Friends and Neighbors; Or, Two Ways of Living in the World






ROOM IN THE WORLD.

     THERE is room in the world for the wealthy and great,
     For princes to reign in magnificent state;
     For the courtier to bend, for the noble to sue,
     If the hearts of all these are but honest and true.

     And there's room in the world for the lowly and meek,
     For the hard horny hand, and the toil-furrow'd cheek;
     For the scholar to think, for the merchant to trade,
     So these are found upright and just in their grade.

     But room there is none for the wicked; and nought
     For the souls that with teeming corruption are fraught.
     The world would be small, were its oceans all land,
     To harbour and feed such a pestilent band.

     Root out from among ye, by teaching the mind,
     By training the heart, this chief curse of mankind!
     'Tis a duty you owe to the forthcoming race—
     Confess it in time, and discharge it with grace!

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