Public Domain Poetry And Stories - True Diffidence. by William Schwenck Gilbert
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True Diffidence.

    By William Schwenck Gilbert



    My boy, you may take it from me,
    That of all the afflictions accurst
    With which a man's saddled
    And hampered and addled,
    A diffident nature's the worst.
    Though clever as clever can be
    A Crichton of early romance
    You must stir it and stump it,
    And blow your own trumpet,
    Or, trust me, you haven't a chance.

    Now take, for example, my case:
    I've a bright intellectual brain
    In all London city
    There's no one so witty
    I've thought so again and again.
    I've a highly intelligent face
    My features cannot be denied
    But, whatever I try, sir,
    I fail in and why, sir?
    I'm modesty personified!

    As a poet, I'm tender and quaint
    I've passion and fervor and grace
    From Ovid and Horace
    To Swinburne and Morris,
    They all of them take a back place,
    Then I sing and I play and I paint;
    Though none are accomplished as I,
    To say so were treason:
    You ask me the reason?
    I'm diffident, modest and shy!



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