A hint: Read the title.
 

Ode                                                       #48

      Inscribed to W.H. Channing

            THOUGH loath to grieve
            The evil time's sole patriot,
            I cannot leave
            My honeyed thought
            For the priest's cant,
            Or statesman's rant.

            If I refuse
            My study for their politic,
            Which at the best is trick,
            The angry Muse
            Puts confusion in my brain.

            But who is he that prates
            Of the culture of mankind,
            Of better arts and life?
            Go, blindworm, go,
            Behold the famous States
            Harrying Mexico
            With rifle and with knife!

            Or who, with accent bolder
            Dare praise the freedom-loving mountaineer?
            I found by thee, O rushing Contoocook!
            And in thy valleys, Agiochook!
            The jackals of the Negro-holder.

            The God who made New Hampshire
            Taunted the lofty land
            With little men;--
            Small bat and wren
            House in the oak:--
            If earth-fire cleave
            The upheaved land, and bury the folk,
            The southern crocodile would grieve.
            Virtue palters; Right is hence;
            Freedom praised, but hid;
            Funeral eloquence
            Rattles the coffin lid.

            What boots thy zeal,
            O glowing friend,
            That would indignant rend
            The northland from the south?
            Wherefore? to what good end?
            Boston Bay and Bunker Hill
            Would serve things still;--
            Things are of the snake.

            The horseman serves the horse
            The neatherd serves the neat,
            The merchant serves the purse,
            The eater serves his meat;
            'Tis the day of the chattel,
            Web to weave, and corn to grind;
            Things are in the saddle,
            And ride mankind.

            There are two laws discrete,
            Not reconciled,--
            Law for man, and law for thing;
            The last builds town and fleet,
            But it runs wild,
            And doth the man unking.

            'Tis fit the forest fall,
            The steep be graded,
            The mountain tunneled,
            The sand shaded,
            The orchard planted,
            The glebe tilled,
            The prairie granted
            The steamer built.

            Let man serve law for man;
            Live for friendship, live for love,
            For truth's and harmony's behoof;
            The state may follow how it can,
            As Olympus follows Jove.

            Yet do not I implore
            The wrinkled shopman to my sounding woods,
            Nor did the unwilling senator
            Ask votes of thrushes in the solitudes.
            Everyone to his chosen work--
            Foolish hands may mix and mar;
            Wise and sure the issues are.
            Round they roll till dark is light,
            Sex to sex, and even to odd;--
            The overgod
            Who marries Right to Might,
            Who peoples, unpeoples,--
            He who exterminates
            Races by stronger races,
            Black by white faces,--
            Knows to bring honey
            Out of the lion;
            Grafts gentlest scion
            On pirate and Turk.

            The Cossack eats Poland,
            Like stolen fruit;
            Her last noble is ruined,
            Her last poet mute;
            Straight, into double band
            The victors divide;
            Half for freedom strike and stand;--
            The astonished Muse finds thousands at her side.
                            --Ralph Waldo Emerson
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