Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Progress Of Art. by Thomas Hood
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The Progress Of Art.

    By Thomas Hood



    Oh happy time! - Art's early days!
    When o'er each deed, with sweet self-praise,
    Narcissus-like I hung!
    When great Rembrandt but little seemed,
    And such Old Masters all were deemed
    As nothing to the young!

    Some scratchy strokes - abrupt and few,
    So easily and swift I drew,
    Sufficed for my design;
    My sketchy, superficial hand
    Drew solids at a dash - and spanned
    A surface with a line.

    Not long my eye was thus content,
    But grew more critical - my bent
    Essayed a higher walk;
    I copied leaden eyes in lead -
    Rheumatic hands in white and red,
    And gouty feet - in chalk.

    Anon my studious art for days
    Kept making faces - happy phrase,
    For faces such as mine!
    Accomplished in the details then,
    I left the minor parts of men,
    And drew the form divine.

    Old Gods and Heroes - Trojan - Greek,
    Figures - long after the antique,
    Great Ajax justly feared;
    Hectors, of whom at night I dreamt,
    And Nestor, fringed enough to tempt
    Bird-nesters to his beard.

    A Bacchus, leering on a bowl,
    A Pallas that out-stared her owl,
    A Vulcan - very lame;
    A Dian stuck about with stars,
    With my right hand I murdered Mars -
    (One Williams did the same).

    But tired of this dry work at last,
    Crayon and chalk aside I cast,
    And gave my brush a drink!
    Dipping - "as when a painter dips
    In gloom of earthquake and eclipse," -
    That is - in Indian ink.

    Oh then, what black Mont Blancs arose,
    Crested with soot, and not with snows:
    What clouds of dingy hue!
    In spite of what the bard has penned,
    I fear the distance did not "lend
    Enchantment to the view."

    Not Radcliffe's brush did e'er design
    Black Forests half so black as mine,
    Or lakes so like a pall;
    The Chinese cake dispersed a ray
    Of darkness, like the light of Day
    And Martin over all.

    Yet urchin pride sustained me still,
    I gazed on all with right good will,
    And spread the dingy tint;
    "No holy Luke helped me to paint,
    The devil surely, not a Saint,
    Had any finger in't!"

    But colors came! - like morning light,
    With gorgeous hues, displacing night,
    Or Spring's enlivened scene:
    At once the sable shades withdrew;
    My skies got very, very blue;
    My trees extremely green.

    And washed by my cosmetic brush,
    How Beauty's cheek began to blush;
    With lock of auburn stain -
    (Not Goldsmith's Auburn) - nut-brown hair,
    That made her loveliest of the fair;
    Not "loveliest of the plain!"

    Her lips were of vermilion hue:
    Love in her eyes, and Prussian blue,
    Set all my heart in flame!
    A young Pygmalion, I adored
    The maids I made - but time was stored
    With evil - and it came!

    Perspective dawned - and soon I saw
    My houses stand against its law;
    And "keeping" all unkept!
    My beauties were no longer things
    For love and fond imaginings;
    But horrors to be wept!

    Ah! why did knowledge ope my eyes?
    Why did I get more artist wise?
    It only serves to hint,
    What grave defects and wants are mine;
    That I'm no Hilton in design -
    In nature no De Wint!

    Thrice happy time! - Art's early days!
    When o'er each deed, with sweet self-praise,
    Narcissus-like I hung!
    When great Rembrandt but little seemed,
    And such Old Masters all were deemed
    As nothing to the young!



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