Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/298

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EPILOGUE TO LESSING'S LAOCOÖN.

The world but feels the present's spell:
The poet feels the past as well;
Whatever men have done, might do,
Whatever thought, might think it too.




EPILOGUE TO LESSING'S LAOCOÖN.

One morn as through Hyde Park we walked,
My friend and I, by chance we talked
Of Lessing's famed Laocoön;
And after we a while had gone
In Lessing's track, and tried to see
What painting is, what poetry,—
Diverging to another thought,
"Ah!" cries my friend, "but who hath taught
Why music and the other arts
Oftener perform aright their parts
Than poetry? why she, than they,
Fewer fine successes can display?


"For 'tis so, surely! Even in Greece,
Where best the poet framed his piece,
Even in that Phœbus-guarded ground
Pausanias on his travels found
Good poems, if he looked, more rare
(Though many) than good statues were—
For these, in truth, were everywhere.
Of bards full many a stroke divine
In Dante's, Petrarch's, Tasso's line,
The land of Ariosto showed;
And yet, e'en there, the canvas glowed
With triumphs, a yet ampler brood,

Of Raphael and his brotherhood.