Prologue. A Sense Of Humor
Vachel Lindsay
No man should stand before the moon To make sweet song thereon, With dandified importance, His sense of humor gone. Nay, let us don the motley cap, The jester’s chastened mien, If we would woo that looking-glass And see what should be seen. O mirror on fair Heaven’s wall, We find there what we bring. So, let us smile in honest part And deck our souls and sing. Yea, by the chastened jest alone Will ghosts and terrors pass, And fays, or suchlike friendly things, Throw kisses through the glass.
Next 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : Queen Mab In The Village
- Vachel Lindsay : Shakespeare
- Vachel Lindsay : Simon Legree
- Vachel Lindsay : Speak Now For Peace
- Vachel Lindsay : Springfield Magical
- Vachel Lindsay : St. Francis Of Assisi
- Vachel Lindsay : Star Of My Heart
- Vachel Lindsay : Sunshine
- Vachel Lindsay : Sweet Briars Of The Stairways
- Vachel Lindsay : Sweetheart Autumn
Previous 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : Parvenu
- Vachel Lindsay : Our Mother Pocahontas
- Vachel Lindsay : Our Guardian Angels And Their Children
- Vachel Lindsay : Once More-to Gloriana
- Vachel Lindsay : On The Road To Nowhere
- Vachel Lindsay : On The Garden-wall
- Vachel Lindsay : On The Building Of Springfield
- Vachel Lindsay : On Suddenly Receiving A Curl Long Refused
- Vachel Lindsay : On Receiving One Of Gloriana's Letters
- Vachel Lindsay : On Reading Omar Khayyam