Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Richard Savage by William Ernest Henley
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

Richard Savage

    By William Ernest Henley



By J. M. Barrie and H. B. Marriott Watson, Criterion Theatre, April 16, 1891.

    To other boards for pun and song and dance!
    Our purpose is an essay in romance:
    An old-world story where such old-world facts
    As hate and love and death, through four swift acts -
    Not without gleams and glances, hints and cues,
    From the dear bright eyes of the Comic Muse! -
    So shine and sound that, as we fondly deem,
    They may persuade you to accept our dream:
    Our own invention, mainly - though we take,
    Somewhat for art but most for interest's sake
    One for our hero who goes wandering still
    In the long shadow of PARNASSUS HILL;
    Scarce within eyeshot; but his tragic shade
    Compels that recognition due be made,
    When he comes knocking at the student's door,
    Something as poet, if as blackguard more.

    Poet and blackguard.    Of the first - how much?
    As to the second, in quite perfect touch
    With folly and sorrow, even shame and crime,
    He lived the grief and wonder of his time!
    Marked for reproaches from his life's beginning;
    Extremely sinned against as well as sinning;
    Hack, spendthrift, starveling, duellist in turn;
    Too cross to cherish yet too fierce to spurn;
    Begrimed with ink or brave with wine and blood;
    Spirit of fire and manikin of mud;
    Now shining clear, now fain to starve and skulk;
    Star of the cellar, pensioner of the bulk;
    At once the child of passion and the slave;
    Brawling his way to an unhonoured grave -
    That was DICK SAVAGE!    Yet, ere his ghost we raise
    For these more decent and less desperate days,
    It may be well and seemly to reflect
    That, howbeit of so prodigal a sect,
    Since it was his to call until the end
    Our greatest, wisest Englishman his friend,
    'Twere all-too fatuous if we cursed and scorned
    The strange, wild creature JOHNSON loved and mourned.

    Nature is but the oyster - Art's the pearl:
    Our DICK is neither sycophant nor churl.
    Not as he was but as he might have been
    Had the Unkind Gods been poets of the scene,
    Fired with our fancy, shaped and tricked anew
    To touch your hearts with love, your eyes with rue,
    He stands or falls, ere he these boards depart,
    Not as dead Nature but as living Art.



Extra Info:



Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 410 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites