Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of James Branch Cabell > Text of Ballad Of Plagiary
A poem by James Branch Cabell |
||
Ballad Of Plagiary |
||
________________________________________________
Title: Ballad Of Plagiary Author: James Branch Cabell [More Titles by Cabell] "Freres et matres, vous qui cultivez"--PAUL VERVILLE.
Hey, my masters, lords and brothers, ye that till the fields of rhyme, Still ye blot and change and polish--vary, heighten and transpose-- Ye have toiled and ye have fretted; ye attain perfected speech: And your rhymes are all of loving, as within the old days when Still ye make of love the utmost end and scope of all your art; Loving now may claim in living, when we have scant time to spare, Whilst the sun makes pictures for us; since to-day, for good or ill, Hey, my masters, all these love-songs by dust-hidden mouths were sung Sung by poets close to nature, free to touch her garments' hem Them ye copy--copy always, with your backs turned to the sun, _We are talking over telephones, as Shakespeare could not talk;_ _And pictures Dante labored on of mediaeval Hell_ But ye copy, copy always;--and ye marvel when ye find Waiting, young and fair as ever, till some singer turn and trace Hey, my masters, turn from piddling to the turmoil and the strife! _Thus I wrote ere Percie passed me. . . . Then did I epitomize_ [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |