| An artist is what is call’d the self that the brush holdeth —
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| Though hath it then caringly caress’d the Canvas of to-morrow?
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| O Canvas! |
| For thee I hold my tool — still! |
| Passionless it quivereth
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| Minding not that my hands are more than apt;
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| My Muse!
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| Where is hidden
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| The blue-huéd arch 'neath the High Heaven’s rich emblazonry
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| The flowery meadow, embrac’d by the horizon — snowflak’d and aery mountains
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| In which the bare-breasted maidens dance to the lay o' midsummer
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| Aloft the distant lazy flapping of the doves in vainglore
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| O Canvas!, wherefore canst thou these images not allow? |
| —
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| I deem a projection of my Theatre they should be! |
| —
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| Then, I challenge thee the wisdom of naysaying the yearns o' mine —
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| What is this unforseen that not enjoineth light shades to be skillfully paintéd?
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| I thought that love would last forever…
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| I was wrong!
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| The raven sky prey’d on by the snowfill’d, blustery clouds
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| Unadornéd the meadow — hunger driveth the wolf out of the wood
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| The maidens chain’d and whipp’d within a dreary dungeon —
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| And, lo! |
| 'twixt the wizen roses a mossy grave:
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| «The Devil is as Black as he Painteth» —
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| O Canvas! |
| wherefore… |