WHAT is a bibliophile? Mere lover Of Whatman page and Mearne-made cover, Of crushed levant whereround doth hover A rare aroma? Whose bookcase, double-locked, affords Such ancient treasures bound in boards One has suspicions that it hoards An MS. Homer? What is a bibliophile? Mere seeker For finds to make all rivals meeker -- Now down in Ann Street, now in Bleecker, To lose no chance That some neglected shop may show A fine unopened, pristine Poe, Flanked by an unfoxed Folio, With provenance? What is a bibliophile? Mere sigher For Trautz, Derome and Payne? A buyer Of Incunabula by wire, Or tall Bodoni? -- Who, in his dreams, of sales doth rave, To others' bidding still a slave, And oft to many a bookish knave Who claims him crony? These things I do not hold as guile; But must one, as a bibliophile, Be captive on a treasure isle And live as lonely? 'T were better not to hoard or spend, Better to borrow books -- or lend -- And know, like Field's o'er-pitied friend, Their insides only. Give me the man who's always finding His heart imbedded in the binding, With threads of love about it winding -- A book no longer; Who laughs with Lever, smiles with Lamb, Spouts "rare Ben Jonson," or with Sam Learns to despise the great world's sham, And so grows stronger. Ah! though you have all Rosinantes Were ever drawn for blithe Cervantes, And all the text of all the Dantes, 'T will little profit If you shall feel not in the Knight The pathos of his human plight, Or share not in the Stygian sight The terror of it. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO JOHN DONNE (2) by BEN JONSON PASA THALASSA THALASSA by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON BORDER BALLAD [OR MARCH, OR SONG], FR. THE MONASTERY by WALTER SCOTT SONNET: 12 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE THE CHILD ALONE: 4. PICTURE-BOOKS IN WINTER by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON THE DESERTED LOVER CONSOLETH HIMSELF ... by THOMAS WYATT SATISFIED by HESTER A. BENEDICT |