I. WHO shall rise and cast away, First, the Burden of the Day? Who assert his place, and teach Lighter labor, nobler speech, Standing firm, erect, and strong, Proud as Freedom, free as Song? II. Lo! we groan beneath the weight Our own weaknesses create; Crook the knee and shut the lip, All for tamer fellowship; Load our slack, compliant clay With the Burden of the Day! III. Higher paths there are to tread; Fresher fields around us spread; Other flames of sun and star Flash at hand and lure afar; Larger manhood might we share, Surer fortune, -- did we dare! IV. In our mills of common thought By the pattern all is wrought: In our school of life, the man Drills to suit the public plan, And through labor, love, and play, Shifts the Burden of the Day. V. Ah, the gods of wood and stone Can a single saint dethrone, But the people who shall aid 'Gainst the puppets they have made First they teach and then obey: 'T is the Burden of the Day. VI. Thunder shall we never hear In this ordered atmosphere? Never this monotony feel Shattered by a trumpet's peal? Never airs that burst and blow From eternal summits, know? VII. Though no man resent his wrong, Still is free the poet's song: Still, a stag, his thought may leap O'er the herded swine and sheep, And in pastures far away Lose the Burden of the Day! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MORNING IN CAMP by HERBERT BASHFORD THE SHIPS by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH PSALM 84 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |