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Stephen Crane

I looked here;

I looked there;

Nowhere could I see my love.

And--this time--

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adverb

in a way that is correct and exact; without error

She measured the ingredients accurately to ensure the cake turned out perfectly.

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A TALE

110 lines
Robert Browning·1812–1889
_Epilogue to "The Two Poets of Croisic."_) What a pretty tale you told meOnce upon a time--Said you found it somewhere (scold me!)Was it prose or was it rhyme,Greek or Latin? Greek, you said,While your shoulder propped my head. Anyhow there's no forgettingThis much if no more,That a poet (pray, no petting!)Yes, a bard, sir, famed of yore, 10Went where suchlike used to go,Singing for a prize, you know. Well, he had to sing, nor merelySing but play the lyre;Playing was important clearlyQuite as singing: I desire,Sir, you keep the fact in mindFor a purpose that's behind. There stood he, while deep attentionHeld the judges round, 20--Judges able, I should mention,To detect the slightest soundSung or played amiss: such earsHad old judges, it appears! None the less he sang out boldly,Played in time and tune,Till the judges, weighing coldlyEach note's worth, seemed, late or soon,Sure to smile "In vain one triesPicking faults out: take the prize!" 30 When, a mischief! Were they sevenStrings the lyre possessed?Oh, and afterwards eleven,Thank you! Well, sir,--who had guessedSuch ill luck in store?--it happedOne of those same seven strings snapped. All was lost, then! No! a cricket(What "cicada"? Pooh!)--Some mad thing that left its thicketFor mere love of music--flew 40With its little heart on fire,Lighted on the crippled lyre. So that when (Ah joy!) our singerFor his truant stringFeels with disconcerted finger,What does cricket else but flingFiery heart forth, sound the noteWanted by the throbbing throat? Ay and, ever to the ending,Cricket chirps at need, 50Executes the hand's intending,Promptly, perfectly,--indeedSaves the singer from defeatWith her chirrup low and sweet. Till, at ending, all the judgesCry with one assent"Take the prize--a prize who grudgesSuch a voice and instrument?Why, we took your lyre for harp,So it shrilled us forth F sharp!" 60 Did the conqueror spurn the creatureOnce its service done?That's no such uncommon featureIn the case when Music's sonFinds his Lotte's deg. power too spent deg.65For aiding soul development. No! This other, on returningHomeward, prize in hand,Satisfied his bosom's yearning:(Sir, I hope you understand!) 70--Said "Some record there must beOf this cricket's help to me!" So, he made himself a statue:Marble stood, life size;On the lyre, he pointed at you,Perched his partner in the prize;Never more apart you foundHer, he throned, from him, she crowned. That's the tale: its application?Somebody I know 80Hopes one day for reputationThro' his poetry that's--Oh,All so learned and so wiseAnd deserving of a prize! If he gains one, will some ticketWhen his statue's built,Tell the gazer "'Twas a cricketHelped my crippled lyre, whose liltSweet and low, when strength usurpedSoftness' place i' the scale, she chirped? 90 "For as victory was nighest,While I sang and played,--With my lyre at lowest, highest,Right alike,--one string that made'Love' sound soft was snapt in twainNever to be heard again,-- "Had not a kind cricket fluttered,Perched upon the placeVacant left, and duly uttered'Love, Love, Love,' whene'er the bass 100Asked the treble to atoneFor its somewhat sombre drone." But you don't know music! WhereforeKeep on casting pearlsTo a--poet? All I care forIs--to tell him that a girl's"Love" comes aptly in when gruffGrows his singing, (There, enough!) * * * * *