CANTO I.
INVOCATION.
I.
The poet hath a realm within, and throne, And in his own soul, singeth his lament. A comer often in the world unknown — A flaming minister to mortals sent; In an apocalypse of sentiment, He shows in colors true the right or wrong, And lights the soul of virtue with content; Oh! could the world without him please us long! What truth is there that lives and does not live in song? II.
"The stuff's in him of robust manliness, He is a poet singing, more by ear Than note:" His great heart filled with tenderness, Thus spoke the patriarch bard of Cedarmere, Of me, who dwelt in a most obscure sphere: For I was in the tents of bondage when The muse inspired, and ere my song grew clear, The graceful Bryant called his fellow-men To mark what in my lay seemed pleasing to him then.