Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Disillusioned By An Ex-Enthusiast by William Schwenck Gilbert
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Disillusioned By An Ex-Enthusiast

    By William Schwenck Gilbert



    Oh, that my soul its gods could see
    As years ago they seemed to me
    When first I painted them;
    Invested with the circumstance
    Of old conventional romance:
    Exploded theorem!

    The bard who could, all men above,
    Inflame my soul with songs of love,
    And, with his verse, inspire
    The craven soul who feared to die
    With all the glow of chivalry
    And old heroic fire;

    I found him in a beerhouse tap
    Awaking from a gin-born nap,
    With pipe and sloven dress;
    Amusing chums, who fooled his bent,
    With muddy, maudlin sentiment,
    And tipsy foolishness!

    The novelist, whose painting pen
    To legions of fictitious men
    A real existence lends,
    Brain-people whom we rarely fail,
    Whene'er we hear their names, to hail
    As old and welcome friends;

    I found in clumsy snuffy suit,
    In seedy glove, and blucher boot,
    Uncomfortably big.
    Particularly commonplace,
    With vulgar, coarse, stockbroking face,
    And spectacles and wig.

    My favourite actor who, at will,
    With mimic woe my eyes could fill
    With unaccustomed brine:
    A being who appeared to me
    (Before I knew him well) to be
    A song incarnadine;

    I found a coarse unpleasant man
    With speckled chin unhealthy, wan
    Of self-importance full:
    Existing in an atmosphere
    That reeked of gin and pipes and beer
    Conceited, fractious, dull.

    The warrior whose ennobled name
    Is woven with his country's fame,
    Triumphant over all,
    I found weak, palsied, bloated, blear;
    His province seemed to be, to leer
    At bonnets in Pall Mall.

    Would that ye always shone, who write,
    Bathed in your own innate limelight,
    And ye who battles wage,
    Or that in darkness I had died
    Before my soul had ever sighed
    To see you off the stage!



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