Dare We Judge?

By Paulina Brandreth

(In “The Survey.”)

What do we know of life,

We, who are housed and fed,

What do we know of strife

Who are so gently led?

Have we dwelt in the slime

Of Poverty’s abode

Have we walked with the crime

Engendered by its load?

Oh, have we ever known

Days of eternal care?

When Hope is turned to stone

And broken by Despair?

Or have we ever raced

And won, and lost again?

And then with failure faced

The cruelty of men?

We have not lived these things,

Our bread and wine is sweet;

We do not know what causes bring

The woman to the street.

Yet, she who wounds her soul

Is better far than we,

Who do our lives control

In self-complacency.

Aye, better far than we,

Who ignorantly dwell,

Lulled with tranquility

Above the wreck of hell.

What do we know of life,

We, who are housed and fed,

Who, sheltered from all strife,

On thornless pathways tread?