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One of the ancients,once said that poetry is "the mirror of the perfect soul." Instead of simply writing down travel notes or, not really thinking about the consequences, expressing your thoughts, memories or on paper, the poetic soul needs to seriously work hard to clothe the perfect content in an even more perfect poetic form.
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What is poetry?


Reading books RomanceThe unity of form and content is what distinguishes poetry from other areas of creativity. However, this is precisely what titanic work implies.
Not every citizen can become a poet. If almost every one of us, at different times, under the influence of certain reasons or trends, was engaged in writing his thoughts, then it is unlikely that the vast majority will be able to admit to themselves that they are a poet.
Genre of poetry touches such strings in the human soul, the existence of which a person either didn’t suspect, or lowered them to the very bottom, intending to give them delight.


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Read books online » Poetry » Cobwebs from a Library Corner by John Kendrick Bangs (best books to read for women TXT) 📖

Book online «Cobwebs from a Library Corner by John Kendrick Bangs (best books to read for women TXT) 📖». Author John Kendrick Bangs



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TO
SISTER ANNE




CONTENTS


BOOKISH


A PESSIMISTIC VIEW
THE MASTER’S PEN—A CONFESSION
BOOKWORM BALLADS (A LITERARY FEAST)
IDEAS FOR SALE
THE AUTHOR’S BOOMERANG
TO AN EGOTISTICAL BIOGRAPHER
NO COPYRIGHT NEEDED
INGREDIENTS OF GREATNESS
A COMMON FAVORITE
THEIR PENS
AN UNSOLVED PROBLEM
THE BIBLIOPHILE’S THREAT
MY TREASURES
A POET’S FAD
THE POET UNDONE
A WANING MUSE
MODESTY
MY LORD THE BOOK
THE BIBLIOMISER
THE “COLLECTOR”
A READER
FATE!
A PLEASING THOUGHT
BOOKS _vs._ “BOOKS,” BY A BIBLIOMANIAC
A CONFESSION
THE EDITION DE LOOKS



WISE AND OTHERWISE


NAPOLINI’S ERROR
MY COLOR
CONTENTMENT IN NATURE
THE HEROIC GUNNER
THE PATHETIC TALE OF THE CADDY BOY
GARRULOUS WISDOM
THE PERJURY OF A REJECTED LOVER
MAID OF CULTURE
NOT PERFECT
A CITY DWELLER’S WISH
WHERE ARE THEY?
MEMORIES
A SAD STATE
AD ASTRA PER OTIUM.
CONSOLATION
SATISFACTION ON READING “NOT ONE DISSATISFIED,” BY WALT WHITMAN
TO A WITHERED ROSE
THE WORST OF ENEMIES
JOKES OF THE NIGHT
AN AUTUMNAL ROMANCE
THE COUNTRY IN JULY
MAY 30, 1893
THE CURSE OF WEALTH
THE RHYME OF THE ANCIENT POPULIST
ONE OF THE NAMELESS GREAT
IN FEBRUARY DAYS
A CHANGE OF AMBITION
MESSAGE FROM MAHATMAS
THE GOLD-SEEKERS
ODE TO A POLITICIAN
SOME ARE AMATEURS




BOOKISH




A PESSIMISTIC VIEW


A LITTLE bit of Thackeray,
A little bit of Scott,
A modicum of Dickens just
To tangle up the plot,
A paraphrase of Marryat,
Another from Dumas—
You ask me for a novel, sir,
And I say, there you are.

The pen is greater than the sword,
Of that there is no doubt.
The pen for me whene’er I wish
An enemy to rout.
A pen, a pad, and say a pint
Of ink with which to scrawl,
To put a foe to flight is all
That’s needed—truly all.

But when it comes to making up
A novel in these days
You do not need a pen at all
To win the writer’s bays.
A pair of sharpened scissors and
A wealth of pure white page
Will do it if you have at hand
A pot of mucilage.

So give to me the scissors keen,
And give to me the glue,
And I will fix a novel up
That’s sure to startle you.
The good ideas have all been worked,
But while we’ve gum and paste
There shall be books and books and books
To please the public taste.


THE MASTER’S PEN—A CONFESSION


IN my collection famed of curios
I have, as every bookman knows,
A pen that Thackeray once used.
To be amused,
I thought I’d “take that pen in hand,”
And see what came of it—what grand
Inspired lines ’twould write,
One Sunday night.
I dipped it in the ink,
And tried to think,
“Just what shall I indite?”
And do you know, that pen went fairly mad;
A dreadful time with it I had.
It spluttered, spattered, scratched, and blotted so,
I had to give it up, you know.
It really wouldn’t work for me,
And so I put it down; but last night, after tea,
I took it up again,
And equally in vain.
The hours sped;
I went to bed,
And in my dreams the pen came up to me and said:
“Here is the list of Asses who have tried
To take up pens the master laid aside;
Look thou!” I looked, and lo!—perhaps you’ve guessed—
My name, like Abou Ben’s, led all the rest!



BOOKWORM BALLADS

A LITERARY FEAST


MY Bookworm gave a dinner to a number of his set.
I was not there—I say it to my very great regret.
For they dined well, I fancy, if the menu that I saw
Was followed as implicitly as one obeys the law.

“’Twill open,” he observed to me, “with quatrains on the half.
They go down easy; then for soup”—it really made me laugh—
“The poems of old Johnny Gay”—his words were rather rough—
“They’ll do quite well, for, after all, soup’s thin and sloppy stuff.

“For fish, old Izaak Walton; and to serve as an _entrée_,
I think some fixed-up morsel, say from James, or from Daudet;
The roast will be Charles Kingsley—there’s a deal of beef in him.
For sherbet, T. B. Aldrich is just suited to my whim.

“For game I’ll have Boccaccio—he’s quite the proper one;
He certainly is gamey, and a trifle underdone;
And for the salad, Addison, so fresh and crisp is he,
With just a touch of Pope to give a tang to him, you see.

“And then for cheese, Max Nordau, for I think you’ll find right there
Some things as strong and mushy as the best of Camembert;
And for dessert let Thackeray and O. Khayyám be brought,
The which completes a dinner of most wondrous richness fraught.

“For olives and for almonds we can take the jokes of _Punch_—
They’re good enough for us, I think, to casually munch;
And through it all we’ll quaff the wines that flow forever clear
From Avon’s vineyards in the heart of Will of Warwickshire.”



IDEAS FOR SALE


I’M in literary culture, and I’ve opened up a shop,
Where I’d like ye, gents and ladies, if you’re passing by to stop.
Come and see my rich assortment of fine literary seed
That I’m selling to the writers of full many a modern screed.

I’ve bacilli for ten volumes for a dollar, in a bag—
Not a single germ among ’em that’s been ever known to drag.
Not a single germ among ’em, if you see they’re planted right,
But will grow into a novel that they’ll say is out of sight.

I have motifs by the thousand, motifs sad and motifs gay.
You can buy ’em by the dozen, or I’ll serve ’em every day:
I will serve ’em in the morning, as the milkman serves his wares;
I will serve ’em by the postman, or I’ll leave ’em on your stairs.

When you get down to your table with your head a vacuum,
You can say unto your helpmeet, “Has that quart of ideas come
That we ordered served here daily from that plot-man down the street?”
And you’ll find that I’ve been early my engagement to complete.

Should you want a book of poems that will bring you into fame,
Let me send a sample packet that will guarantee the same,
Holding “Seeds of Thought from Byron, Herrick, Chaucer, Tennyson.”
Plant ’em deep, and keep ’em watered, and you’ll find the deed is done.

I’ve a hundred comic packets that would make a Twain of Job;
I have “Seeds of Tales Narcotic; Tales of Surgeons and the Probe.”
I’ve a most superb assortment, on the very cheapest terms,
Done up carefully in tin-foil, of my A 1 “Trilby Germs.”

So perchance if you’re ambitious in a literary line,
Be as dull as e’er you can be, you will surely cut a shine,
If you’ll only take advantage of this opportunity,
When you’re passing by to stop in for a little chat with me.

You may ask me, in conclusion, why I do not seek myself
All the laurel and the glory of these seeds I sell for pelf.
I will tell you, though the confidence I can’t deny is rash,
I’m a trifle long on laurels, and a little short of cash.



THE AUTHOR’S BOOMERANG


HE frowns with reason; he has always said,
“The public has no knowledge of true art;
The book of worth these days would not be read;
’Tis trash not truth that goes upon the mart.”

And then was published his belovéd work—
Some twenty-six editions it has had—
And he his own conclusion cannot shirk:
With such success as this it must be bad!



TO AN EGOTISTICAL BIOGRAPHER


I’VE read your story of your friend’s fine life,
But really, gentle sir, I fail to see,
Why you have named it “Blank, and Jane his wife,”
When you had better called it simply “Me.”



NO COPYRIGHT NEEDED


I’VE penned a score of essays bright,
In Addison’s best style;
I’ve taken many a lofty flight,
The Muses to beguile.

Of novels I have written few—
I think no more than ten;
With history I’ve had to do,
Like several other men.

And still, to my intense regret,
Through all my woe and weal,
I’ve never penned a volume yet,
A foreigner would steal.


INGREDIENTS OF GREATNESS


THE style of man I’d like to be,
If I could have my way,
Would be a sort of pot-pourri
Of Poe

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