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Orion,
and Other Poems
by
Charles G.D. Roberts
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BALLAD
OF THE POET’S THOUGHT
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A
POET
was vexed with the fume of the street,
With tumult wearied, with
din distraught;
And very few of the passing feet
Would stay to listen the
truths he taught:
And he said,—"My labor
is all for naught;
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I
will go, and at Nature’s lips drink deep."—
For he knew not the wealth
of the poet’s thought,
Though sweet to win, was bitter to keep.
So he left the hurry, and dust, and heat
For the free, green forest
where man was not;
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And
found in the wilderness’ deep retreat
That favor with Nature which
he sought.
She spake with him, nor
denied him aught,
In waking vision or visioned sleep,
But little he guessed the
wealth she brought,
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Though
sweet to win, was bitter to keep.
But now when his bosom, grown replete,
Would lighten itself in
song of what
It had gathered in silence, he could meet
No answering thrill from
his passion caught.
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Then
grieving he fled from that quiet spot,
To where men work, and are weary, and weep;
For he said,—"The
wealth for which I wrought
Is sweet to win, but bitter to keep."
ENVOI
Oh,
poets bewailing your hapless lot,
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That
ye may not in Nature your whole hearts steep,
Know that the wealth of the poet’s thought
Is sweet to win, but bitter
to keep. |
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