| James and Mary Ford, eds. Every Day in the Year. 1902. | | | | December 1 | | A Poets Epitaph | | By Ebenezer Elliott (17811849) |
| | | | Ebenezer Elliott, the author of these lines, was an English poet, author of the Corn-Law Rhymes. He died Dec. 1, 1849. |
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| STOP, Mortal! Here thy brother lies | |
| The Poet of the Poor. | |
| His books were rivers, woods and skies, | |
| The meadow and the moor; | |
| His teachers were the torn hearts wail, | 5 |
| The tyrant and the slave, | |
| The street, the factory, the jail, | |
| The palaceand the grave! | |
| Sin met thy brother every where! | |
| And is thy brother blamed? | 10 |
| From passion, danger, doubt, and care, | |
| He no exemption claimed. | |
| The meanest thing, earths feeblest worm, | |
| He feared to scorn or hate; | |
| But, honoring in a peasants form | 15 |
| The equal of the great, | |
| He blessed the steward, whose wealth makes | |
| The poor mans little, more; | |
| Yet loathed the haughty wretch that takes | |
| From plundered Labors store. | 20 |
| A hand to do, a head to plan, | |
| A heart to feel and dare | |
| Tell Mans worst foes, here lies the man | |
| Who drew them as they are. | | | |
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