LIFE IS STRUGGLE.
To wear out heart, and nerves, and brain 
And give oneself a world of pain; 
Be eager, angry, fierce, and hot, 
Imperious, supple—God knows what, 
For what's all one to have or not; 
O false, unwise, absurd, and vain! 
For 'tis not joy, it is not gain, 
It is not in itself a bliss, 
Only it is precisely this 
That keeps us all alive. 
To say we truly feel the pain, 
And quite are sinking with the strain;—
Entirely, simply, undeceived, 
Believe, and say we ne'er believed 
The object, e'en were it achieved, 
A thing we e'er had cared to keep;
With heart and soul to hold it cheap, 
And then to go and try it again; 
O false, unwise, absurd, and vain I 
O, 'tis not joy, and 'tis not bliss, 
Only it is precisely this 
That keeps us still alive.
From "Poems," by Arthur Hugh Clough
(Macmillan & Co., Publishers, New York,);
and "A Book of Verses," by William Ernest Henley
(Charles Scribner's Sons, Publishers, New York).