At Francis Allens on the Christmas-eve,
The game of forfeits donethe girls all kissd
Beneath the sacred bush and past away
The parson Holmes, the poet Everard Hall,
The host, and I sat round the wassail-bowl,
Then half-way ebbd: and there we held a talk,
How all the old honour had from Christmas gone,
Or gone, or dwindled down to some odd games
In some odd nooks like this; till I, tired out
With cutting eights that day upon the pond,
Where, three times slipping from the outer edge,
I bumpd the ice into three several stars,
Fell in a doze; and half-awake I heard
The parson taking wide and wider sweeps,
Now harping on the church-commissionners,
Now hawking at Geology and schism;
Until I woke, and found him settled down
Upon the general decay of faith
Right thro the world, at home was little left,
And none abroad: there was no anchor none,
To hold by. Francis, laughing, clapt his hand
On Everards shoulder, with I hold by him.
And I, quoth Everard, by the wassail-bowl.
Why yes, I said, we knew your gift that way
At college: but another which you had,
I mean of verse (for so we held it then),
What came of that ? You know, said Frank, he burnt
His epic, his King Arthur, some twelve books
And then to me demanding why? Oh, sir,
He thought that nothing new was said, or else
Something so said twas nothingthat a truth
Looks freshest in the fashion of the clay
God knows: he has a mint of reasons: ask.
It pleased me well enough. Nay, nay, said Hall,
Why take the style of those heroic times?
For nature brings not back the Mastodon,
Nor we those times; and why should any man
Remodel models? these twelve books of mine
Were faint Homeric echoes, nothing-worth.
Mere chaff and draft, much better burnt. But I,
Said Francis, pickd the eleventh from this hearth
And have it: keep a thing, its use will come.
I hoard it as a sugar-plum for Holmes.
He laughd, and I, tho sleepy, like a horse
That hears the corn-bin open, prickd my ears;
For I rememberd Everards college fame
When we were Freshmen: then at my request
He brought it ; and the poet little urged,
But with some prelude of disparagement,
Read, mouthing out his hollow oes and aes,
Deep-chested music, and to this result.
The Epic
Alfred Lord Tennyson
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