It is true, that even in the best-run state
 Such things will happen; it is true,
 What’s done is done. The law, whereby we hate
 Our hatred, sees no fire in the flue
 But by the smoke, and not for thought alone
 It punishes, but for the thing that’s done.
 And yet there is the horror of the fact,
 Though we knew not the man. To die in jail,
 To be beaten to death, to know the act
 Of personal fury before the eyes can fail
 And the man die against the cold last wall
 Of the lonely world—and neither is that all:
 There is the terror too of each man’s thought,
 That knows not, but must quietly suspect
 His neighbor, friend, or self of being taught
 To take an attitude merely correct;
 Being frightened of his own cold image in
 The glass of government, and his own sin,
 Frightened lest senate house and prison wall
 Be quarried of one stone, lest righteous and high
 Look faintly smiling down and seem to call
 A crime the welcome chance of liberty,
 And any man an outlaw who aggrieves
 The patriotism of a pair of thieves.


















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