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Loss and Gain
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Hamatreya Hermione Holidays The House The Humblebee Initial Love Loss and Gain Merlin I Merlin II Merops Mithridates Monadnoc Musketaquid Ode to William H. Channing Ode To Beauty
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Texts : Early Emerson Poems : Emerson Poems: H-O : LOSS AND GAIN

Loss and Gain
Virtue runs before the muse
And defies her skill,
She is rapt, and doth refuse
To wait a painter's will.
Star-adoring, occupied,
Virtue cannot bend her,
Just to please a poet's pride,
To parade her splendor.
The bard must be with good intent
No more his, but hers,
Throw away his pen and paint,
Kneel with worshippers.
Then, perchance, a sunny ray
From the heaven of fire,
His lost tools may over-pay,
And better his desire.

from: Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Early Poems of Ralph Waldo Emerson.
New
York, Boston, Thomas Y. Crowell & Company: 1899. Introduction by Nathan
Haskell Dole.

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[ Emerson Poems: A-C ] [ Emerson Poems: D-G ] [ Emerson Poems: H-O ] [ Emerson Poems: P-Z ]

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