We perish and rot
but the rising stars do not.
When we are gone,
mountain and stronghold stay.
Once I was under
a coveted neighbor's wing.
And with Arbad, that protector
has pa**ed away.
I'll stand ungrieved,
though Fortune force us asunder
For every man
is felled by Fortune one day.
I am no more enthralled
by newfound riches
than grieved by aught
that Fortune wreaks or takes.
For men are like desert camps:
one day, full of folk
but, come the morn,
a bare unpeopled waste.
They pa** away in flocks,
and the land stays on:
a trailing herdsman
rounding up the strays.
Yes, men are like shooting stars:
a trailing light
collapsed to ashes
after the briefest blaze.
Men's wealth and kinfolk
are but a loan of Fortune.
All that is loaned
must be at last repaid.
Men are at work.
One worker razes his building
to the ground, and another
raises something great.
Among them are the happy
who seize their lot,
and unlucky others:
beggars till the grave.
If my Doom be slow in coming,
I can look forward
to ailing fingers
clenched about a cane,
While telling tales
of youth and yesteryear,
on slow legs, trying to stand
yet bent with pain.
I am become a sword
whose sheath is worn
apart by the years since smithing,
though sharp the blade.
Do not be gone!1
A due date for d**h is meted
to all. It is yet to come...
then comes today!
Reproachful woman!2
When fine lads journey forth,
can you reckon who of them
shall return from the fray?
Will you grieve
at what fell Fortune wreaks on men?
What noble man
will disaster not waylay?
No, by your lifeblood:
neither the pebble-reader
nor the auguress3 knows
what fey things God4 ordains.
If any of you would doubt me,
simply ask them
when a lad shall taste of Doom,
or the land taste rains.