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Read here:
This is the story of Evarra -- man --
Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city gave him of her gold,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the caravans brought turquoises,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his life was sheltered by the King,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠So that no man should maim him, none should steal,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Or break his rest with babble in the streets
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠When he was weary after toil, he made
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠An image of his God in gold and pearl,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠With turquoise diadem and human eyes,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠A wonder in the sunshine, known afar,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And worshipped by the King; but, drunk with pride,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city bowed to him for God,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He wrote above the shrine: "Thus Gods are made,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the city praised him. . . . Then he died.

Read here the story of Evarra -- man --
Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city had no wealth to give,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the caravans were spoiled afar,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his life was threatened by the King,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠So that all men despised him in the streets,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He hewed the living rock, with sweat and tears,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And reared a God against the morning-gold,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠A terror in the sunshine, seen afar,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And worshipped by the King; but, drunk with pride,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city fawned to bring him back,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He carved upon the plinth: "Thus Gods are made,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the people praised him. . . . Then he died.

Read here the story of Evarra -- man --
Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because he lived among a simple folk,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his village was between the hills,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because he smeared his cheeks with blood of ewes,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He cut an idol from a fallen pine,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Smeared blood upon its cheeks, and wedged a shell
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Above its brows for eyes, and gave it hair
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Of trailing moss, and plaited straw for crown.
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the village praised him for this craft,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And brought him butter, honey, milk, and curds.
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Wherefore, because the shoutings drove him mad,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He scratched upon that log: "Thus Gods are made,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the people praised him. . . . Then he died.

Read here the story of Evarra -- man --
Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his God decreed one clot of blood
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Should swerve one hair's-breadth from the pulse's path,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And chafe his brain, Evarra mowed alone,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Rag-wrapped, among the cattle in the fields,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Counting his fingers, jesting with the trees,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And mocking at the mist, until his God
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Drove him to labour. Out of dung and horns
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Dropped in the mire he made a monstrous God,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Abhorrent, shapeless, crowned with plantain tufts,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And when the cattle lowed at twilight-time,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He dreamed it was the clamour of lost crowds,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And howled among the beasts: "Thus Gods are made,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Thereat the cattle bellowed. . . . Then he died.

󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Yet at the last he came to Paradise,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And found his own four Gods, and that he wrote;
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And marvelled, being very near to God,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠What oaf on earth had made his toil God's law,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Till God said mocking: "Mock not. These be thine."
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Then cried Evarra: "I have sinned!" -- "Not so.
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠If thou hadst written otherwise, thy Gods
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Had rested in the mountain and the mine,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And I were poorer by four wondrous Gods,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And thy more wondrous law, Evarra. Thine,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Servant of shouting crowds and lowing kine."
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Thereat, with laughing mouth, but tear-wet eyes,
󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Evarra cast his Gods from Paradise.

This is the story of Evarra -- man --
Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea

*Read here: This is the story of Evarra -- man -- Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city gave him of her gold, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the caravans brought turquoises, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his life was sheltered by the King, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠So that no man should maim him, none should steal, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Or break his rest with babble in the streets 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠When he was weary after toil, he made 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠An image of his God in gold and pearl, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠With turquoise diadem and human eyes, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠A wonder in the sunshine, known afar, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And worshipped by the King; but, drunk with pride, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city bowed to him for God, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He wrote above the shrine: *"Thus Gods are made, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the city praised him. . . . Then he died. *Read here the story of Evarra -- man -- Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city had no wealth to give, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the caravans were spoiled afar, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his life was threatened by the King, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠So that all men despised him in the streets, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He hewed the living rock, with sweat and tears, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And reared a God against the morning-gold, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠A terror in the sunshine, seen afar, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And worshipped by the King; but, drunk with pride, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because the city fawned to bring him back, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He carved upon the plinth: *"Thus Gods are made, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the people praised him. . . . Then he died. *Read here the story of Evarra -- man -- Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because he lived among a simple folk, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his village was between the hills, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because he smeared his cheeks with blood of ewes, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He cut an idol from a fallen pine, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Smeared blood upon its cheeks, and wedged a shell 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Above its brows for eyes, and gave it hair 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Of trailing moss, and plaited straw for crown. 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the village praised him for this craft, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And brought him butter, honey, milk, and curds. 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Wherefore, because the shoutings drove him mad, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He scratched upon that log: *"Thus Gods are made, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And all the people praised him. . . . Then he died. *Read here the story of Evarra -- man -- Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea.* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Because his God decreed one clot of blood 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Should swerve one hair's-breadth from the pulse's path, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And chafe his brain, Evarra mowed alone, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Rag-wrapped, among the cattle in the fields, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Counting his fingers, jesting with the trees, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And mocking at the mist, until his God 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Drove him to labour. Out of dung and horns 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Dropped in the mire he made a monstrous God, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Abhorrent, shapeless, crowned with plantain tufts, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And when the cattle lowed at twilight-time, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠He dreamed it was the clamour of lost crowds, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And howled among the beasts: *"Thus Gods are made, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And whoso makes them otherwise shall die."* 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Thereat the cattle bellowed. . . . Then he died. 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Yet at the last he came to Paradise, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And found his own four Gods, and that he wrote; 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And marvelled, being very near to God, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠What oaf on earth had made his toil God's law, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Till God said mocking: "Mock not. These be thine." 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Then cried Evarra: "I have sinned!" -- "Not so. 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠If thou hadst written otherwise, thy Gods 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Had rested in the mountain and the mine, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And I were poorer by four wondrous Gods, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠And thy more wondrous law, Evarra. Thine, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Servant of shouting crowds and lowing kine." 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Thereat, with laughing mouth, but tear-wet eyes, 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠 󠀠Evarra cast his Gods from Paradise. *This is the story of Evarra -- man -- Maker of Gods in lands beyond the sea*

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