AWAKE, ye forms of verse divine! Painting! descend on canvas wing, -- And hover o'er my head, Design! Your son, your glorious son, I sing; At Trumbull's name I break my sloth, To load him with poetic riches: The Titian of a table-cloth! The Guido of a pair of breeches! Come, star-eyed maid, Equality! In thine adorer's praise I revel; Who brings, so fierce his love to thee, All forms and faces to a level: Old, young, great, small, the grave, the gay, Each man might swear the next his brother, And there they stand in dread array, To fire their votes at one another. How bright their buttons shine! how straight Their coat-flaps fall in plaited grace! How smooth the hair on every pate! How vacant each immortal face! And then the tints, the shade, the flush, (I wrong them with a strain too humble), Not mighty Sherred's strength of brush Can match thy glowing hues, my Trumbull! Go on, great painter! dare be dull -- No longer after Nature dangle; Call rectilinear beautiful; Find grace and freedom in an angle; Pour on the red, the green, the yellow, "Paint till a horse may mire upon it," And, while I've strength to write or bellow, I'll sound your praises in a sonnet. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ASPATIA'S SONG, FR. THE MAID'S TRAEGDY by JOHN FLETCHER AN AUGUST MIDNIGHT by THOMAS HARDY THE CONVERGENCE OF THE TWAIN; LINES ON LOSS OF THE TITANIC by THOMAS HARDY SONNET: THE EVENING STAR by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE PLEASED CAPTIVE; A SONG by PHILIP AYRES GHOSTS by MARION FRANCIS BROWN THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: THE PEDLER by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |