THE IMMORTAL PART
by A.E. Housman
(A Shropshire Lad was originally published in 1896. This Web edition is based on the 1908 edition printed by Ballantyne, Hanson, & Co.)

- When I meet the morning beam,
- Or lay me down at night to dream,
- I hear my bones within me say,
- “Another night, another day.

- “When shall this slough of sense be cast,
- This dust of thoughts be laid at last,
- The man of flesh and soul be slain
- And the man of bone remain?
-

- “This tongue that talks, these lungs that shout,
- These thews that hustle us about,
- This brain that fills the skull with schemes,
- And its humming hive of dreams,–

- “These to-day are proud in power And lord it in their little hour:
- The immortal bones obey control
- Of dying flesh and dying soul.

- “‘Tis long till eve and morn are gone:
- Slow the endless night comes on,
- And late to fulness grows the birth
- That shall last as long as earth.
-

- “Wanderers eastward, wanderers west,
- Know you why you cannot rest?
- ‘Tis that every mother’s son
- Travails with a skeleton.
- “Lie down in the bed of dust;
- Bear the fruit that bear you must;
- Bring the eternal seed to light,
- And morn is all the same as night.
- “Rest you so from trouble sore,
- Fear the heat o’ the sun no more,
- Nor the snowing winter wild,
- Now you labour not with child.

- “Empty vessel, garment cast,
- We that wore you long shall last.
- –Another night, another day.”
- So my bones within me say.

- Therefore they shall do my will
- To-day while I am master still,
- And flesh and soul, now both are strong,
- Shall hale the sullen slaves along,
-

- Before this fire of sense decay,
- This smoke of thought blow clean away,
- And leave with ancient night alone
- The stedfast and enduring bone.


