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Blackberries
by William Allingham
Allingham, William (1824-1889)
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[The Poet's your only practical man]
[Rash is the man that woos]
[Bard makes not Poem, not the shortest one]
[I love all the masters of poesie]
[Not like Homer would I write]
[The loving Poet shapes his fine delight.]
[You cannot see in the world the work of the Poet's pen]
[What chiefly makes a poem? not opulence, nor grace]
[Through the harmony of words]
[The Bard sings Beauty, and what lies behind]
[No wonder if the accurate man]
[If you love not Poetry]
[Many for Poems care much, for Poesie little or nothing]
[Best Poesie, by very skill of words]
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Blackberries
93
[How clever soever your Book may be]
How
clever soever your Book may be,
No throb of life therein I see;
The thing is but a costly toy,
Instead of a wonder, a power, a joy,
A gift out of eternity.
Blackberries