The monument outlasting bronze Was promised well by bards of old; The lucid outline of their lay Its sweet precision keeps for aye, Fixed in the ductile language-gold. But we who work with smaller skill, And less refined material mould, This close conglomerate English speech, Bequest of many tribes, that each Brought here and wrought at from of old, Residuum rough, eked out by rhyme, Barbarian ornament uncouth,-- Our hope is less to last through Art Than deeper searching of the heart, Than broader range of uttered truth. One keen-cut group, one deed or aim Athenian Sophocles could show, And rest content; but Shakespeare's stage Must hold the glass to every age,-- A thousand forms and passions glow Upon the world-wide canvas. So With larger scope our art we ply; And if the crown be harder won, Diviner rays around it run, With strains of fuller harmony. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON MY FIRST DAUGHTER by BEN JONSON HE FELL AMONG THIEVES by HENRY JOHN NEWBOLT AMORETTI: 68 by EDMUND SPENSER FRIENDSHIP; A SONNET by ALFRED TENNYSON ECCLESIASTICAL SONNETS: PART 3: 5. WALTON'S BOOK OF LIVE by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH ODES: BOOK 1: ODE 17. ON A SERMON AGAINST GLORY by MARK AKENSIDE A CURLEW'S CALL by JANE BARLOW |