Textarchiv - Thomas Oldham https://www.textarchiv.com/thomas-oldham Anglo-Irish geologist. Born 4 May 1816 in Dublin. Died 17 July 1878 in Rugby. de The Muse's Triumph https://www.textarchiv.com/thomas-oldham/the-muses-triumph <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>What adverse passions rule my changeful breast,<br /> With hope exalted, or by fear deprest!<br /> Now, by the Muse inspired, I snatch the lyre,<br /> And proudly to poetic fame aspire;<br /> Now dies the sacred flame, my pride declines,<br /> And diffidence the immortal wreath resigns.<br /> Friends, void of taste, warm advocates for trade,<br /> With shafts of ridicule, my peace invade:<br /> &#039;A Poet!&#039;—thus they sneeringly exclaim—<br /> &#039;Well may you court that glorious, envied name;<br /> For, sure, no common joys his lot attend;<br /> None but himself those joys can comprehend.</p> <p>O, superhuman bliss, employ sublime,<br /> To scribble fiction, and to jingle rhyme!<br /> Caged in some muse-behaunted, Grub-street garret,<br /> To prate his feeders&#039; promptings, like a parrot!<br /> And what, though want and scorn his life assail?<br /> What, though he rave in Bedlam, starve in jail?<br /> Such trifling ills the Bard may well despise;<br /> Sure of immortal honour when he dies.<br /> But, seriously—the advice of friendship hear:<br /> Stop short in your poetical career;<br /> O! quell the frenzies of your fever&#039;d brain,<br /> And turn, at Wisdom&#039;s call, to trade and gain,&#039;</p> <p>Absorb&#039;d in passive sadness, I comply;<br /> Turn from the Muse my disenchanted eye,<br /> And deign to study, as my friends persuade,<br /> The little, money-getting arts of trade.<br /> But soon the Goddess, fired with high disdain<br /> To see me woo the yellow strumpet, Gain,<br /> Resuming all her beauty, all her power,<br /> Returns to triumph in the vacant hour;<br /> Weakly reluctant, on her charms I gaze,<br /> Trembling, I feel her fascinating lays;<br /> Roused from ignoble dreams, my wondering soul<br /> Springs to the well-known bliss, regardless of control.<br /> Say then, ye blind, profane! who dare to blame<br /> The heaven-born Poet, and his thirst of fame;<br /> Ye slaves of Mammon! whose low minds behold<br /> No fair, no great, no good, in aught but gold;</p> <p>Say! will the Captive of tyrannic sway,<br /> Restored to genial air, and boundless day,<br /> Turn to his dungeon&#039;s suffocating night?<br /> Will the proud Eagle, who with daring flight<br /> Sublimely soars against the solar blaze,<br /> And eyes the inspiring God with raptured gaze,<br /> Stoop from his native kingdom in the sky,<br /> To share the breathings of mortality?</p> <p>How, then, can he, whose breast the Muse inspires,<br /> Restrain his soul, or quench those hallow&#039;d fires?<br /> How can he quit the world of mental bliss,<br /> For all the riches,—miseries!—of this?</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/thomas-oldham" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Thomas Oldham</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1840</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/thomas-oldham/the-muses-triumph" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="The Muse&#039;s Triumph" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:53:20 +0000 mrbot 6193 at https://www.textarchiv.com