INSPIRATION

INSPIRATION

A poet sang of human things,Of gorgeous queens and mighty kings,And gems that glisten;He praised the brassy front of show,The ruby’s fire and diamond’s glow,Yet none would listen.He wove him many labored rimesOf ended days and coming times,Of deeds that stirred him;He wrote of pomp and circumstance,The flap of flag, the light of lance,But no one heard him.And thus he learned to know the painOf him who sings but sings in vainTo ears averted,Like one who wakes his sweetest toneTo unresponsive walls of stoneIn halls deserted.When all the merry melodiesHe sang his fellow men to pleaseBrought none to hear him,He turned from splendor and from pelfTo sing a measure for himself,A song to cheer him.He wrote a song of long ago—A vale where yellow lilies growBeside a river,A path that leads the weary feetWhere meadowland and waters meetAnd rushes quiver.He wrote a song of childhood days,Of pleasant shade and wooded waysAnd summer quiet—A bridge that spanned a gushing rill,A humble cot upon a hill,With roses by it.’Twas not the creature of his art,This song upwelling from his heartIn moments lonely;With memory his eyes grew dim,For then his own soul sang to him,The poet only.But other mortals heard his taleOf woodland path and verdant valeTo heaven winging,And men who scorned his song beforeSought out the poet’s open doorTo hear him singing.Thus came to him his mistress Fame,Clad in her aureole of flameAnd smile supernal;No more a fleeting vision now,She placed upon the singer’s browThe kiss eternal.And then the poet, fool and sage,Turned gently from his written page,While bravos thundered,And, when he saw the listening throngOf those who once had spurned his song,He greatly wondered.

A poet sang of human things,Of gorgeous queens and mighty kings,And gems that glisten;He praised the brassy front of show,The ruby’s fire and diamond’s glow,Yet none would listen.He wove him many labored rimesOf ended days and coming times,Of deeds that stirred him;He wrote of pomp and circumstance,The flap of flag, the light of lance,But no one heard him.And thus he learned to know the painOf him who sings but sings in vainTo ears averted,Like one who wakes his sweetest toneTo unresponsive walls of stoneIn halls deserted.When all the merry melodiesHe sang his fellow men to pleaseBrought none to hear him,He turned from splendor and from pelfTo sing a measure for himself,A song to cheer him.He wrote a song of long ago—A vale where yellow lilies growBeside a river,A path that leads the weary feetWhere meadowland and waters meetAnd rushes quiver.He wrote a song of childhood days,Of pleasant shade and wooded waysAnd summer quiet—A bridge that spanned a gushing rill,A humble cot upon a hill,With roses by it.’Twas not the creature of his art,This song upwelling from his heartIn moments lonely;With memory his eyes grew dim,For then his own soul sang to him,The poet only.But other mortals heard his taleOf woodland path and verdant valeTo heaven winging,And men who scorned his song beforeSought out the poet’s open doorTo hear him singing.Thus came to him his mistress Fame,Clad in her aureole of flameAnd smile supernal;No more a fleeting vision now,She placed upon the singer’s browThe kiss eternal.And then the poet, fool and sage,Turned gently from his written page,While bravos thundered,And, when he saw the listening throngOf those who once had spurned his song,He greatly wondered.

A poet sang of human things,Of gorgeous queens and mighty kings,And gems that glisten;He praised the brassy front of show,The ruby’s fire and diamond’s glow,Yet none would listen.

A poet sang of human things,

Of gorgeous queens and mighty kings,

And gems that glisten;

He praised the brassy front of show,

The ruby’s fire and diamond’s glow,

Yet none would listen.

He wove him many labored rimesOf ended days and coming times,Of deeds that stirred him;He wrote of pomp and circumstance,The flap of flag, the light of lance,But no one heard him.

He wove him many labored rimes

Of ended days and coming times,

Of deeds that stirred him;

He wrote of pomp and circumstance,

The flap of flag, the light of lance,

But no one heard him.

And thus he learned to know the painOf him who sings but sings in vainTo ears averted,Like one who wakes his sweetest toneTo unresponsive walls of stoneIn halls deserted.

And thus he learned to know the pain

Of him who sings but sings in vain

To ears averted,

Like one who wakes his sweetest tone

To unresponsive walls of stone

In halls deserted.

When all the merry melodiesHe sang his fellow men to pleaseBrought none to hear him,He turned from splendor and from pelfTo sing a measure for himself,A song to cheer him.

When all the merry melodies

He sang his fellow men to please

Brought none to hear him,

He turned from splendor and from pelf

To sing a measure for himself,

A song to cheer him.

He wrote a song of long ago—A vale where yellow lilies growBeside a river,A path that leads the weary feetWhere meadowland and waters meetAnd rushes quiver.

He wrote a song of long ago—

A vale where yellow lilies grow

Beside a river,

A path that leads the weary feet

Where meadowland and waters meet

And rushes quiver.

He wrote a song of childhood days,Of pleasant shade and wooded waysAnd summer quiet—A bridge that spanned a gushing rill,A humble cot upon a hill,With roses by it.

He wrote a song of childhood days,

Of pleasant shade and wooded ways

And summer quiet—

A bridge that spanned a gushing rill,

A humble cot upon a hill,

With roses by it.

’Twas not the creature of his art,This song upwelling from his heartIn moments lonely;With memory his eyes grew dim,For then his own soul sang to him,The poet only.

’Twas not the creature of his art,

This song upwelling from his heart

In moments lonely;

With memory his eyes grew dim,

For then his own soul sang to him,

The poet only.

But other mortals heard his taleOf woodland path and verdant valeTo heaven winging,And men who scorned his song beforeSought out the poet’s open doorTo hear him singing.

But other mortals heard his tale

Of woodland path and verdant vale

To heaven winging,

And men who scorned his song before

Sought out the poet’s open door

To hear him singing.

Thus came to him his mistress Fame,Clad in her aureole of flameAnd smile supernal;No more a fleeting vision now,She placed upon the singer’s browThe kiss eternal.

Thus came to him his mistress Fame,

Clad in her aureole of flame

And smile supernal;

No more a fleeting vision now,

She placed upon the singer’s brow

The kiss eternal.

And then the poet, fool and sage,Turned gently from his written page,While bravos thundered,And, when he saw the listening throngOf those who once had spurned his song,He greatly wondered.

And then the poet, fool and sage,

Turned gently from his written page,

While bravos thundered,

And, when he saw the listening throng

Of those who once had spurned his song,

He greatly wondered.


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