C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
A New Sculptor
By Julia Ward Howe (18191910)
O
Of mien unwonted,
And its pale shapes of glory without shame
Or speech confronted.
Smoothly appointed;
With Nymphs and Satyrs from the dewy sods
Freshly anointed.
And fiery Bacchus;
Pallas and Pluto, and those powers of Fear
Whose visions rack us.
The hunt just scented;
Glad Aphrodite met the warrior Mars,
The myriad-tented.
Draped in such clothing
As the world’s great, whom luxury makes warm,
Look on with loathing.
With honor wearing;
And in his dexter hand, embossed with toil,
A hammer bearing.
O’ercome of beauty,
With heart-impatience brimming to the brink
Of courteous duty,—
His weapon poising;
I, in my wrath and wonderment of woe,
No comment voicing.
Wreck of past ages;
Afford me here a lump of harmless clay,
Ye grooms and pages!”
A frame he builded
Of a new feature,—with the power of birth
Fashioned and welded.
A mien, a stature
As if the centuries that rolled between
Had greatened Nature.
A place was won it:
The rustic sculptor motioned; then, “To-day”
He wrote upon it.
That thou hast wrought me?
My marbles lived on symmetry and song;
Why hast thou brought me
Nurture and feeding?
Not this the burthen of my maidhood’s tasks,
Nor my high breeding.”
Nourished by Labor!
Thy gods are gone with old-time Faith and Fate;
Here is thy Neighbor.”