Robert Louis Stevenson, an Elegy; and Other Poems by Richard Le Gallienne
page 21 of 49 (42%)
page 21 of 49 (42%)
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PROFESSOR MINTO Nature, that makes Professors all day long, And, filling idle souls with idle song, Turns out small Poets every other minute, Made earth for men--but seldom puts men in it. Ah, Minto, thou of that minority Wert man of men--we had deep need of thee! Had Heaven a deeper? Did the heavenly Chair Of Earthly Love wait empty for thee there? _March_ 1, 1893. ON MR. GLADSTONE'S RETIREMENT The world grows Lilliput, the great men go; If greatness be, it wears no outer sign; No more the signet of the mighty line Stamps the great brow for all the world to know. Shrunken the mould of manhood is, and lo! Fragments and fractions of the old divine, Men pert of brain, planned on a mean design, Dapper and undistinguished--such we grow. No more the leonine heroic head, |
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