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    "Sane and intelligent human beings are like all other human beings, and carefully and cautiously and diligently conceal their private real opinions from the world and give out fictitious ones in their stead for general consumption."
     

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    Part 1 - Chapter 14

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    Wherein Are Inserted The Despairing Verses Of The Dead Shepherd, Together With Other Incidents Not Looked For

    THE LAY OF CHRYSOSTOM

    Since thou dost in thy cruelty desire
    The ruthless rigour of thy tyranny
    From tongue to tongue, from land to land proclaimed,
    The very Hell will I constrain to lend
    This stricken breast of mine deep notes of woe
    To serve my need of fitting utterance.
    And as I strive to body forth the tale
    Of all I suffer, all that thou hast done,
    Forth shall the dread voice roll, and bear along
    Shreds from my vitals torn for greater pain.
    Then listen, not to dulcet harmony,
    But to a discord wrung by mad despair
    Out of this bosom's depths of bitterness,
    To ease my heart and plant a sting in thine.

    The lion's roar, the fierce wolf's savage howl,
    The horrid hissing of the scaly snake,
    The awesome cries of monsters yet unnamed,
    The crow's ill-boding croak, the hollow moan
    Of wild winds wrestling with the restless sea,
    The wrathful bellow of the vanquished bull,
    The plaintive sobbing of the widowed dove,
    The envied owl's sad note, the wail of woe
    That rises from the dreary choir of Hell,
    Commingled in one sound, confusing sense,
    Let all these come to aid my soul's complaint,
    For pain like mine demands new modes of song.

    No echoes of that discord shall be heard
    Where Father Tagus rolls, or on the banks
    Of olive-bordered Betis; to the rocks
    Or in deep caverns shall my plaint be told,
    And by a lifeless tongue in living words;
    Or in dark valleys or on lonely shores,
    Where neither foot of man nor sunbeam falls;
    Or in among the poison-breathing swarms
    Of monsters nourished by the sluggish Nile.
    For, though it be to solitudes remote
    The hoarse vague echoes of my sorrows sound
    Thy matchless cruelty, my dismal fate
    Shall carry them to all the spacious world.

    Disdain hath power to kill, and patience dies
    Slain by suspicion, be it false or true;
    And deadly is the force of jealousy;
    Long absence makes of life a dreary void;
    No hope of happiness can give repose
    To him that ever fears to be forgot;
    And death, inevitable, waits in hall.
    But I, by some strange miracle, live on
    A prey to absence, jealousy, disdain;
    Racked by suspicion as by certainty;

    Forgotten, left to feed my flame alone.
    And while I suffer thus, there comes no ray
    Of hope to gladden me athwart the gloom;
    Nor do I look for it in my despair;
    But rather clinging to a cureless woe,
    All hope do I abjure for evermore.

    Can there be hope where fear is? Were it well,
    When far more certain are the grounds of fear?
    Ought I to shut mine eyes to jealousy,
    If through a thousand heart-wounds it appears?
    Who
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