Poeta Fit, Non Nascitur

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"How shall I be a poet?
  How shall I write in rhyme?
  You told me once `the very wish
  Partook of the sublime.'
  The tell me how! Don't put me off
  With your `another time'!"
  The old man smiled to see him,
  To hear his sudden sally;
  He liked the lad to speak his mind
 Enthusiastically;
 And thought "There's no hum-drum in him,
 Nor any shilly-shally."

 "And would you be a poet
 Before you've been to school?
 Ah, well! I hardly thought you
 So absolute a fool.
 First learn to be spasmodic -
 A very simple rule.

 "For first you write a sentence,
 And then you chop it small;
 Then mix the bits, and sort them out
 Just as they chance to fall:
 The order of the phrases makes
 No difference at all.

 `Then, if you'd be impressive,
 Remember what I say,
 That abstract qualities begin
 With capitals alway:
 The True, the Good, the Beautiful -
 Those are the things that pay!

 "Next, when we are describing
 A shape, or sound, or tint;
 Don't state the matter plainly,
 But put it in a hint;
 And learn to look at all things
 With a sort of mental squint."

 "For instance, if I wished, Sir,
 Of mutton-pies to tell,
 Should I say `dreams of fleecy flocks
 Pent in a wheaten cell'?"
 "Why, yes," the old man said: "that phrase
 Would answer very well.

 "Then fourthly, there are epithets
 That suit with any word -
 As well as Harvey's Reading Sauce
 With fish, or flesh, or bird -
 Of these, `wild,' `lonely,' `weary,' `strange,'
 Are much to be preferred."

 "And will it do, O will it do
 To take them in a lump -
 As `the wild man went his weary way
 To a strange and lonely pump'?"
 "Nay, nay! You must not hastily
 To such conclusions jump.

 "Such epithets, like pepper,
 Give zest to what you write;
 And, if you strew them sparely,
 They whet the appetite:
 But if you lay them on too thick,
 You spoil the matter quite!

 "Last, as to the arrangement:
 Your reader, you should show him,
 Must take what information he
 Can get, and look for no im­
 mature disclosure of the drift
 And purpose of your poem.

 "Therefore to test his patience -
 How much he can endure -
 Mention no places, names, or dates,
 And evermore be sure
 Throughout the poem to be found
 Consistently obscure.

 "First fix upon the limit
 To which it shall extend:
 Then fill it up with `Padding'
 (Beg some of any friend)
 Your great SENSATION-STANZA
 You place towards the end."

 "And what is a Sensation,
 Grandfather, tell me, pray?
 I think I never heard the word
 So used before to-day:
 Be kind enough to mention one
 `Exempli gratiâ'"

 And the old man, looking sadly
 Across the garden-lawn,
 Where here and there a dew-drop
 Yet glittered in the dawn,
 Said "Go to the Adelphi,
 And see the `Colleen Bawn.'

 "The word is due to Boucicault -
 The theory is his,
 Where Life becomes a Spasm,
 And History a Whiz:
 If that is not Sensation,
 I don't know what it is,

 "Now try your hand, ere Fancy
 Have lost its present glow -"
 "And then," his grandson added,
 "We'll publish it, you know:
 Green cloth - gold-lettered at the back -
 In duodecimo!"


 Then proudly smiled that old man
 To see the eager lad
 Rush madly for his pen and ink
 And for his blotting-pad -
 But, when he thought of publishing,
 His face grew stern and sad.

© Lewis Carroll