POEMS. THE POET'S LICENSE. T 'HE Poet's License! - Some there are Who hold the false opinion 'T is but a meagre privilege Confined to Art's dominion ; Which bind the colder men of prose Ah no! - I deem 't is something more, To which the proudest bard on earth The Poet's License! - 't is the right, Throughout the world of beauty. To gaze with rapture at the stars When Nature gives a gorgeous rose, And so it is the poet comes And revels in her bowers, And, though another hold the land, Is owner of the flowers. O nevermore let Ignorance Repeat the phrase as meaning aught The Poet's License! - 't is the fee Of earth and sky and river To him who views them royally, TREASURE IN HEAVEN. RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED TO GEORGE PEABODY, ESQ. "What I spent, I had; what I kept, I lost; what I gave, I have!" OLD EPIΤΑΡΗ. E I. VERY coin of earthly treasure For our simple worldly pleasure, II. All the gold we leave behind us III. But each merciful oblation - For the treasure freely given I'M GROWING OLD. Y days pass pleasantly away; MY My nights are blest with sweetest sleep; I feel no symptoms of decay; I have no cause to mourn nor weep; My foes are impotent and shy; My friends are neither false nor cold, And yet, of late, I often sigh, I 'm growing old ! My growing talk of olden times, My growing thirst for early news, My growing apathy to rhymes, My growing love of easy shoes, My growing hate of crowds and noise, I'm growing fonder of my staff; I 'm growing dimmer in the eyes; I'm growing old ! |