Skip directly to:
Main content
Main navigation
University of Virginia Library
Search this document
Blackberries
by William Allingham
Allingham, William (1824-1889)
[epigraph]
[dedication]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[Dear Poet! is thy free light step the same]
[Tho' out of fashion, still to me]
[With wrappings and knottings your meaning you hide]
[A song or a riddle? I best like a song.]
[For Heaven's sake, Mighty Poet! leave thy tricks]
[Accurst, O Poet! be thy song]
[“Love's but a kind of itch”]
Epitaph (between the Lines).
[“Why murmur at this foolish crown of bays?”]
[A new Thing's rare indeed! The Poets play]
[Good Sense and Poetry, old friends, are now not seen together]
[The Poet launched a stately fleet: it sank.]
Advice to a Young Poet.
Self-Criticism.
A Public Monument.
[Apollo smiles on bards of every sort]
Inscription omitted on a Public Monument.
Statua Infelix.
To a Modern Poet.
Modern Poet answers
[A brilliant literature, no doubt, have we.]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
[section]
Collapse All
|
Expand All
Blackberries
[He who worships Success]
He
who worships Success
Follows no blind guide:
“I merely can grope and guess;
Let the Universe decide.”
Only, to learn aright
Who does or does not succeed,
He must keep true ends in sight,—
A difficult matter indeed!
Blackberries