How
he has made us laugh!
A
whole generation of men
Smiled
in the joy of his wit.
But
who knows whether he was not
Like
those deep jesters of old
Who
dwelt at the courts of Kings,
Arthur’s,
Pendragon’s, Lear’s,
Plying
the wise fool’s trade,
Making
men merry at will,
Hiding
their deeper thoughts
Under
a motley array,—
Keen-eyed,
serious men,
Watching
the sorry world,
The
gaudy pageant of life,
With
pity and wisdom and love?
Fearless,
extravagant, wild,
His
caustic merciless mirth
Was
leveled at pompous shams.
Doubt
not behind that mask
There
dwelt the soul of a man,
Resolute,
sorrowing, sage,
As
sure a champion of good
As
ever rode forth to fray.
Haply—who
knows?—somewhere
In
Avalon, Isle of Dreams,
In
vast contentment at last,
With
every grief done away,
While
Chaucer and Shakespeare wait,
And
Moliere hangs on his words,
And
Cervantes not far off
Listens
and smiles apart,
With
that incomparable drawl
He
is jesting with Dagonet now.