Public Domain Poetry And Stories - On The Disastrous Spread Of Æstheticism In All Classes. by Gilbert Keith Chesterton
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On The Disastrous Spread Of Æstheticism In All Classes.

    By Gilbert Keith Chesterton



    Impetuously I sprang from bed,
    Long before lunch was up,
    That I might drain the dizzy dew
    From day's first golden cup.



    In swift devouring ecstacy
    Each toil in turn was done;
    I had done lying on the lawn
    Three minutes after one.

    For me, as Mr. Wordsworth says,
    The duties shine like stars;
    I formed my uncle's character,
    Decreasing his cigars.

    But could my kind engross me? No!
    Stern Art--what sons escape her?
    Soon I was drawing Gladstone's nose
    On scraps of blotting paper.



    Then on--to play one-fingered tunes
    Upon my aunt's piano.
    In short, I have a headlong soul,
    I much resemble Hanno.

    (Forgive the entrance of the not
    Too cogent Carthaginian.
    It may have been to make a rhyme;
    I lean to that opinion).



    Then my great work of book research
    Till dusk I took in hand--
    The forming of a final, sound
    Opinion on _The Strand_.

    But when I quenched the midnight oil,
    And closed _The Referee_,
    Whose thirty volumes folio
    I take to bed with me,

    I had a rather funny dream,
    Intense, that is, and mystic;
    I dreamed that, with one leap and yell,
    The world became artistic.

    The Shopmen, when their souls were still,
    Declined to open shops--



    And Cooks recorded frames of mind
    In sad and subtle chops.



    The stars were weary of routine:
    The trees in the plantation
    Were growing every fruit at once,
    In search of a sensation.

    The moon went for a moonlight stroll,
    And tried to be a bard,
    And gazed enraptured at itself:
    I left it trying hard.

    The sea had nothing but a mood
    Of 'vague ironic gloom,'
    With which t'explain its presence in
    My upstairs drawing-room.



    The sun had read a little book
    That struck him with a notion:
    He drowned himself and all his fires
    Deep in the hissing ocean.

    Then all was dark, lawless, and lost:
    I heard great devilish wings:
    I knew that Art had won, and snapt
    The Covenant of Things.



    I cried aloud, and I awoke,
    New labours in my head.
    I set my teeth, and manfully
    Began to lie in bed.

    Toiling, rejoicing, sorrowing,
    So I my life conduct.
    Each morning see some task begun,
    Each evening see it chucked.

    But still, in sudden moods of dusk,
    I hear those great weird wings,
    Feel vaguely thankful to the vast
    Stupidity of things.



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