Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Ezra Pound - Au SalonEzra Pound - Au Salon
Work rating: Low


Her grave, sweet haughtiness Pleaseth me, and in like wise Her quiet ironies. Others are beautiful, none more, some less. I suppose, when poetry comes down to facts, When our souls are returned to the gods And the spheres they belong in, Here in the every-day where our acts Rise up and judge us; I suppose there are a few dozen verities That no shift of mood can shake from us: One place where we`d rather have tea (Thus far hath modernity brought us) `Tea` (Damn you!) Have tea, damn the Caesars, Talk of the latest success, give wing to some scandal, Garble a name we detest, and for prejudice? Set loose the whole consummate pack to bay like Sir Roger de Coverley`s This our reward for our works, sic crescit gloria mundi: Some circle of not more than three that we prefer to play up to, Some few whom we`d rather please than hear the whole aegrum vulgus Splitting its beery jowl a-meaowling our praises. Some certain peculiar things, cari laresque, penates, Some certain accustomed forms, the absolute unimportant.
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.