Ban and Arriere Ban--A Rally of Fugitive Rhymes
THE POET'S APOLOGY

Andrew Lan

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No, the Muse has gone away,

Does not haunt me much to-day.

Everything she had to say

Has been said!

'Twas not much at any time

She could hitch into a rhyme,

Never was the Muse sublime,

Who has fled!

Any one who takes her in

May observe she's rather thin;

Little more than bone and skin

Is the Muse;

Scanty sacrifice she won

When her very best she'd done,

And at her they poked their fun,

In Reviews.

'Rhymes,' in truth, 'are stubborn things.'

And to Rhyme she clung, and clings,

But whatever song she sings

Scarcely sells.

If her tone be grave, they say

'Give us something rather gay.'

If she's skittish, then they pray

'Something else!'

Much she loved, for wading shod,

To go forth with line and rod,

Loved the heather, and the sod,

Loved to rest

On the crystal river's brim

Where she saw the fishes swim,

And she heard the thrushes' hymn,

By the Test!

She, whatever way she went,

Friendly was and innocent,

Little need the Bard repent

Of her lay.

Of the babble and the rhyme,

And the imitative chime

That amused him on a time, -

Now he's grey.

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