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New poems and variant readings/Still I love to rhyme

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New poems and variant readings (1918)
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Still I love to rhyme
1916670New poems and variant readings — Still I love to rhyme1918Robert Louis Stevenson

STILL I LOVE TO RHYME

Still I love to rhyme, and still more, rhyming, to wander
Far from the commoner way;
Old-time trills and falls by the brook-side still do I ponder,
Dreaming to-morrow to-day.


Come here, come, revive me, Sun-God, teach me, Apollo,
Measures descanted before;
Since I ancient verses, I emulous follow,
Prints in the marbles of yore.


Still strange, strange, they sound in old young raiment invested,
Songs for the brain to forget—
Young song-birds elate to grave old temples benested
Piping and chirruping yet.


Thoughts? No thought has yet unskilled attempted to flutter
Trammelled so vilely in verse;
He who writes but aims at fame and his bread and his butter,
Won with a groan and a curse.