Three poets stood before the king,
Longing, as poets do, to sing.
The first in clownish garb arrayed,
With jingling bauble ever played;
Over his perky face the while
Flitted a sneer or else a smile.
Well-groomed the second was, and neat,
In proper dress from head to feet;
A mirror of the fashion he,
And ruddy-cheeked, and fair to see.
The third stood near, with drooping head
Unkemmed and pale as are the dead.
“O king, hear me,” the first one cried:
“I have no thought on earth beside
To make you laugh, forget your care.
No sacred thing my song shall spare;
Of joy or grief 'tis yours to quaff;
Be wise with me, O king, and laugh.”
And thus the second urged his claim:
“Hear me, O king, for I can frame
Ballade, rondeau, and villanelle;
Sonnets by me are finished well,
And I can deftly, truly play
Upon the mocking triolet.
“More tricks I know of phrase and word
Than ever yet by man was heard;
Strange terms, expressions obsolete,
Trip through my lines on dainty feet;
And when the thought seems weak and poor,
I screen it with a phrase obscure.”
Slowly the third began to speak;
His voice at first was low and weak,
But soon his words rang clearer, higher,
Until his wondrous eyes caught fire;
And then a light from heaven shed
Sat halowise upon his head.
No leave asked he of court or king;
He sang as those who die or sing:
A strain prophetic, weird, sublime—
The voice and meaning of all time.
Rhymester and clown forgotten lie—
The poet's song shall never die.
Longing, as poets do, to sing.
The first in clownish garb arrayed,
With jingling bauble ever played;
Over his perky face the while
Flitted a sneer or else a smile.
Well-groomed the second was, and neat,
In proper dress from head to feet;
A mirror of the fashion he,
And ruddy-cheeked, and fair to see.
The third stood near, with drooping head
Unkemmed and pale as are the dead.
“O king, hear me,” the first one cried:
“I have no thought on earth beside
To make you laugh, forget your care.
No sacred thing my song shall spare;
Of joy or grief 'tis yours to quaff;
Be wise with me, O king, and laugh.”
And thus the second urged his claim:
“Hear me, O king, for I can frame
Ballade, rondeau, and villanelle;
Sonnets by me are finished well,
And I can deftly, truly play
Upon the mocking triolet.
“More tricks I know of phrase and word
Than ever yet by man was heard;
Strange terms, expressions obsolete,
Trip through my lines on dainty feet;
And when the thought seems weak and poor,
I screen it with a phrase obscure.”
Slowly the third began to speak;
His voice at first was low and weak,
But soon his words rang clearer, higher,
Until his wondrous eyes caught fire;
And then a light from heaven shed
Sat halowise upon his head.
No leave asked he of court or king;
He sang as those who die or sing:
A strain prophetic, weird, sublime—
The voice and meaning of all time.
Rhymester and clown forgotten lie—
The poet's song shall never die.
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