Page 28 - Poetry-Books
P. 28

The rhymsters you find, as
                The morals grow darker !

             I never upbraid these
                Old periwigged sinners,
             Their songs and light ladies,
                Their dances and dinners;
             My book-shelf’s a haven
                From storms puritanic,
             We sure may be gay when
                Of death we’ve no panic!

             My parlor is little,
                And poor are its treasures;
             All pleasures are brittle,
                And so are my pleasures;
             But, though I shall never
                Be Beckford or Locker,
             While fate does not sever
                The door from the knocker,

             No book shall tap vainly
                At latch or at lattice
             (If costumed urbanely,
                And worth our care, that is);
             My poets from slumber
                Shall rise in morocco,
             To shield the new comer
                From storm or sirocco.

                    *    *    *    *    *
             I might prate thus for pages,
                The theme is so pleasant;
             But the gloom of the ages
                Lies on me at present;
             All business and fear to
                The cold world I banish.
             Hush! like the Ameer, to
                My harem I vanish!

             —Edmund Gosse (Ballads of Books, 1887)


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