VIII THERE is no Heav'en, there is no Hell; these be the dreams of baby minds; Tools of the wily Fetisheer, to 'fright the fools his cunning blinds. Learn from the mighty Spi'rits of old to set thy foot on Heav'en and Hell; In Life to find thy hell and heav'en as thou abuse or use it well. So deemed the doughty Jew who dared by studied silence low to lay Orcus and Hades, lands of shades, the gloomy night of human day. Hard to the heart is final d**h: fain would an Ens not end in Nil; Love made the senti'ment kindly good: the Priest perverted all to ill. {p. 51} While Reason sternly bids us die, Love longs for life beyond the grave: Our hearts, affections, hopes and fears for life-to-be shall ever crave. Hence came the despot's darling dream, a Church to rule and sway the State; Hence sprang the train of countless griefs in priestly sway and rule innate. For future Life who dares reply? No witness at the bar have we; Save what the brother Potsherd tells,-- old tales and novel jugglery. Who e'er return'd to teach the Truth., the things of Heaven and Hell to limn? And all we hear is only fit for grandam-talk and nursery-hymn. "Have mercy, man!" the Zâhid cries, "of our best visions rob us not! "Mankind a future life must have to balance life's unequal lot." {p. 52} "Nay," quoth the Magian, "'tis not so; I draw my wine for one and all, "A cup for this, a score for that, e'en as his measure's great or small: "Who drinks one bowl hath scant delight; to poorest pa**ion he was born; "Who drains the score must e'er expect to rue the headache of the morn." Safely he jogs along the way which 'Golden Mean' the sages call; Who scales the brow of frowning Alp must face full many a slip and fall. Here èxtremes meet, anointed Kings whose crownèd heads uneasy lie, Whose cup of joy contains no more than tramps that on the dunghill die. To fate-doomed Sinner born and bred for dangling from the gallows-tree; To Saint who spends his holy days in rapt'urous hope his God to see; {p. 53} To all that breathe our upper air the hands of Dest'iny ever deal, In fixed and equal parts, their shares of joy and sorrow, woe and weal. How comes it, then, our span of days in hunting wealth and fame we spend Why strive we (and all humans strive) for vain and visionary end? Reply: mankind obeys a law that bids him labour, struggle, strain; The Sage well knowing its unworth, the Fool a-dreaming foolish gain. And who, mid e'en the Fools, but feels that half the joy is in the race For wealth and fame and place, nor sighs when comes success to crown the chase? Again: in Hind, Chîn, Franguestân that accident of birth befell. Without our choice, our will, our voice: Faith is an accident as well. {p. 54} What to the Hindu saith the Frank: "Denier of the Laws divine! "However godly-good thy Life, Hell is the home for thee and thine." "Go strain the draught before 'tis drunk, and learn that breathing every breath, "With every step, with every gest, something of life thou do'est to d**h." Replies the Hindu: "Wend thy way for foul and foolish Mlenchhas fit; "Your Pariah-par'adise woo and win; at such dog-Heav'en I laugh and spit. "Cannibals of the Holy Cow! who make your rav'ening maws the grave "Of Things with self-same right to live;-- what Fiend the filthy license gave?" What to the Moslem cries the Frank? "A polygamic Theist thou! From an imposter-Prophet turn; Thy stubborn head to Jesus bow." {p. 55} Rejoins the Moslem: "Allah's one tho' with four Moslemahs I wive, "One-wife-men ye and (damnèd race!) you split your God to Three and Five." The Buddhist to Confucius thus: "Like dogs ye live, like dogs ye die; "Content ye rest with wretched earth; God, judgment, Hell ye fain defy." Retorts the Tartar: "Shall I lend mine only ready-money 'now,' "For vain usurious 'Then' like thine, avaunt, a triple idiot Thou!" With this poor life, with this mean world I fain complete what in me lies; "I strive to perfect this my me; my sole ambition's to be wise." When doctors differ who decides amid the milliard-beaded throng? Who save the madman dares to cry: "'Tis I am right, you all are wrong?" {p. 56} "You all are right, you all are wrong," we hear the careless Soofi say, "For each believes his glimm'ering lamp to be the gorgeous light of day." "Thy faith why false, my faith why true? 'tis all the work of Thine and Mine, "The fond and foolish love of self that makes the Mine excel the Thine." Cease then to mumble rotten bones; and strive to clothe with flesh and blood The skel'eton; and to shape a Form that all shall hail as fair and good. "For gen'erous youth," an Arab saith, "Jahim's[1] the only genial state; "Give us the fire but not the shame with the sad, sorry blest to mate." And if your Heav'en and Hell be true, and Fate that forced me to be born Force me to Heav'en or Hell--I go, and hold Fate's insolence in scorn. [1. Jehannum, Gehenna, Hell.] {p. 57} I want not this, I want not that, already sick of Me and Thee; And if we're both transform'd and changed, what then becomes of Thee and Me? Enough to think such things may be: to say they are not or they are Were folly: leave -them all to Fate, nor wage on shadows useless war. Do what thy manhood bids thee do, from none but self expect applause; He noblest lives and noblest dies who makes and keeps his self-made laws. All other Life is living d**h, a world where none but Phantoms dwell, A breath, a wind, a sound, a voice, a tinkling of the camel-bell.