The poet, looking back upon the hopes he has cherished, perceives that he has fallen far short of achieving them. The songs he has sung are less sweet than those he has dreamed of singing; the wishes he has wrought into facts are less noble than those that are yet unfulfilled. But he looks forward to the time when all that he desires for humankind shall yet come to pass. The praise will not be his; it will belong to others. Still, he does not envy those who are destined to succeed where he failed. Rather does he rejoice that through them his hopes for the race will be realized. And he is happy that by longing for just such a triumph he shares in it—he makes it his triumph. Let the thick curtain fall; Not by the page word-painted Sweeter than any sung Others shall sing the song, What matter, I or they? Hail to the coming singers! The airs of heaven blow o'er me; A dream of man and woman The love of God and neighbor; Ring, bells in unreared steeples, Parcel and part of all, I feel the earth move sunward, John Green leaf Whittier. |