep
when
men
must
weep
Who
never
yet
have
wept:
So
we—the
fool,
the
fraud,
the
knave—
That
endless
vigil
kept,
And
through
each
brain
on
hands
of
pain
Another's
terror
crept.
Alas!
it
is
a
fearful
thing
To
feel
another's
guilt!
For,
right
within,
the
sword
of
Sin
Pierced
to
its
poisoned
hilt,
And
as
molten
lead
were
the
tears
we
shed
For
the
blood
we
had
not
spilt.
The
Warders
with
their
shoes
of
felt
Crept
by
each
padlocked
door,
And
peeped
and
saw,
with
eyes
of
awe,
Grey
figures
on
the
floor,
And
wondered
why
men
knelt
to
pray
Who
never
prayed
before.
All
through
the
night
we
knelt
and
prayed,
Mad
mourners
of
a
corpse!
The
troubled
plumes
of
midnight
were
The
plumes
upon
a
hearse:
And
bitter
wine
upon
a
sponge
Was
the
savior
of
Remorse.
The
cock
crew,
the
red
cock
crew,
But
never
came
the
day:
And
crooked
shape
of
Terror
crouched,
In
the
corners
where
we
lay:
And
each
evil
sprite
that
walks
by
night
Before
us
seemed
to
play.
They
glided
past,
they
glided
fast,
Like
travelers
through
a
mist:
They
mocked
the
moon
in
a
rigadoon
Of
delicate
turn
and
twist,
And
with
formal
pace
and
loathsome
grace
The
phantoms
kept
their
tryst.
With
mop
and
mow,
we
saw
them
go,
Slim
shadows
hand
in
hand:
About,
about,
in
ghostly
rout
They
trod
a
saraband:
And
the
damned
grotesques
made
arabesques,
Like
the
wind
upon
the
sand!
With
the
pirouettes
of
marionettes,
They
tripped
on
pointed
tread:
But
with
flutes
of
Fear
they
filled
the
ear,
As
their
grisly
masque
they
led,
And
loud
they
sang,
and
loud
they
sang,
For
they
sang
to
wake
the
dead.
"Oho!"
they
cried,
"The
world
is
wide,
But
fettered
limbs
go
lame!
And
once,
or
twice,
to
throw
the
dice
Is
a
gentlemanly
game,
But
he
does
not
win
who
plays
with
Sin
In
the
secret
House
of
Shame."
No
things
of
air
these
antics
were
That
frolicked
with
such
glee:
To
men
whose
lives
were
held
in
gyves,
And
whose
feet
might
not
go
free,
Ah!
wounds
of
Christ!
they
were
living
things,
Most
terrible
to
see.
Around,
around,
they
waltzed
and
wound;
Some
wheeled
in
smirking
pairs:
With
the
mincing
step
of
demirep
Some
sidled
up
the
stairs:
And
with
subtle
sneer,
and
fawning
leer,
Each
helped
us
at
our
prayers.
The
morning
wind
began
to
moan,
But
still
the
night
went
on:
Through
its
giant
loom
the
web
of
gloom
Crept
till
each
thread
was
spun:
And,
as
we
prayed,
we
grew
afraid
Of
the
Justice
of
the
Sun.
The
moaning
wind
went
wandering
round
The
weeping
prison-wall:
Till
like
a
wheel
of
turning-steel
We
felt
the
minutes
crawl:
O
moaning
wind!
what
had
we
done
To
have
such
a
seneschal?
At
last
I
saw
the
shadowed
bars
Like
a
lattice
wrought
in
lead,
Move
right
across
the
whitewashed
wall
That
faced
my
three-plank
bed,
And
I
knew
that
somewhere
in
the
world
God's
dreadful
dawn
was
red.
At
six
o'clock
we
cleaned
our
cells,
At
seven
all
was
still,
But
the
sough
and
swing
of
a
mighty
wing
The
prison
seemed
to
fill,
For
the
Lord
of
Death
with
icy
breath
Had
entered
in
to
kill.
He
did
not
pass
in
purple
pomp,
Nor
ride
a
moon-white
steed.
Three
yards
of
cord
and
a
sliding
board
Are
all
the
gallows'
need:
So
with
rope
of
shame
the
Herald
came
To
do
the
secret
deed.
We
were
as
men
who
through
a
fen
Of
filthy
darkness
grope:
We
did
not
dare
to
breathe
a
prayer,
Or
give
our
anguish
scope:
Something
was
dead
in
each
of
us,
And
what
was
dead
was
Hope.
For
Man's
grim
Justice
goes
its
way,
And
will
not
swerve
aside:
It
slays
the
weak,
it
slays
the
strong,
It
has
a
deadly
stride:
With
iron
heel
it
slays
the
strong,
The
monstrous
parricide!
We
waited
for
the
stroke
of
eight:
Each
tongue
was
thick
with
thirst:
For
the
stroke
of
eight
is
the
stroke
of
Fate
That
makes
a
man
accursed,
And
Fate
will
use
a
running
noose
For
the
best
man
and
the
worst.
We
had
no
other
thing
to
do,
Save
to
wait
for
the
sign
to
come:
So,
like
things
of
stone
in
a
valley
lone,
Quiet
we
sat
and
dumb:
But
each
man's
heart
beat
thick
and
quick
Like
a
madman
on
a
drum!
With
sudden
shock
the
prison-clock
Smote
on
the
shivering
air,
And
from
all
the
gaol
rose
up
a
wail
Of
impotent
despair,
Like
the
sound
that
frightened
marshes
hear
From
a
leper
in
his
lair.
And
as
one
sees
most
fearful
things
In
the
crystal
of
a
dream,
We
saw
the
greasy
hempen
rope
Hooked
to
the
blackened
beam,
And
heard
the
prayer
the
hangman's
snare
Strangled
into
a
scream.
And
all
the
woe
that
moved
him
so
That
he
gave
that
bitter
cry,
And
the
wild
regrets,
and
the
bloody
sweats,
None
knew
so
well
as
I:
For
he
who
live
more
lives
than
one
More
deaths
than
one
must
die.
IV.
There
is
no
chapel
on
the
day
On
which
they
hang
a
man:
The
Chaplain's
heart
is
far
too
sick,
Or
his
face
is
far
to
wan,
Or
there
is
that
written
in
his
eyes
Which
none
should
look
upon.
So
they
kept
us
close
till
nigh
on
noon,
And
then
they
rang
the
bell,
And
the
Warders
with
their
jingling
keys
Opened
each
listening
cell,
And
down
the
iron
stair
we
tramped,
Each
from
his
separate
Hell.
Out
into
God's
sweet
air
we
went,
But
not
in
wonted
way,
For
this
man's
face
was
white
with
fear,
And
that
man's
face
was
grey,
And
I
never
saw
sad
men
who
looked
So
wistfully
at
the
day.
I
never
saw
sad
men
who
looked
With
such
a
wistful
eye
Upon
that
little
tent
of
blue
We
prisoners
called
the
sky,
And
at
every
careless
cloud
that
passed
In
happy
freedom
by.
But
their
were
those
amongst
us
all
Who
walked
with
downcast
head,
And
knew
that,
had
each
go
his
due,
They
should
have
died
instead:
He
had
but
killed
a
thing
that
lived
Whilst
they
had
killed
the
dead.
For
he
who
sins
a
second
time
Wakes
a
dead
soul
to
pain,
And
draws
it
from
its
spotted
shroud,
And
makes
it
bleed
again,
And
makes
it
bleed
great
gouts
of
blood
And
makes
it
bleed
in
vain!
Like
ape
or
clown,
in
monstrous
garb
With
crooked
arrows
starred,
Silently
we
went
round
and
round
The
slippery
asphalte
yard;
Silently
we
went
round
and
round,
And
no
man
spoke
a
word.
Silently
we
went
round
and
round,
And
through
each
hollow
mind
The
memory
of
dreadful
things
Rushed
like
a
dreadful
wind,
An
Horror
stalked
before
each
man,
And
terror
crept
behind.
The
Warders
strutted
up
and
down,
And
kept
their
herd
of
brutes,
Their
uniforms
were
spick
and
span,
And
they
wore
their
Sunday
suits,
But
we
knew
the
work
they
had
been
at
By
the
quicklime
on
their
boots.
For
where
a
grave
had
opened
wide,
There
was
no
grave
at
all:
Only
a
stretch
of
mud
and
sand
By
the
hideous
prison-wall,
And
a
little
heap
of
burning
lime,
That
the
man
should
have
his
pall.
For
he
has
a
pall,
this
wretched
man,
Such
as
few
men
can
claim:
Deep
down
below
a
prison-yard,
Naked
for
greater
shame,
He
lies,
with
fetters
on
each
foot,
Wrapt
in
a
sheet
of
flame!
And
all
the
while
the
burning
lime
Eats
flesh
and
bone
away,
It
eats
the
brittle
bone
by
night,
And
the
soft
flesh
by
the
day,
It
eats
the
flesh
and
bones
by
turns,
But
it
eats
the
heart
alway.
For
three
long
years
they
will
not
sow
Or
root
or
seedling
there:
For
three
long
years
the
unblessed
spot
Will
sterile
be
and
bare,
And
look
upon
the
wondering
sky
With
unreproachful
stare.
They
think
a
murderer's
heart
would
taint
Each
simple
seed
they
sow.
It
is
not
true!
God's
kindly
earth
Is
kindlier
than
men
know,
And
the
red
rose
would
but
blow
more
red,
The
white
rose
whiter
blow.
Out
of
his
mouth
a
red,
red
rose!
Out
of
his
heart
a
white!
For
who
can
say
by
what
strange
way,
Christ
brings
his
will
to
light,
Since
the
barren
staff
the
pilgrim
bore
Bloomed
in
the
great
Pope's
sight?
But
neither
milk-white
rose
nor
red
May
bloom
in
prison
air;
The
shard,
the
pebble,
and
the
flint,
Are
what
they
give
us
there:
For
flowers
have
been
known
to
heal
A
common
man's
despair.
So
never
will
wine-red
rose
or
white,
Petal
by
petal,
fall
On
that
stretch
of
mud
and
sand
that
lies
By
the
hideous
prison-wall,
To
tell
the
men
who
tramp
the
yard
That
God's
Son
died
for
all.
Yet
though
the
hideous
prison-wall
Still
hems
him
round
and
round,
And
a
spirit
man
not
walk
by
night
That
is
with
fetters
bound,
And
a
spirit
may
not
weep
that
lies
In
such
unholy
ground,
He
is
at
peace—this
wretched
man—
At
peace,
or
will
be
soon:
There
is
no
thing
to
make
him
mad,
Nor
does
Terror
walk
at
noon,
For
the
lampless
Earth
in
which
he
lies
Has
neither
Sun
nor
Moon.
They
hanged
him
as
a
beast
is
hanged:
They
did
not
even
toll
A
requiem
that
might
have
brought
Rest
to
his
startled
soul,
But
hurriedly
they
took
him
out,
And
hid
him
in
a
hole.
They
stripped
him
of
his
canvas
clothes,
And
gave
him
to
the
flies;
They
mocked
the
swollen
purple
throat
And
the
stark
and
staring
eyes:
And
with
laughter
loud
they
heaped
the
shroud
In
which
their
convict
lies.
The
Chaplain
would
not
kneel
to
pray
By
his
dishonored
grave:
Nor
mark
it
with
that
blessed
Cross
That
Christ
for
sinners
gave,
Because
the
man
was
one
of
those
Whom
Christ
came
down
to
save.
Yet
all
is
well;
he
has
but
passed
To
Life's
appointed
bourne:
And
alien
tears
will
fill
for
him
Pity's
long-broken
urn,
For
his
mourner
will
be
outcast
men,
And
outcasts
always
mourn.
V.
I
know
not
whether
Laws
be
right,
Or
whether
Laws
be
wrong;
All
that
we
know
who
lie
in
goal
Is
that
the
wall
is
strong;
And
that
each
day
is
like
a
year,
A
year
whose
days
are
long.
But
this
I
know,
that
every
Law
That
men
have
made
for
Man,
Since
first
Man
took
his
brother's
life,
And
the
sad
world
began,
But
straws
the
wheat
and
saves
the
chaff
With
a
most
evil
fan.
This
too
I
know—and
wise
it
were
If
each
could
know
the
same—
That
every
prison
that
men
build
Is
built
with
bricks
of
shame,
And
bound
with
bars
lest
Christ
should
see
How
men
their
brothers
maim.
With
bars
they
blur
the
gracious
moon,
And
blind
the
goodly
sun:
And
they
do
well
to
hide
their
Hell,
For
in
it
things
are
done
That
Son
of
God
nor
son
of
Man
Ever
should
look
upon!
The
vilest
deeds
like
poison
weeds
Bloom
well
in
prison-air:
It
is
only
what
is
good
in
Man
That
wastes
and
withers
there:
Pale
Anguish
keeps
the
heavy
gate,
And
the
Warder
is
Despair
For
they
starve
the
little
frightened
child
Till
it
weeps
both
night
and
day:
And
they
scourge
the
weak,
and
flog
the
fool,
And
gibe
the
old
and
grey,
And
some
grow
mad,
and
all
grow
bad,
And
none
a
word
may
say.
Each
narrow
cell
in
which
we
dwell
Is
foul
and
dark
latrine,
And
the
fetid
breath
of
living
Death
Chokes
up
each
grated
screen,
And
all,
but
Lust,
is
turned
to
dust
In
Humanity's
machine.
The
brackish
water
that
we
drink
Creeps
with
a
loathsome
slime,
And
the
bitter
bread
they
weigh
in
scales
Is
full
of
chalk
and
lime,
And
Sleep
will
not
lie
down,
but
walks
Wild-eyed
and
cries
to
Time.
But
though
lean
Hunger
and
green
Thirst
Like
asp
with
adder
fight,
We
have
little
care
of
prison
fare,
For
what
chills
and
kills
outright
Is
that
every
stone
one
lifts
by
day
Becomes
one's
heart
by
night.
With
midnight
always
in
one's
heart,
And
twilight
in
one's
cell,
We
turn
the
crank,
or
tear
the
rope,
Each
in
his
separate
Hell,
And
the
silence
is
more
awful
far
Than
the
sound
of
a
brazen
bell.
And
never
a
human
voice
comes
near
To
speak
a
gentle
word:
And
the
eye
that
watches
through
the
door
Is
pitiless
and
hard:
And
by
all
forgot,
we
rot
and
rot,
With
soul
and
body
marred.
And
thus
we
rust
Life's
iron
chain
Degraded
and
alone:
And
some
men
curse,
and
some
men
weep,
And
some
men
make
no
moan:
But
God's
eternal
Laws
are
kind
And
break
the
heart
of
stone.
And
every
human
heart
that
breaks,
In
prison-cell
or
yard,
Is
as
that
broken
box
that
gave
Its
treasure
to
the
Lord,
And
filled
the
unclean
leper's
house
With
the
scent
of
costliest
nard.
Ah!
happy
day
they
whose
hearts
can
break
And
peace
of
pardon
win!
How
else
may
man
make
straight
his
plan
And
cleanse
his
soul
from
Sin?
How
else
but
through
a
broken
heart
May
Lord
Christ
enter
in?
And
he
of
the
swollen
purple
throat.
And
the
stark
and
staring
eyes,
Waits
for
the
holy
hands
that
took
The
Thief
to
Paradise;
And
a
broken
and
a
contrite
heart
The
Lord
will
not
despise.
The
man
in
red
who
reads
the
Law
Gave
him
three
weeks
of
life,
Three
little
weeks
in
which
to
heal
His
soul
of
his
soul's
strife,
And
cleanse
from
every
blot
of
blood
The
hand
that
held
the
knife.
And
with
tears
of
blood
he
cleansed
the
hand,
The
hand
that
held
the
steel:
For
only
blood
can
wipe
out
blood,
And
only
tears
can
heal:
And
the
crimson
stain
that
was
of
Cain
Became
Christ's
snow-white
seal.
VI.
In
Reading
gaol
by
Reading
town
There
is
a
pit
of
shame,
And
in
it
lies
a
wretched
man
Eaten
by
teeth
of
flame,
In
burning
winding-sheet
he
lies,
And
his
grave
has
got
no
name.
And
there,
till
Christ
call
forth
the
dead,
In
silence
let
him
lie:
No
need
to
waste
the
foolish
tear,
Or
heave
the
windy
sigh:
The
man
had
killed
the
thing
he
loved,
And
so
he
had
to
die.
And
all
men
kill
the
thing
they
love,
By
all
let
this
be
heard,
Some
do
it
with
a
bitter
look,
Some
with
a
flattering
word,
The
coward
does
it
with
a
kiss,
The
brave
man
with
a
sword!