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1868–1950

SONG OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT

Edgar Lee Masters

How beautiful is the human spirit In its vase of clay! It takes no thought of the chary dole Of the light of day.

It labors and loves, as it were a soul Whom the gods repay With length of life, and a golden goal At the end of the way.

There are souls I know who arch a dome, And tunnel a hill. They chisel in marble and fashion in chrome, And measure the sky.

They find the good and destroy the ill, And they bend and ply The laws of nature out of a will While the fates deny.

I wonder and worship the human spirit When I behold Numbers and symbols, and how they reach Through steel and gold;

A harp, a battle-ship, thought and speech, And an hour foretold. It ponders its nature to turn and teach, And itself to mould.

The human spirit is God, no doubt, Is flesh made the word: Jesus, Beethoven and Raphael, And the souls who heard

Beyond the rim of the world the swell Of an ocean stirred By a Power on the waters inscrutable. There are souls who gird

Their loins in faith that the world is well, In a faith unblurred. How beautiful is the human spirit — The flesh made the word!

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