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Matthew Arnold on Hearing Him Read His Poems in Boston

A stranger, schooled to gentle arts,
       He stept before the curious throng;
   His path into our waiting hearts
       Already paved by song.
 
   Full well we knew his choristers,
       Whose plaintive voices haunt our rest,
   Those sable-vested harbingers
       Of melancholy guest.
 
   We smiled on him for love of these,
      With eyes that swift grew dim to scan
  Beneath the veil of courteous ease
      The faith-forsaken man.
 
  To his wan gaze the weary shows
      And fashions of our vain estate,
  Our shallow pain and false repose,
      Our barren love and hate,
 
  Are shadows in a land of graves,
      Where creeds, the bubbles of a dream,
  Flash each and fade, like melting waves
      Upon a moonlight stream.
 
  Yet loyal to his own despair,
      Erect beneath a darkened sky,
  He deems the austerest truth more fair
      Than any gracious lie;
 
  And stands, heroic, patient, sage,
      With hopeless hands that bind the sheaf,
  Claiming God’s work with His wage,
      The bard of unbelief.
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