Lines Written Under The Conviction That It Is Not Wise To Read Mathematics In November After One’s F

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In the sad November time,
  When the leaf has left the lime,
  And the Cam, with sludge and slime,
  Plasters his ugly channel,
  While, with sober step and slow,
  Round about the marshes low,
  Stiffening students stumping go
  Shivering through their flannel.

  Then to me in doleful mood
  Rises up a question rude,
  Asking what sufficient good
  Comes of this mode of living?
  Moping on from day to day,
  Grinding up what will not "pay,"
  Till the jaded brain gives way
  Under its own misgiving.

  Why should wretched Man employ
  Years which Nature meant for joy,
  Striving vainly to destroy
  Freedom of thought and feeling?
  Still the injured powers remain
  Endless stores of hopeless pain,
  When at last the vanquished brain
  Languishes past all healing.

  Where is then his wealth of mind -
  All the schemes that Hope designed?
  Gone, like spring, to leave behind
  Indolent melancholy.
  Thus he ends his helpless days,
  Vex’t with thoughts of former praise -
  Tell me, how are Wisdom’s ways
  Better than senseless Folly?

  Happier those whom trifles please,
  Dreaming out a life of ease,
  Sinking by unfelt degrees
  Into annihilation.
  Or the slave, to labour born,
  Heedless of the freeman’s scorn,
  Destined to be slowly worn
  Down to the brute creation.

  Thus a tempting spirit spoke,
  As from troubled sleep I woke
  To a morning thick with smoke,
  Sunless and damp and chilly.
  Then to sleep I turned once more,
  Eyes inflamed and windpipe sore,
  Dreaming dreams I dreamt before,
  Only not quite so silly.

  In my dream methought I strayed
  Where a learned-looking maid
  Stores of flimsy goods displayed,
  Articles not worth wearing.
  "These," she said, with solemn air,
  "Are the robes that sages wear,
  Warranted, when kept with care,
  Never to need repairing."

  Then unnumbered witlings, caught
  By her wiles, the trappings bought,
  And by labour, not by thought,
  Honour and fame were earning.
  While the men of wiser mind
  Passed for blind among the blind;
  Pedants left them far behind
  In the career of learning.

  "Those that fix their eager eyes
  Ever on the nearest prize
  Well may venture to despise
  Loftier aspirations.
  Pedantry is in demand!
  Buy it up at second-hand,
  Seek no more to understand
  Profitless speculations."

  Thus the gaudy gowns were sold,
  Cast off sloughs of pedants old;
  Proudly marched the students bold
  Through the domain of error,
  Till their trappings, false though fair,
  Mouldered off and left them bare,
  Clustering close in blank despair,
  Nakedness, cold, and terror.

  Then, I said, "These haughty Schools
  Boast that by their formal rules
  They produce more learned fools
  Than could be well expected.
  Learned fools they are indeed,
  Learned in the books they read;
  Fools whene’er they come to need
  Wisdom, too long neglected.

  "Oh! that men indeed were wise,
  And would raise their purblind eyes
  To the opening mysteries
  Scattered around them ever.
  Truth should spring from sterile ground,
  Beauty beam from all around,
  Right should then at last be found
  Joining what none may sever."

© James Clerk Maxwell