Arthur Maquarie

Here you will find the Poem Of Glory of poet Arthur Maquarie

Of Glory

WHO will persuade me that one perfect song 
 Is not more glorious than a victor?s bays? 
 I know not who. I ask because the phrase 
Runs lightly and the final words are strong. 
But did you press me for a right or wrong, 
 Then would I bid you hunt for perfect lays, 
 And rouse the dust of dead heroic days, 
And pass your judgement if you live so long. 
 
To me it seems more worth, when all is said, 
 To smoke a friend?s cigar and see the moon 
 Lie rippling on the Arno mid the strewn 
White ranks of rippling stars, to give my head 
 Its own good leading, to expect no boon, 
To sing, and damn the world, and join the dead.