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Wen Gott betrgt, ist wohl betrogen.

By Arthur Hugh Clough

Topics: classic

Is it true, ye gods, who treat us     As the gambling fool is treated;     O ye, who ever cheat us,     And let us feel were cheated!     Is it true that poetical power,     The gift of heaven, the dower     Of Apollo and the Nine,     The inborn sense, the vision and the faculty divine,     All we glorify and bless     In our rapturous exaltation,     All invention, and creation,     Exuberance of fancy, and sublime imagination,     All a poets fame is built on,     The fame of Shakespeare, Milton,     Of Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley,     Is in reasons grave precision,     Nothing more, nothing less,     Than a peculiar conformation,     Constitution, and condition     Of the brain and of the belly?     Is it true, ye gods who cheat us?     And that s the way ye treat us?     Oh say it, all who think it,     Look straight, and never blink it!     If it is so, let it be so,     And we will all agree so;     But the plot has counterplot,     It may be, and yet be not.

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"Is it true, ye gods, who treat us..."

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Author:Arthur Hugh Clough

"Is it true, ye gods, who treat us..." by Arthur Hugh Clough

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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"

Arthur Hugh Clough

About Arthur Hugh Clough

Arthur Hugh Clough (1819–1861) was an English poet whose work explores Victorian doubt and moral uncertainty. His poems "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" and "The Latest Decalogue" are sharp, thoughtful, and still widely anthologized.

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"Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith,     I was,..."

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