The Poetry Corner

A Poet's Lesson

By Arthur Macy

Poet, my master, come, tell me true, And how are your verses made? Ah! that is the easiest thing to do: - You take a cloud of a silvern hue, A tender smile or a sprig of rue, With plenty of light and shade, And weave them round in syllables rare, With a grace and skill divine; With the earnest words of a pleading prayer, With a cadence caught from a dulcet air, A tale of love and a lock of hair, Or a bit of a trailing vine. Or, delving deep in a mine unwrought, You find in the teeming earth The golden vein of a noble thought; The soul of a statesman still unbought, Or a patriot's cry with anguish fraught For the land that gave him birth. A brilliant youth who has lost his way On the winding road of life; A sculptor's dream of the plastic clay; A painter's soul in a sunset ray; The sweetest thing a woman can say, Or a struggling nation's strife. A boy's ambition; a maiden's star, Unrisen, but yet to be; A glimmering light that shines afar For a sinking ship on a moaning bar; An empty sleeve; a veteran's scar; Or a land where men are free. And if the poet's hand be strong To weave the web of a deathless song, And if a master guide the pen To words that reach the hearts of men, And if the ear and the touch be true, It's the easiest thing in the world to do!