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e Passed with the singer's own informing breath: Ah, golden book, for thee there is no grave, Thine is a rhyme that shall not taste of death. Great wife of his great heart--'tis yours to mourn, Son well-beloved, 'tis yours, who loved him so: But we!--hath death one perfect page out-torn From the great song whereby alone we know The splendid spirit imperiously shy,-- Husband to you and father--we afar Hail poet of God, and name as one should cry: 'Yonder a king, and yonder lo! a star!' So great his song we deem a little while That Song itself with his great voice hath fled, So grand the toga-sweep of his great style, So vast the theme on which his song was fed. One sings a flower, and one a face, and one Screens from the world a corner choice and small, Each toy its little laureate hath, but none Sings of the whole: yea, only he sang all. Poor little bards, so shameless in your care To snatch the mighty laurel from his head, Have you no fear, dwarfs in the giant's chair, How men shall laugh, remembering the dead? Great is advertisement! 'tis almost fate, But, little mushroom-men, of puff-ball fame, Ah, do you dream to be mistaken great And to be really great are just the same? Ah, fools! he was a laureate ere one leaf Of the great crown had whispered on his brows; Fame shrilled his song, Love carolled it, and Grief Blessed it with tears within her lonely house. Fame loved him well, because he loved not Fame, But Peace and Love, all other things before, A man was he ere yet he was a name, His song was much because his love was more. PROFESSOR MINTO Nature, that makes Professors all day long, And, filling idle souls with idle song, Turns out small Poets every other minute, Made earth for men--but seldom puts men in it. Ah, Minto, thou of that minority Wert man of men--we had deep need of thee! Had Heaven a deeper? Did the heavenly Chair Of Earthly Love wait empty for thee there? _March_ 1, 1893. ON MR. GLADSTONE'S RETIREMENT The world grows Lilliput, the great men go; If greatness be, it wears no outer sign; No more the signet of the mighty line Stamps the great brow for all the world to know. Shrunken the mould of manhood is, and lo! Fragments and fractions of the old divine, Men pert of brain, planned on a mean design, Dapper and undistinguished--such we grow. No more the leonine heroic head, The ruling arm, great h
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