Private Property By Aldous Leonard Huxley

   All fly – yet who is misanthrope? – 
    The actual men and things that pass
    Jostling, to wither as the grass
    So soon: and (be it heaven’s hope,
    Or poetry’s kaleidoscope,
    Or love or wine, at feast, at mass)
    Each owns a paradise of glass
    Where never a yearning heliotrope
    Pursues the sun’s ascent or slope;
    For the sun dreams there, and no time is or was.

    Like fauns embossed in our domain,
    We look abroad, and our calm eyes
    Mark how the goatish gods of pain
    Revel; and if by grim surprise
    They break into our paradise,
    Patient we build its beauty up again.