’My friends, in the happier days of the muse,
We were luckily free from such things as reviews;
Then naught came between with its fog to make clearer
The heart of the poet to that of his hearer;
Then the poet brought heaven to the people, and they
1730
Felt that they, too, were poets in hearing his lay;
Then the poet was prophet, the past in his soul
Precreated the future, both parts of one whole;
Then for him there was nothing too great or too small,
For one natural deity sanctified all;
Then the bard owned no clipper and meter of moods
Save the spirit of silence that hovers and broods
O’er the seas and the mountains, the rivers
and woods;
He asked not earth’s verdict, forgetting the
clods,
His soul soared and sang to an audience of gods;
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’Twas for them that he measured the thought
and the line,
And shaped for their vision the perfect design,
With as glorious a foresight, a balance as true,
As swung out the worlds in the infinite blue;
Then a glory and greatness invested man’s heart,
The universal, which now stands estranged and apart,
In the free individual moulded, was Art;
Then the forms of the Artist seemed thrilled with
desire
For something as yet unattained, fuller, higher,
As once with her lips, lifted hands, and eyes listening,
1750
And her whole upward soul in her countenance glistening,
Eurydice stood—like a beacon unfired,
Which, once touched with flame, will leap heav’nward
inspired—
And waited with answering kindle to mark
The first gleam of Orpheus that pained the red Dark.
Then painting, song, sculpture did more than relieve
The need that men feel to create and believe,
And as, in all beauty, who listens with love
Hears these words oft repeated—“beyond
and above,”
So these seemed to be but the visible sign
1760
Of the grasp of the soul after things more divine;
They were ladders the Artist erected to climb
O’er the narrow horizon of space and of time,
And we see there the footsteps by which men had gained
To the one rapturous glimpse of the never-attained,
As shepherds could erst sometimes trace in the sod
The last spurning print of a sky-cleaving god.
’But now, on the poet’s dis-privacied
moods
With do this and do that the pert critic
intrudes;
While he thinks he’s been barely fulfilling
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To interpret ’twixt men and their own sense
of beauty.
And has striven, while others sought honor or pelf,
To make his kind happy as he was himself,
He finds he’s been guilty of horrid offences
In all kinds of moods, numbers, genders, and tenses;
He’s been ob and subjective, what
Kettle calls Pot,
Precisely, at all events, what he ought not,
You have done this, says one judge; done
that, says another;
You should have done this, grumbles one; that,
says t’other;
Never mind what he touches, one shrieks out Taboo!
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And while he is wondering what he shall do,
Since each suggests opposite topics for song,
They all shout together you’re right!
and you’re wrong!