The Poetry Corner

A Roman "Round-Robin."

By Henry Austin Dobson

("His Friends" To Quintus Horatius Flaccus.) "Hc decies repetita [non] placebit."--Ars Poetica. Flaccus, you write us charming songs: No bard we know possesses In such perfection what belongs To brief and bright addresses; No man can say that Life is short With mien so little fretful; No man to Virtue's paths exhort In phrases less regretful; Or touch, with more serene distress, On Fortune's ways erratic; And then delightfully digress From Alp to Adriatic: All this is well, no doubt, and tends Barbarian minds to soften; But, HORACE--we, we are your friends-- Why tell us this so often? Why feign to spread a cheerful feast, And then thrust in our faces These barren scraps (to say the least) Of Stoic common-places? Recount, and welcome, your pursuits: Sing Lyd's lyre and hair; Sing drums and Berecynthian flutes; Sing parsley-wreaths; but spare,-- O, spare to sing, what none deny, That things we love decay;-- That Time and Gold have wings to fly;-- That all must Fate obey! Or bid us dine--on this day week-- And pour us, if you can, As soft and sleek as girlish cheek, Your inmost Ccuban;-- Of that we fear not overplus; But your didactic 'tap'-- Forgive us!--grows monotonous; Nunc vale! Verbum sap.