Friends,—such I call ye, for it is not meet To hail ye brethren in the tuneful art, Since I but falter, though of earnest heart,— Friends, I have thought, reading your measures sweet, Your verses, though with many a charm replete, Were bettered did they some high thought impart, Or in man’s conscience plant a sudden dart. Why proffer roses when the world craves wheat? Who paints a picture hath ill done his task, If he show not the soul in that he paints. Why give to mere description all your lays While what the eye beholds is but a mask To some grand truth the poet’s hand should raise, Revealing that for which man’s spirit faints. |