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<teiHeader creator="Margaret Lantry" status="update" date.created="1997-08-27" date.updated="2008-07-31">
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title type="uniform">The Ballad of Reading Gaol</title>
<title type="gmd">An electronic edition</title>
<author sortas="wilde, oscar">Oscar Wilde</author>
<respStmt>
<resp>Electronic edition compiled by</resp>
<name id="DOC">Donnchadh &Oacute; Corr&aacute;in</name>
<resp>proofed by</resp>
<name id="ML">Margaret Lantry</name>
</respStmt>
<funder>University College Cork.</funder>
</titleStmt>
<editionStmt>
<edition n="1">First draft, revised and corrected.</edition>
</editionStmt>
<extent><measure type="words">6270</measure></extent>
<publicationStmt>
<publisher>CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts: a project of University College, Cork.</publisher>
<address>
<addrLine>College Road, Cork, Ireland&mdash;http://www.ucc.ie/celt</addrLine>
</address>
<date>1997</date>
<date>2008</date>
<distributor>CELT online at University College, Cork, Ireland.</distributor>
<idno type="celt">E850003-023</idno>
<availability status="restricted">
<p>Available with prior consent of the CELT programme for purposes of academic research and teaching only.</p>
</availability>
</publicationStmt>
<notesStmt>
<note>There is not as yet an authoritative edition of Wilde's works.</note>
</notesStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<listBibl>
<head>Select editions</head>
<bibl n="1">The writings of Oscar Wilde (London; New York: A. R. Keller &amp; Co. 1907) 15 vols. Vol. 1: The Ballad of Reading Gaol, etc.</bibl>
<bibl n="2">Robert Ross (ed), The First Collected Edition of the Works of Oscar Wilde (London: Methuen &amp; Co. 1908). 15 vols. Reprinted Dawsons: Pall Mall 1969.</bibl>
<bibl n="3">Complete works of Oscar Wilde (Glasgow: HarperCollins, 1994).</bibl>
</listBibl>
<listBibl>
<head>Select editions of The Ballad of Reading Gaol.</head>
<bibl n="1">The ballad of Reading gaol 1898 (Poole: Woodstock 1995). Facsimile edition of 1898 London publication.</bibl>
<bibl n="2">The ballad of Reading gaol (New York: Brentano's 1900).</bibl>
<bibl n="3">De profundis, and, The ballad of Reading gaol (Leipzig: B. Tauchnitz 1908). Copyright edition.</bibl>
</listBibl>
<listBibl>
<head>Select bibliography</head>
<bibl n="1">'Notes for a bibliography of Oscar Wilde', Books and book-plates (A quarterly for collectors) 5, no. 3 (April 1905), 170-183.</bibl>
<bibl n="2">Karl E. Beckson, The Oscar Wilde encyclopedia (New York: AMS Press 1998). AMS Studies in the nineteenth century 18.</bibl>
<bibl n="3">Richard Ellmann; John Espey, Oscar Wilde: two approaches: papers read at a Clark Library seminar, April 17, 1976 (Los Angeles: William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California 1977).</bibl>
<bibl n="4">Richard Ellmann, Oscar Wilde at Oxford: a lecture delivered at the Library of Congress on March 1, 1983 (Washington, DC: Library of Congress 1984).</bibl>
<bibl n="5">Richard Ellmann, Oscar Wilde: a biography (London: Hamilton 1987).</bibl>
<bibl n="6">Juliet Gardiner, Oscar Wilde: a life in letters, writings and wit (Dublin: Gill &amp; Macmillan 1995).</bibl>
<bibl n="7">Frank Harris, Oscar Wilde, including My memories of Oscar Wilde, by George Bernard Shaw and an introductory note by Lyle Blair (London: Robinson, 1992).</bibl>
<bibl n="8">Rupert Hart-Davis (ed), Selected letters of Oscar Wilde (Oxford: Oxford University Press 1979).</bibl>
<bibl n="9">Rupert Hart-Davis (ed), More letters of Oscar Wilde (London: Murray 1985).</bibl>
<bibl n="10">Vyvyan Beresford Holland, Oscar Wilde: a pictorial biography (London: Thames &amp; Hudson 1960).</bibl>
<bibl n="11">Abraham Horodisch, Oscar Wilde's Ballad of Reading gaol, a bibliographical study (New York: Aldus Book Co. 1954). 326 copies pubd.</bibl>
<bibl n="12">H. Montgomery Hyde, Oscar Wilde: a biography (London: Methuen 1977).</bibl>
<bibl n="13">Andrew McDonnell, Oscar Wilde at Oxford: an annotated catalogue of Wilde manuscripts and related items at the Bodleian Library, Oxford, including many hitherto unpublished letters, photographs and illustrations (A. McDonnell 1996). Limited edition of 170 copies.</bibl>
<bibl n="14">Stuart Mason, Bibliography of Oscar Wilde (London: E. G. Richards 1907). Also pubd. New York 1908, London 1914 in 2 vols. Repr. of 1914 edition: New York: Haskell House 1972.</bibl>
<bibl n="15">E. H. Mikhail, Oscar Wilde: an annotated bibliography of criticism (London: Macmillan 1978). Also pubd. Totowa NJ: Rowman &amp; Littlefield 1978.</bibl>
<bibl n="16">Thomas A. Mikolyzk, Oscar Wilde: an annotated bibliography (Westport CT: Greenwood Press 1993). Bibliographies and indexes in world literature, 38.</bibl>
<bibl n="17">Norman Page, An Oscar Wilde chronology (London: Macmillan 1991).</bibl>
<bibl n="18">Hesketh Pearson, A Life of Oscar Wilde (London 1946).</bibl>
<bibl n="19">Richard Pine, The thief of reason: Oscar Wilde and modern Ireland (Dublin: Gill &amp; Macmillan 1996).</bibl>
<bibl n="20">Horst Schroeder, Additions and corrections to Richard Ellmann's Oscar Wilde (Braunschweig: H. Schroeder 1989).</bibl>
</listBibl>
<listBibl>
<head>The edition used in the digital edition</head>
<biblFull>
<titleStmt>
<title level="m">The Ballad of Reading Gaol</title>
<author>C. 3. 3. [Oscar Wilde]</author>
</titleStmt>
<editionStmt>
<edition>First edition, reprinted</edition>
</editionStmt>
<extent>vii + 31pp</extent>
<publicationStmt>
<publisher>Leonard Smithers</publisher>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>1899</date>
</publicationStmt>
</biblFull>
</listBibl>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<encodingDesc>
<projectDesc>
<p>CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts</p>
</projectDesc>
<samplingDecl>
<p>All the text has been retained. Variant readings have not been reproduced in this edition.</p>
</samplingDecl>
<editorialDecl>
<correction status="high">
<p>Text has been checked, proof-read and parsed using NSGMLS.</p>
</correction>
<normalization>
<p>The electronic text represents the edited text.</p>
</normalization>
<quotation>
<p>Direct speech is marked <emph>q</emph>.</p>
</quotation>
<hyphenation>
<p>The editorial practice of the hard-copy editor has been
retained.</p>
</hyphenation>
<segmentation>
<p><emph>div0</emph>=the whole text. Metrical lines and quatrains, although not numbered in the printed text, are marked and numbered. <emph>div1</emph>=the sections of the poem as indicated in the printed text.</p>
</segmentation>
<interpretation>
<p>Names of places are not tagged. Terms for cultural and social roles are not tagged.</p>
</interpretation>
</editorialDecl>
<refsDecl>
<p>The <emph>n</emph> attribute of each text in this corpus carries a
unique identifying number for the whole text.</p>
<p>The title of the text is held as the first <emph>head</emph>
element within each text.</p>
<p><emph>div0</emph> is reserved for the
text (whether in one volume or many).</p>
<p>The numbered quatrains provide a canonical reference.</p>
</refsDecl>
</encodingDesc>
<profileDesc>
<creation>By Oscar Wilde (1854&ndash;1900).
<date>1898</date></creation>
<langUsage> 
<language id="en">The text is in English.</language>
<language id="la">One word is in Latin.</language>
</langUsage>
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<keywords>
<term>literary</term>
<term>poetry</term>
<term>19c</term>
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<change>
<date>2010-09-08</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Beatrix F&auml;rber</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Conversion script run; new SGML and HTML files created.</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>2008-07-31</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Beatrix F&auml;rber</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Keywords added; file validated. Minor changes made to header; new wordcount made.</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>2005-08-25</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Julianne Nyhan</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Normalised language codes and edited langUsage for XML conversion</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>2005-08-04T14:26:09+0100</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Peter Flynn</name>
<resp>conversion</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Converted to XML</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>1997-09-03</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Margaret Lantry</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Text proofed; text normalized using SGMLNORM and parsed using NSGMLS.
Header revised.</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>1997-08-27</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Margaret Lantry</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Header constructed.</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>1997-05-27</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Donnchadh &Oacute; Corr&aacute;in</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Text proofed, structural mark-up added.</item>
</change>
<change>
<date>1997-05-28</date>
<respStmt>
<name>Donnchadh &Oacute; Corr&aacute;in</name>
<resp>ed.</resp>
</respStmt>
<item>Text captured.</item>
</change>
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<text n="E850003-023">
<front>
<div type="dedication">
<p>In Memoriam C.T.W. Sometime Trooper of The Royal Horse Guards.
<frn lang="la">Obiit</frn> H. M. Prison, Reading, Berkshire, July 7th, 1896</p>
</div>
</front>
<body>
<div0 type="poem" lang="en">
<head>The Ballad of Reading Gaol</head>
<pb n="1"/>
<div1 n="1" type="canto">
<lg n="1" type="sestet">
<l n="1">He did not wear his scarlet coat,</l>
<l n="2">For blood and wine are red,</l>
<l n="3">And blood and wine were on his hands</l>
<l n="4">When they found him with the dead,</l>
<l n="5">The poor dead woman whom he loved,</l>
<l n="6">And murdered in her bed.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="2" type="sestet">
<l n="7">He walked amongst the Trial Men</l>
<l n="8">In a suit of shabby gray;</l>
<l n="9">A cricket cap was on his head,</l>
<l n="10">And his step seemed light and gay;</l>
<l n="11">But I never saw a man who looked</l>
<l n="12">So wistfully at the day.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="3" type="sestet">
<l n="13">I never saw a man who looked</l>
<l n="14">With such a wistful eye</l>
<l n="15">Upon that little tent of blue</l>
<l n="16">Which prisoners call the sky,</l>
<l n="17">And at every drifting cloud that went</l>
<l n="18">With sails of silver by.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="2"/>
<lg n="4" type="sestet">
<l n="19">I walked, with other souls in pain,</l>
<l n="20">Within another ring,</l>
<l n="21">And was wondering if the man had done</l>
<l n="22">A great or little thing,</l>
<l n="23">When a voice behind me whispered low,</l>
<l n="24"><q>That fellow's got to swing</q>.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="5" type="sestet">
<l n="25">Dear Christ! the very prison walls</l>
<l n="26">Suddenly seemed to reel,</l>
<l n="27">And the sky above my head became</l>
<l n="28">Like a casque of scorching steel;</l>
<l n="29">And, though I was a soul in pain,</l>
<l n="30">My pain I could not feel.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="6" type="sestet">
<l n="31">I only knew what hunted thought</l>
<l n="32">Quickened his step, and why</l>
<l n="33">He looked upon the garish day</l>
<l n="34">With such a wistful eye;</l>
<l n="35">The man had killed the thing he loved</l>
<l n="36">And so he had to die.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="7" type="sestet">
<l n="37">Yet each man kills the thing he loves</l>
<l n="38">By each let this be heard,</l>
<l n="39">Some do it with a bitter look,</l>
<l n="40">Some with a flattering word,</l>
<l n="41">The coward does it with a kiss,</l>
<l n="42">The brave man with a sword!</l>
</lg>
<pb n="3"/>
<lg n="8" type="sestet">
<l n="43">Some kill their love when they are young,</l>
<l n="44">And some when they are old;</l>
<l n="45">Some strangle with the hands of Lust,</l>
<l n="46">Some with the hands of Gold:</l>
<l n="47">The kindest use a knife, because</l>
<l n="48">The dead so soon grow cold.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="9" type="sestet">
<l n="49">Some love too little, some too long,</l>
<l n="50">Some sell, and others buy;</l>
<l n="51">Some do the deed with many tears,</l>
<l n="52">And some without a sigh:</l>
<l n="53">For each man kills the thing he loves,</l>
<l n="54">Yet each man does not die.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="10" type="sestet">
<l n="55">He does not die a death of shame</l>
<l n="56">On a day of dark disgrace,</l>
<l n="57">Nor have a noose about his neck,</l>
<l n="58">Nor a cloth upon his face,</l>
<l n="59">Nor drop feet foremost through the floor</l>
<l n="60">Into an empty place.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="11" type="sestet">
<l n="61">He does not sit with silent men</l>
<l n="62">Who watch him night and day;</l>
<l n="63">Who watch him when he tries to weep,</l>
<l n="64">And when he tries to pray;</l>
<l n="65">Who watch him lest himself should rob</l>
<l n="66">The prison of its prey.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="4"/>
<lg n="12" type="sestet">
<l n="67">He does not wake at dawn to see</l>
<l n="68">Dread figures throng his room,</l>
<l n="69">The shivering Chaplain robed in white,</l>
<l n="70">The Sheriff stern with gloom,</l>
<l n="71">And the Governor all in shiny black,</l>
<l n="72">With the yellow face of Doom.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="13" type="sestet">
<l n="73">He does not rise in piteous haste</l>
<l n="74">To put on convict-clothes,</l>
<l n="75">While some coarse-mouthed Doctor gloats, and notes</l>
<l n="76">Each new and nerve-twitched pose,</l>
<l n="77">Fingering a watch whose little ticks</l>
<l n="78">Are like horrible hammer-blows.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="14" type="sestet">
<l n="79">He does not know that sickening thirst</l>
<l n="80">That sands one's throat, before</l>
<l n="81">The hangman with his gardener's gloves</l>
<l n="82">Slips through the padded door,</l>
<l n="83">And binds one with three leathern thongs,</l>
<l n="84">That the throat may thirst no more.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="15" type="sestet">
<l n="85">He does not bend his head to hear</l>
<l n="86">The Burial Office read,</l>
<l n="87">Nor, while the terror of his soul</l>
<l n="88">Tells him he is not dead,</l>
<l n="89">Cross his own coffin, as he moves</l>
<l n="90">Into the hideous shed.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="5"/>
<lg n="16" type="sestet">
<l n="91">He does not stare upon the air</l>
<l n="92">Through a little roof of glass:</l>
<l n="93">He does not pray with lips of clay</l>
<l n="94">For his agony to pass;</l>
<l n="95">Nor feel upon his shuddering cheek</l>
<l n="96">The kiss of Caiaphas.</l>
</lg>
</div1>
<pb n="6"/>
<div1 n="2" type="canto">
<lg n="17" type="sestet">
<l n="97">Six weeks our guardsman walked the yard,</l>
<l n="98">In a suit of shabby gray:</l>
<l n="99">His cricket cap was on his head,</l>
<l n="100">And his step seemed light and gay,</l>
<l n="101">But I never saw a man who looked </l>
<l n="102">So wistfully at the day.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="18" type="sestet">
<l n="103">I never saw a man who looked </l>
<l n="104">With such a wistful eye</l>
<l n="105">Upon that little tent of blue</l>
<l n="106">Which prisoners call the sky,</l>
<l n="107">And at every wandering cloud that trailed</l>
<l n="108">Its ravelled fleeces by.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="19" type="sestet">
<l n="109">He did not wring his hands, as do</l>
<l n="110">Those witless men who dare</l>
<l n="111">To try to rear the changeling Hope</l>
<l n="112">In the cave of black Despair:</l>
<l n="113">He only looked upon the sun,</l>
<l n="114">And drank the morning air.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="7"/>
<lg n="20" type="sestet">
<l n="115">He did not wring his hands nor weep,</l>
<l n="116">Nor did he peek or pine,</l>
<l n="117">But he drank the air as though it held</l>
<l n="118">Some healthful anodyne;</l>
<l n="119">With open mouth he drank the sun</l>
<l n="120">As though it had been wine!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="21" type="sestet">
<l n="121">And I and all the souls in pain,</l>
<l n="122">Who tramped the other ring,</l>
<l n="123">Forgot if we ourselves had done</l>
<l n="124">A great or little thing,</l>
<l n="125">And watched with gaze of dull amaze</l>
<l n="126">The man who had to swing.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="22" type="sestet">
<l n="127">And strange it was to see him pass</l>
<l n="128">With a step so light and gay,</l>
<l n="129">And strange it was to see him look </l>
<l n="130">So wistfully at the day,</l>
<l n="131">And strange it was to think that he</l>
<l n="132">Had such a debt to pay.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="23" type="sestet">
<l n="133">For oak and elm have pleasant leaves</l>
<l n="134">That in the spring-time shoot:</l>
<l n="135">But grim to see is the gallows-tree,</l>
<l n="136">With its adder-bitten root,</l>
<l n="137">And, green or dry, a man must die</l>
<l n="138">Before it bears its fruit!</l>
</lg>
<pb n="8"/>
<lg n="24" type="sestet">
<l n="139">The loftiest place is that seat of grace</l>
<l n="140">For which all worldlings try:</l>
<l n="141">But who would stand in hempen band</l>
<l n="142">Upon a scaffold high,</l>
<l n="143">And through a murderer's collar take</l>
<l n="144">His last look at the sky?</l>
</lg>
<lg n="25" type="sestet">
<l n="145">It is sweet to dance to violins</l>
<l n="146">When Love and Life are fair:</l>
<l n="147">To dance to flutes, to dance to lutes</l>
<l n="148">Is delicate and rare:</l>
<l n="149">But it is not sweet with nimble feet</l>
<l n="150">To dance upon the air!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="26" type="sestet">
<l n="151">So with curious eyes and sick surmise</l>
<l n="152">We watched him day by day,</l>
<l n="153">And wondered if each one of us</l>
<l n="154">Would end the self-same way,</l>
<l n="155">For none can tell to what red Hell</l>
<l n="156">His sightless soul may stray.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="27" type="sestet">
<l n="157">At last the dead man walked no more</l>
<l n="158">Amongst the Trial Men,</l>
<l n="159">And I knew that he was standing up</l>
<l n="160">In the black dock's dreadful pen,</l>
<l n="161">And that never would I see his face</l>
<l n="162">In God's sweet world again.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="9"/>
<lg n="28" type="sestet">
<l n="163">Like two doomed ships that pass in storm</l>
<l n="164">We had crossed each other's way:</l>
<l n="165">But we made no sign, we said no word,</l>
<l n="166">We had no word to say;</l>
<l n="167">For we did not meet in the holy night,</l>
<l n="168">But in the shameful day.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="29" type="sestet">
<l n="169">A prison wall was round us both,</l>
<l n="170">Two outcast men were we:</l>
<l n="171">The world had thrust us from its heart,</l>
<l n="172">And God from out His care:</l>
<l n="173">And the iron gin that waits for Sin</l>
<l n="174">Had caught us in its snare.</l>
</lg>
</div1>
<pb n="10"/>
<div1 n="3" type="canto">
<lg n="30" type="sestet">
<l n="175">In Debtors' Yard the stones are hard,</l>
<l n="176">And the dripping wall is high,</l>
<l n="177">So it was there he took the air</l>
<l n="178">Beneath the leaden sky,</l>
<l n="179">And by each side a Warder walked,</l>
<l n="180">For fear the man might die.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="31" type="sestet">
<l n="181">Or else he sat with those who watched</l>
<l n="182">His anguish night and day;</l>
<l n="183">Who watched him when he rose to weep,</l>
<l n="184">And when he crouched to pray;</l>
<l n="185">Who watched him lest himself should rob</l>
<l n="186">Their scaffold of its prey.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="32" type="sestet">
<l n="187">The Governor was strong upon</l>
<l n="188">The Regulations Act:</l>
<l n="189">The Doctor said that Death was but</l>
<l n="190">A scientific fact:</l>
<l n="191">And twice a day the Chaplain called</l>
<l n="192">And left a little tract.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="11"/>
<lg n="33" type="sestet">
<l n="193">And twice a day he smoked his pipe,</l>
<l n="194">And drank his quart of beer:</l>
<l n="195">His soul was resolute, and held</l>
<l n="196">No hiding-place for fear;</l>
<l n="197">He often said that he was glad</l>
<l n="198">The hangman's hands were near.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="34" type="sestet">
<l n="199">But why he said so strange a thing</l>
<l n="200">No Warder dared to ask:</l>
<l n="201">For he to whom a watcher's doom</l>
<l n="202">Is given as his task,</l>
<l n="203">Must set a lock upon his lips,</l>
<l n="204">And make his face a mask.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="35" type="sestet">
<l n="205">Or else he might be moved, and try</l>
<l n="206">To comfort or console:</l>
<l n="207">And what should Human Pity do</l>
<l n="208">Pent up in Murderers' Hole?</l>
<l n="209">What word of grace in such a place</l>
<l n="210">Could help a brother's soul?</l>
</lg>
<lg n="36" type="sestet">
<l n="211">With slouch and swing around the ring</l>
<l n="212">We trod the Fool's Parade!</l>
<l n="213">We did not care: we knew we were</l>
<l n="214">The Devil's Own Brigade:</l>
<l n="215">And shaven head and feet of lead</l>
<l n="216">Make a merry masquerade.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="12"/>
<lg n="37" type="sestet">
<l n="217">We tore the tarry rope to shreds</l>
<l n="218">With blunt and bleeding nails;</l>
<l n="219">We rubbed the doors, and scrubbed the floors,</l>
<l n="220">And cleaned the shining rails:</l>
<l n="221">And, rank by rank, we soaped the plank,</l>
<l n="222">And clattered with the pails.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="38" type="sestet">
<l n="223">We sewed the sacks, we broke the stones,</l>
<l n="224">We turned the dusty drill:</l>
<l n="225">We banged the tins, and bawled the hymns,</l>
<l n="226">And sweated on the mill:</l>
<l n="227">But in the heart of every man</l>
<l n="228">Terror was lying still.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="39" type="sestet">
<l n="229">So still it lay that every day</l>
<l n="230">Crawled like a weed-clogged wave:</l>
<l n="231">And we forgot the bitter lot</l>
<l n="232">That waits for fool and knave,</l>
<l n="233">Till once, as we tramped in from work,</l>
<l n="234">We passed an open grave.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="40" type="sestet">
<l n="235">With yawning mouth the yellow hole</l>
<l n="236">Gaped for a living thing;</l>
<l n="237">The very mud cried out for blood</l>
<l n="238">To the thirsty asphalte ring:</l>
<l n="239">And we knew that ere one dawn grew fair</l>
<l n="240">Some prisoner had to swing.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="13"/>
<lg n="41" type="sestet">
<l n="241">Right in we went, with soul intent</l>
<l n="242">On Death and Dread and Doom:</l>
<l n="243">The hangman, with his little bag,</l>
<l n="244">Went shuffling through the gloom</l>
<l n="245">And each man trembled as he crept</l>
<l n="246">Into his numbered tomb.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="42" type="sestet">
<l n="247">That night the empty corridors</l>
<l n="248">Were full of forms of Fear,</l>
<l n="249">And up and down the iron town</l>
<l n="250">Stole feet we could not hear,</l>
<l n="251">And through the bars that hide the stars</l>
<l n="252">White faces seemed to peer.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="43" type="sestet">
<l n="253">He lay as one who lies and dreams</l>
<l n="254">In a pleasant meadow-land,</l>
<l n="255">The watcher watched him as he slept,</l>
<l n="256">And could not understand</l>
<l n="257">How one could sleep so sweet a sleep</l>
<l n="258">With a hangman close at hand</l>
</lg>
<lg n="44" type="sestet">
<l n="259">But there is no sleep when men must weep</l>
<l n="260">Who never yet have wept:</l>
<l n="261">So we&mdash;the fool, the fraud, the knave&mdash;</l>
<l n="262">That endless vigil kept,</l>
<l n="263">And through each brain on hands of pain</l>
<l n="264">Another's terror crept.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="14"/>
<lg n="45" type="sestet">
<l n="265">Alas! it is a fearful thing</l>
<l n="266">To feel another's guilt!</l>
<l n="267">For, right within, the sword of Sin</l>
<l n="268">Pierced to its poisoned hilt,</l>
<l n="269">And as molten lead were the tears we shed</l>
<l n="270">For the blood we had not spilt.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="46" type="sestet">
<l n="271">The Warders with their shoes of felt</l>
<l n="272">Crept by each padlocked door,</l>
<l n="273">And peeped and saw, with eyes of awe,</l>
<l n="274">Grey figures on the floor,</l>
<l n="275">And wondered why men knelt to pray</l>
<l n="276">Who never prayed before.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="47" type="sestet">
<l n="277">All through the night we knelt and prayed,</l>
<l n="278">Mad mourners of a corpse!</l>
<l n="279">The troubled plumes of midnight were</l>
<l n="280">The plumes upon a hearse:</l>
<l n="281">And bitter wine upon a sponge</l>
<l n="282">Was the savour of Remorse.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="48" type="sestet">
<l n="283">The gray cock crew, the red cock crew,</l>
<l n="284">But never came the day:</l>
<l n="285">And crooked shape of Terror crouched,</l>
<l n="286">In the corners where we lay:</l>
<l n="287">And each evil sprite that walks by night</l>
<l n="288">Before us seemed to play.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="15"/>
<lg n="49" type="sestet">
<l n="289">They glided past, they glided fast,</l>
<l n="290">Like travellers through a mist:</l>
<l n="291">They mocked the moon in a rigadoon</l>
<l n="292">Of delicate turn and twist,</l>
<l n="293">And with formal pace and loathsome grace</l>
<l n="294">The phantoms kept their tryst.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="50" type="sestet">
<l n="295">With mop and mow, we saw them go,</l>
<l n="296">Slim shadows hand in hand:</l>
<l n="297">About, about, in ghostly rout</l>
<l n="298">They trod a saraband:</l>
<l n="299">And the damned grotesques made arabesques,</l>
<l n="300">Like the wind upon the sand!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="51" type="sestet">
<l n="301">With the pirouettes of marionettes,</l>
<l n="302">They tripped on pointed tread:</l>
<l n="303">But with flutes of Fear they filled the ear,</l>
<l n="304">As their grisly masque they led,</l>
<l n="305">And loud they sang, and loud they sang,</l>
<l n="306">For they sang to wake the dead.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="52" type="sestet">
<l n="307"><q>Oho!</q> they cried,<q>The world is wide,</q></l>
<l n="308"><q>But fettered limbs go lame!</q></l>
<l n="309"><q>And once, or twice, to throw the dice</q></l>
<l n="310"><q>Is a gentlemanly game,</q></l>
<l n="311"><q>But he does not win who plays with Sin</q></l>
<l n="312"><q>In the secret House of Shame.</q></l>
</lg>
<pb n="16"/>
<lg n="53" type="sestet">
<l n="313">No things of air these antics were</l>
<l n="314">That frolicked with such glee:</l>
<l n="315">To men whose lives were held in gyves,</l>
<l n="316">And whose feet might not go free,</l>
<l n="317">Ah! wounds of Christ! they were living things,</l>
<l n="318">Most terrible to see.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="54" type="sestet">
<l n="319">Around, around, they waltzed and wound;</l>
<l n="320">Some wheeled in smirking pairs:</l>
<l n="321">With the mincing step of demirep</l>
<l n="322">Some sidled up the stairs:</l>
<l n="323">And with subtle sneer, and fawning leer,</l>
<l n="324">Each helped us at our prayers.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="55" type="sestet">
<l n="325">The morning wind began to moan,</l>
<l n="326">But still the night went on:</l>
<l n="327">Through its giant loom the web of gloom</l>
<l n="328">Crept till each thread was spun:</l>
<l n="329">And, as we prayed, we grew afraid</l>
<l n="330">Of the Justice of the Sun.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="56" type="sestet">
<l n="331">The moaning wind went wandering round</l>
<l n="332">The weeping prison-wall:</l>
<l n="333">Till like a wheel of turning-steel</l>
<l n="334">We felt the minutes crawl:</l>
<l n="335">O moaning wind! what had we done</l>
<l n="336">To have such a seneschal?</l>
</lg>
<pb n="17"/>
<lg n="57" type="sestet">
<l n="337">At last I saw the shadowed bars</l>
<l n="338">Like a lattice wrought in lead,</l>
<l n="339">Move right across the whitewashed wall</l>
<l n="340">That faced my three-plank bed,</l>
<l n="341">And I knew that somewhere in the world</l>
<l n="342">God's dreadful dawn was red.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="58" type="sestet">
<l n="343">At six o'clock we cleaned our cells, </l>
<l n="344">At seven all was still,</l>
<l n="345">But the sough and swing of a mighty wing</l>
<l n="346">The prison seemed to fill,</l>
<l n="347">For the Lord of Death with icy breath</l>
<l n="348">Had entered in to kill.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="59" type="sestet">
<l n="349">He did not pass in purple pomp,</l>
<l n="350">Nor ride a moon-white steed.</l>
<l n="351">Three yards of cord and a sliding board</l>
<l n="352">Are all the gallows' need:</l>
<l n="353">So with rope of shame the Herald came</l>
<l n="354">To do the secret deed.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="60" type="sestet">
<l n="355">We were as men who through a fen</l>
<l n="356">Of filthy darkness grope:</l>
<l n="357">We did not dare to breathe a prayer,</l>
<l n="358">Or give our anguish scope:</l>
<l n="359">Something was dead in each of us,</l>
<l n="360">And what was dead was Hope.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="18"/>
<lg n="61" type="sestet">
<l n="361">For Man's grim Justice goes its way,</l>
<l n="362">And will not swerve aside:</l>
<l n="363">It slays the weak, it slays the strong,</l>
<l n="364">It has a deadly stride:</l>
<l n="365">With iron heel it slays the strong,</l>
<l n="366">The monstrous parricide!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="62" type="sestet">
<l n="367">We waited for the stroke of eight:</l>
<l n="368">Each tongue was thick with thirst:</l>
<l n="369">For the stroke of eight is the stroke of Fate</l>
<l n="370">That makes a man accursed,</l>
<l n="371">And Fate will use a running noose</l>
<l n="372">For the best man and the worst.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="63" type="sestet">
<l n="373">We had no other thing to do,</l>
<l n="374">Save to wait for the sign to come:</l>
<l n="375">So, like things of stone in a valley lone,</l>
<l n="376">Quiet we sat and dumb:</l>
<l n="377">But each man's heart beat thick and quick,</l>
<l n="378">Like a madman on a drum!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="64" type="sestet">
<l n="379">With sudden shock the prison-clock</l>
<l n="380">Smote on the shivering air,</l>
<l n="381">And from all the gaol rose up a wail</l>
<l n="382">Of impotent despair,</l>
<l n="383">Like the sound that frightened marshes hear</l>
<l n="384">From a leper in his lair.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="19"/>
<lg n="65" type="sestet">
<l n="385">And as one sees most fearful things</l>
<l n="386">In the crystal of a dream,</l>
<l n="387">We saw the greasy hempen rope</l>
<l n="388">Hooked to the blackened beam,</l>
<l n="389">And heard the prayer the hangman's snare</l>
<l n="390">Strangled into a scream.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="66" type="sestet">
<l n="391">And all the woe that moved him so</l>
<l n="392">That he gave that bitter cry,</l>
<l n="393">And the wild regrets, and the bloody sweats,</l>
<l n="394">None knew so well as I:</l>
<l n="395">For he who live more lives than one</l>
<l n="396">More deaths than one must die.</l>
</lg>
</div1>
<pb n="20"/>
<div1 n="4" type="canto">
<lg n="67" type="sestet">
<l n="397">There is no chapel on the day</l>
<l n="398">On which they hang a man:</l>
<l n="399">The Chaplain's heart is far too sick,</l>
<l n="400">Or his face is far too wan,</l>
<l n="401">Or there is that written in his eyes</l>
<l n="402">Which none should look upon.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="68" type="sestet">
<l n="403">So they kept us close till nigh on noon,</l>
<l n="404">And then they rang the bell,</l>
<l n="405">And the Warders with their jingling keys</l>
<l n="406">Opened each listening cell,</l>
<l n="407">And down the iron stair we tramped,</l>
<l n="408">Each from his separate Hell.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="69" type="sestet">
<l n="409">Out into God's sweet air we went,</l>
<l n="410">But not in wonted way,</l>
<l n="411">For this man's face was white with fear,</l>
<l n="412">And that man's face was gray,</l>
<l n="413">And I never saw sad men who looked</l>
<l n="414">So wistfully at the day.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="21"/>
<lg n="70" type="sestet">
<l n="415">I never saw sad men who looked</l>
<l n="416">With such a wistful eye</l>
<l n="417">Upon that little tent of blue</l>
<l n="418">We prisoners called the sky,</l>
<l n="419">And at every careless cloud that passed</l>
<l n="420">In happy freedom by.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="71" type="sestet">
<l n="421">But there were those amongst us all</l>
<l n="422">Who walked with downcast head,</l>
<l n="423">And knew that, had each got his due,</l>
<l n="424">They should have died instead:</l>
<l n="425">He had but killed a thing that lived</l>
<l n="426">Whilst they had killed the dead.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="72" type="sestet">
<l n="427">For he who sins a second time</l>
<l n="428">Wakes a dead soul to pain,</l>
<l n="429">And draws it from its spotted shroud,</l>
<l n="430">And makes it bleed again,</l>
<l n="431">And makes it bleed great gouts of blood</l>
<l n="432">And makes it bleed in vain!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="73" type="sestet">
<l n="433">Like ape or clown, in monstrous garb</l>
<l n="434">With crooked arrows starred,</l>
<l n="435">Silently we went round and round</l>
<l n="436">The slippery asphalte yard;</l>
<l n="437">Silently we went round and round,</l>
<l n="438">And no man spoke a word.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="22"/>
<lg n="74" type="sestet">
<l n="439">Silently we went round and round,</l>
<l n="440">And through each hollow mind</l>
<l n="441">The memory of dreadful things</l>
<l n="442">Rushed like a dreadful wind,</l>
<l n="443">And Horror stalked before each man,</l>
<l n="444">And Terror crept behind.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="75" type="sestet">
<l n="445">The Warders strutted up and down,</l>
<l n="446">And kept their herd of brutes,</l>
<l n="447">Their uniforms were spick and span,</l>
<l n="448">And they wore their Sunday suits,</l>
<l n="449">But we knew the work they had been at</l>
<l n="450">By the quicklime on their boots.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="76" type="sestet">
<l n="451">For where a grave had opened wide,</l>
<l n="452">There was no grave at all:</l>
<l n="453">Only a stretch of mud and sand</l>
<l n="454">By the hideous prison-wall,</l>
<l n="455">And a little heap of burning lime,</l>
<l n="456">That the man should have his pall.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="77" type="sestet">
<l n="457">For he has a pall, this wretched man,</l>
<l n="458">Such as few men can claim:</l>
<l n="459">Deep down below a prison-yard,</l>
<l n="460">Naked for greater shame,</l>
<l n="461">He lies, with fetters on each foot,</l>
<l n="462">Wrapt in a sheet of flame!</l>
</lg>
<pb n="23"/>
<lg n="78" type="sestet">
<l n="463">And all the while the burning lime</l>
<l n="464">Eats flesh and bone away,</l>
<l n="465">It eats the brittle bone by night,</l>
<l n="466">And the soft flesh by the day,</l>
<l n="467">It eats the flesh and bones by turns,</l>
<l n="468">But it eats the heart alway.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="79" type="sestet">
<l n="469">For three long years they will not sow</l>
<l n="470">Or root or seedling there:</l>
<l n="471">For three long years the unblessed spot</l>
<l n="472">Will sterile be and bare,</l>
<l n="473">And look upon the wondering sky</l>
<l n="474">With unreproachful stare.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="80" type="sestet">
<l n="475">They think a murderer's heart would taint</l>
<l n="476">Each simple seed they sow.</l>
<l n="477">It is not true!  God's kindly earth</l>
<l n="478">Is kindlier than men know,</l>
<l n="479">And the red rose would but blow more red,</l>
<l n="480">The white rose whiter blow.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="81" type="sestet">
<l n="481">Out of his mouth a red, red rose!</l>
<l n="482">Out of his heart a white!</l>
<l n="483">For who can say by what strange way,</l>
<l n="484">Christ brings his will to light,</l>
<l n="485">Since the barren staff the pilgrim bore</l>
<l n="486">Bloomed in the great Pope's sight?</l>
</lg>
<pb n="24"/>
<lg n="82" type="sestet">
<l n="487">But neither milk-white rose nor red</l>
<l n="488">May bloom in prison air;</l>
<l n="489">The shard, the pebble, and the flint,</l>
<l n="490">Are what they give us there:</l>
<l n="491">For flowers have been known to heal</l>
<l n="492">A common man's despair.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="83" type="sestet">
<l n="493">So never will wine-red rose or white,</l>
<l n="494">Petal by petal, fall</l>
<l n="495">On that stretch of mud and sand that lies</l>
<l n="496">By the hideous prison-wall,</l>
<l n="497">To tell the men who tramp the yard</l>
<l n="498">That God's Son died for all.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="84" type="sestet">
<l n="499">Yet though the hideous prison-wall</l>
<l n="500">Still hems him round and round,</l>
<l n="501">And a spirit man not walk by night</l>
<l n="502">That is with fetters bound,</l>
<l n="503">And a spirit may not weep that lies</l>
<l n="504">In such unholy ground,</l>
</lg>
<lg n="85" type="sestet">
<l n="505">He is at peace&mdash;this wretched man&mdash;</l>
<l n="506">At peace, or will be soon:</l>
<l n="507">There is no thing to make him mad,</l>
<l n="508">Nor does Terror walk at noon,</l>
<l n="509">For the lampless Earth in which he lies</l>
<l n="510">Has neither Sun nor Moon.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="25"/>
<lg n="86" type="sestet">
<l n="511">They hanged him as a beast is hanged:</l>
<l n="512">They did not even toll</l>
<l n="513">A requiem that might have brought</l>
<l n="514">Rest to his startled soul,</l>
<l n="515">But hurriedly they took him out,</l>
<l n="516">And hid him in a hole.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="87" type="sestet">
<l n="517">They stripped him of his canvas clothes,</l>
<l n="518">And gave him to the flies;</l>
<l n="519">They mocked the swollen purple throat,</l>
<l n="520">And the stark and staring eyes:</l>
<l n="521">And with laughter loud they heaped the shroud</l>
<l n="522">In which their convict lies.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="88" type="sestet">
<l n="523">The Chaplain would not kneel to pray</l>
<l n="524">By his dishonoured grave:</l>
<l n="525">Nor mark it with that blessed Cross</l>
<l n="526">That Christ for sinners gave,</l>
<l n="527">Because the man was one of those</l>
<l n="528">Whom Christ came down to save.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="89" type="sestet">
<l n="529">Yet all is well; he has but passed</l>
<l n="530">To Life's appointed bourne:</l>
<l n="531">And alien tears will fill for him</l>
<l n="532">Pity's long-broken urn,</l>
<l n="533">For his mourner will be outcast men,</l>
<l n="534">And outcasts always mourn.</l>
</lg>
</div1>
<pb n="26"/>
<div1 n="5" type="canto">
<lg n="90" type="sestet">
<l n="535">I know not whether Laws be right,</l>
<l n="536">Or whether Laws be wrong;</l>
<l n="537">All that we know who lie in gaol</l>
<l n="538">Is that the wall is strong;</l>
<l n="539">And that each day is like a year,</l>
<l n="540">A year whose days are long.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="91" type="sestet">
<l n="541">But this I know, that every Law</l>
<l n="542">That men have made for Man,</l>
<l n="543">Since first Man took his brother's life,</l>
<l n="544">And the sad world began,</l>
<l n="545">But straws the wheat and saves the chaff</l>
<l n="546">With a most evil fan.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="92" type="sestet">
<l n="547">This too I know&mdash;and wise it were</l>
<l n="548">If each could know the same&mdash;</l>
<l n="549">That every prison that men build</l>
<l n="550">Is built with bricks of shame,</l>
<l n="551">And bound with bars lest Christ should see</l>
<l n="552">How men their brothers maim.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="27"/>
<lg n="93" type="sestet">
<l n="553">With bars they blur the gracious moon,</l>
<l n="554">And blind the goodly sun:</l>
<l n="555">And they do well to hide their Hell,</l>
<l n="556">For in it things are done</l>
<l n="557">That Son of God nor son of Man</l>
<l n="558">Ever should look upon!</l>
</lg>
<lg n="94" type="sestet">
<l n="559">The vilest deeds like poison weeds</l>
<l n="560">Bloom well in prison-air:</l>
<l n="561">It is only what is good in Man</l>
<l n="562">That wastes and withers there:</l>
<l n="563">Pale Anguish keeps the heavy gate,</l>
<l n="564">And the Warder is Despair</l>
</lg>
<lg n="95" type="sestet">
<l n="565">For they starve the little frightened child</l>
<l n="566">Till it weeps both night and day:</l>
<l n="567">And they scourge the weak, and flog the fool,</l>
<l n="568">And gibe the old and gray,</l>
<l n="569">And some grow mad, and all grow bad,</l>
<l n="570">And none a word may say.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="96" type="sestet">
<l n="571">Each narrow cell in which we dwell</l>
<l n="572">Is a foul and dark latrine,</l>
<l n="573">And the fetid breath of living Death</l>
<l n="574">Chokes up each grated screen,</l>
<l n="575">And all, but Lust, is turned to dust</l>
<l n="576">In Humanity's machine.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="28"/>
<lg n="97" type="sestet">
<l n="577">The brackish water that we drink</l>
<l n="578">Creeps with a loathsome slime,</l>
<l n="579">And the bitter bread they weigh in scales</l>
<l n="580">Is full of chalk and lime,</l>
<l n="581">And Sleep will not lie down, but walks</l>
<l n="582">Wild-eyed, and cries to Time.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="98" type="sestet">
<l n="583">But though lean Hunger and green Thirst</l>
<l n="584">Like asp with adder fight,</l>
<l n="585">We have little care of prison fare,</l>
<l n="586">For what chills and kills outright</l>
<l n="587">Is that every stone one lifts by day</l>
<l n="588">Becomes one's heart by night.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="99" type="sestet">
<l n="589">With midnight always in one's heart,</l>
<l n="590">And twilight in one's cell,</l>
<l n="591">We turn the crank, or tear the rope,</l>
<l n="592">Each in his separate Hell,</l>
<l n="593">And the silence is more awful far</l>
<l n="594">Than the sound of a brazen bell.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="100" type="sestet">
<l n="595">And never a human voice comes near</l>
<l n="596">To speak a gentle word:</l>
<l n="597">And the eye that watches through the door</l>
<l n="598">Is pitiless and hard:</l>
<l n="599">And by all forgot, we rot and rot,</l>
<l n="600">With soul and body marred.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="29"/>
<lg n="101" type="sestet">
<l n="601">And thus we rust Life's iron chain</l>
<l n="602">Degraded and alone:</l>
<l n="603">And some men curse, and some men weep,</l>
<l n="604">And some men make no moan:</l>
<l n="605">But God's eternal Laws are kind</l>
<l n="606">And break the heart of stone.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="102" type="sestet">
<l n="607">And every human heart that breaks,</l>
<l n="608">In prison-cell or yard,</l>
<l n="609">Is as that broken box that gave</l>
<l n="610">Its treasure to the Lord,</l>
<l n="611">And filled the unclean leper's house</l>
<l n="612">With the scent of costliest nard.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="103" type="sestet">
<l n="613">Ah! happy day they whose hearts can break</l>
<l n="614">And peace of pardon win!</l>
<l n="615">How else may man make straight his plan</l>
<l n="616">And cleanse his soul from Sin?</l>
<l n="617">How else but through a broken heart</l>
<l n="618">May Lord Christ enter in?</l>
</lg>
<lg n="104" type="sestet">
<l n="619">And he of the swollen purple throat,</l>
<l n="620">And the stark and staring eyes,</l>
<l n="621">Waits for the holy hands that took</l>
<l n="622">The Thief to Paradise;</l>
<l n="623">And a broken and a contrite heart</l>
<l n="624">The Lord will not despise.</l>
</lg>
<pb n="30"/>
<lg n="105" type="sestet">
<l n="625">The man in red who reads the Law</l>
<l n="626">Gave him three weeks of life,</l>
<l n="627">Three little weeks in which to heal</l>
<l n="628">His soul of his soul's strife,</l>
<l n="629">And cleanse from every blot of blood</l>
<l n="630">The hand that held the knife.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="106" type="sestet">
<l n="631">And with tears of blood he cleansed the hand,</l>
<l n="632">The hand that held the steel:</l>
<l n="633">For only blood can wipe out blood,</l>
<l n="634">And only tears can heal:</l>
<l n="635">And the crimson stain that was of Cain</l>
<l n="636">Became Christ's snow-white seal.</l>
</lg>
</div1>
<pb n="31"/>
<div1 n="6" type="canto">
<lg n="107" type="sestet">
<l n="637">In Reading gaol by Reading town</l>
<l n="638">There is a pit of shame,</l>
<l n="639">And in it lies a wretched man</l>
<l n="640">Eaten by teeth of flame,</l>
<l n="641">In a burning winding-sheet he lies,</l>
<l n="642">And his grave has got no name.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="108" type="sestet">
<l n="643">And there, till Christ call forth the dead,</l>
<l n="644">In silence let him lie:</l>
<l n="645">No need to waste the foolish tear,</l>
<l n="646">Or heave the windy sigh:</l>
<l n="647">The man had killed the thing he loved,</l>
<l n="648">And so he had to die.</l>
</lg>
<lg n="109" type="sestet">
<l n="649">And all men kill the thing they love,</l>
<l n="650">By all let this be heard,</l>
<l n="651">Some do it with a bitter look,</l>
<l n="652">Some with a flattering word,</l>
<l n="653">The coward does it with a kiss,</l>
<l n="654">The brave man with a sword!</l>
</lg>
</div1>
<signed><name><sic corr="Oscar Wilde">C. 3. 3.</sic></name></signed>
</div0>
</body>
</text>
</TEI.2>
