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THOMAS HOOD.

THOMAS HOOD.

Great poets never die; their words are seedsWhich sheltered in the hearts of men take root,And grow and flourish into high-souled deeds—The world's sustaining fruit.
No idle dreamers they, nor light their task,Who, with a weapon simple as a song,Defend the Right, and tear the lying maskFrom the foul face of Wrong;
Who 'neath the coarsest, foulest rags can seeSome glimpses of the never-dying sparkThat lights the front of frail humanity,As stars illume the dark.
And such was he, whose spirit shot a rayOf sunlight through the sad hearts of the poor;—The dawning of that brighter, better day,No longer now obscure.
Patient in suffering, calm amid the strifeOf this bleak world, how patiently he wrought!—Weaving bright threads through the sad woof of life.In the great loom of Thought.
The music of his words, falling on earsDulled with the droning of the workshop wheel,Hath robbed the humble toiler of his tears,And taught him how to feel.
Fought he not bravely? Answer, ye oppressed:Fought he not wisely?—Let the future say:The sun that sets in such a golden westHeralds a golden day.