to the ripe corn if so be that their serfdom falls
in the years of plenty and the ear is full, to eat
the bread of tears, if their season of servitude be
required of them in a time of scarcity and famine.
Bondsmen of death, from birth, they are sent forth
out of the sublime silence of the pathless forest
which hems in the open glebe land of the present and
which is eternity, past and to come; bondsmen of death,
from youth to age, they join in the labour of the field,
they plough, they sow, they reap, perhaps, tears they
shed many, and of laughter there is also a little
amongst them; bondsmen of death, to the last, they
are taken in the end, when they have served their tale
of years, many or few, and they are led from furrow
and grass land, willing or unwilling, mercifully or
cruelly, to the uttermost boundary, and they are thrust
out quickly into the darkness whence they came.
For their place is already filled, and the new husbandmen,
their children, have in their turn come into the field,
to eat of the fruit they sowed, to sow in turn a seed
of which they themselves shall not see the harvest,
whose sheaves others shall bind, whose ears others
shall thresh, and of whose corn others shall make
bread after them. With our eyes we may yet see
the graves of two hundred generations of men, whose
tombs serve but to mark that boundary more clearly,
whose fierce warfare, when they fought against the
master, could not drive back that limit by a handbreadth,
whose uncomplaining labour, when they accepted their
lot patiently, earned them not one scant foot of soil
wherewith to broaden their inheritance as reward for
their submission; and of them all, neither man nor
woman was ever forgotten in the day of reckoning, nor
was one suffered to linger in the light. Death
will bury a thousand generations more, in graves as
deep, strengthening year by year the strong chain of
his grim landmarks. He will remember us every
one when the time comes; to some of us he will vouchsafe
a peaceful end, but some shall pass away in mortal
agony, and some shall be dragged unconscious to the
other side; but all must go. Some shall not see
him till he is at hand, and some shall dream of him
in year-long dreams of horror, to be taken unawares
at the last. He will remember us every one and
will come to us, and the place of our rest shall be
marked for centuries, for years, or for seconds, for
each a stone, or a few green sods laid upon a mound
beneath the sky, or the ripple on a changing wave when
the loaded sack has slipped from the smooth plank,
and the sound of a dull splash has died away in the
wind. There be strong men, as well as weak, who
shudder and grow cold when they think of that yet
undated day which must close with its black letter
their calendar of joy and sorrow; there are weaklings,
as well as giants, who fear death for those they love,
but who fear not anything else at all. The master
treats courage and cowardice alike; Achilles and Thersites
must alike perish, and none will be so bold as to
say that he can tell the dust of the misshapen varlet
from the ashes of the swift-footed destroyer, whose
hair was once so bright, whose eyes were so fierce,
whose mighty heart was so slothless, so wrathful,
so inexorable and so brave.


