You should study the bards of to-day Who in England are now all the rage; You should try to be piquant and gay: Your lines are too solemn and sage. You should try to fill only a page, Or two at the most with your lay; And revive the quaint verse of an age That is fading forgotten away. Study Lang, Gosse, and Dobson, I pray- That their rhymes and their fancies engage Your thought to be witty as they. You must stand on the popular stage. In the bars of an old fashioned cage We must prison the birds of our May, To carol the notes of an age That is fading forgotten away. Now this is a 'Ballade'-I say, So one stanza more to our page, But the "Vers de Société," If you can are the best for your 'wage.' Though the purists may fall in a rage That two rhymes go thrice in one lay, You may passably echo an age That is fading forgotten away. Envoy. Bard-heed not the seer and the sage, 'Afflatus' and Nature don't pay; But stick to the forms of an age That is fading forgotten away. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A COLONIAL MORNING DREAM by KAREN SWENSON GETTING A PURCHASE by KAREN SWENSON ALL THAT'S PAST by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE THE FINDING OF THE LYRE by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL THE SURPRISE AT TICONDEROGA [MAY 10, 1775] by MARY ANNA PHINNEY STANSBURY MAIDEN'S CHOICE by CAROLYN M. BARBER THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 67. THE THREE AGES OF WOMAN: 2 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |