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Invitation To A Young But Learned Friend To Abandon Archaeology For The Moment, And Play Once More With His Neglected Muse.

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In those good days when we were young and wise,     You spake to music, you with the thoughtful eyes,     And God looked down from heaven, pleased to hear     A young man's song arise so firm and clear.     Has Fancy died? The Morning Star gone cold?     Why are you silent? Have we grown so old?     Must I alone keep playing? Will not you,     Lord of the Measures, string your lyre anew?     Lover of Greece, is this the richest store     You bring us,--withered leaves and dusty lore,     And broken vases widowed of their wine,     To brand you pedant while you stand divine?     Decorous words beseem the learned lip,     But Poets have the nicer scholarship.     In English glades they watch the Cyprian glow,     And all the Maenad melodies they know.     They hear strange voices in a London street,     And track the silver gleam of rushing feet;     And these are things that come not to the view     Of slippered dons who read a codex through.     O honeyed Poet, will you praise no more     The moonlit garden and the midnight shore?     Brother, have you forgotten how to sing     The story of that weak and cautious king     Who reigned two hundred years in Trebizond?     You who would ever strive to pierce beyond     Love's ecstacy, Life's vision, is it well     We should not know the tales you have to tell?

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"In those good days when we were young and wise,..."

"Invitation To A Young But Learned Friend To Abandon Archaeology For The Moment, And Play Once More With His Neglected Muse." is a quintessential example of James Elroy Flecker's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"I who am dead a thousand years,     And wrote this..."

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