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‘Behold, I will do a new thing. Now it shall spring forth. And the beasts of the field shall honour me, the dragons and the owls’ – Bible 14 Prologueto Léon Clopet, architect When your Petrus, or Pierre, had no stone to make his chair, no more sighs or tears to shed, and ne’er a nail above his bed to hang his old guitar upon, you gave me shelter, dear Léon. Come, little Rhapsodist, you said, write your poems, eat my bread, although the sky is hardly blue and Homer’s heav’n is not for you, nor that which warmed the troubadour, for here ‘tis cold, and you are poor. Ah, Paris has no forest free, so come, my little poet, to me, where pinched but happy we may live and friendship to each other give. And we will share our little lot of sweet hashish till all’s forgot! My humble and ashamed soul thus blessed the friend that made it whole and helped it in its misery. For in my cruel adversity, struck long and low with anxious fear, you only, Léon, shed a tear!
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Do not naysay my gratitude: should I naysay your fire and food? I cannot hide my thanks to thee – ah, no, my dear Protector, see, I tell the world my dire distress, uncovered in my nakedness! And wish it that the world may know I did not flinch; for I can show two lots of earthly pain, at least, at this, the world’s all-sumptuous feast! For poverty ne’er broke my youth, or cracked the brittle branch of truth. And wish it that the world may see my beard is not the all of me! I have my heart, I have my song, that smile when troubles come along. I have my guiding soul, whose fee is unretreating victory! And wish the world may understand that with no buckler in my hand, no Lordship or no Kingly place, no Gentleman’s too-flattering face, no Usurer’s ill-gotten gains – I am no Byron for my pains. I write no elegies for Courts amidst their lusts and wastrel sports, no hymns to Gods do I rehearse, no lady’s thigh displays my verse that springs from wealth and gluttony: my song is of my poverty. 15

‘Behold, I will do a new thing. Now it shall spring forth. And the beasts of the field shall honour me, the dragons and the owls’ – Bible

14 Prologueto Léon Clopet, architect

When your Petrus, or Pierre, had no stone to make his chair, no more sighs or tears to shed, and ne’er a nail above his bed to hang his old guitar upon, you gave me shelter, dear Léon. Come, little Rhapsodist, you said, write your poems, eat my bread, although the sky is hardly blue and Homer’s heav’n is not for you, nor that which warmed the troubadour, for here ‘tis cold, and you are poor. Ah, Paris has no forest free, so come, my little poet, to me, where pinched but happy we may live and friendship to each other give. And we will share our little lot of sweet hashish till all’s forgot! My humble and ashamed soul thus blessed the friend that made it whole and helped it in its misery. For in my cruel adversity, struck long and low with anxious fear, you only, Léon, shed a tear!

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