The Poet's Poet by Elizabeth Atkins
page 45 of 367 (12%)
page 45 of 367 (12%)
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Who does not wholly give himself to art,
Who has about him nothing marked or strange, But tries to suit himself to all the world Will ne'er attain to greatness. [Footnote: _Michael Angelo._] Sometimes an American poet takes the opposite tack, and denies that his conduct differs from that of other men. Thus Richard Watson Gilder insists that the poet has "manners like other men" and that on thisaccount the world that is eagerly awaiting the future poet will miss him. He repeats the world's query: How shall we know him? Ye shall know him not, Till, ended hate and scorn, To the grave he's borne. [Footnote: _When the True Poet Comes._] Whitman, in his defense, goes farther than this, and takes an original attitude toward his failure to keep step with other men, declaring Of these states the poet is the equable man, Not in him but off him things are grotesque, eccentric, fail of their full returns. [Footnote: _By Blue Ontario's Shore._] As for the third method employed by the public in its attacks upon the poet,--that of making charges against his truthfulness,--the poet resents this most bitterly of all. Gray, in _The Bard,_ lays the wholesale slaughter of Scotch poets by Edward I, to their fearless truth |
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