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Poem by George Arnold


Beer


Here,
With my beer
I sit,
While golden moments flit:
Alas!
They pass
Unheeded by:
And, as they fly,
I,
Being dry,
Sit, idly sipping here
My beer.

O, finer far
Than fame, or riches, are
The graceful smoke-wreathes of this cigar!
Why
Should I
Weep, wail, or sigh?
What if luck has passed me by?
What if my hopes are dead,—
My pleasures fled?
Have I not still
My fill
Of right good cheer,—
Cigars and beer

Go, whining youth,
Forsooth!
Go, weep and wail,
Sigh and grow pale,
  Weave melancholy rhymes
  On the old times,
Whose joys like shadowy ghosts appear,
But leave me to my beer!
  Gold is dross,—
  Love is loss,—
So, if I gulp my sorrows down,
Or see them drown
In foamy draughts of old nut-brown,
Then do wear the crown,
  Without the cross!



George Arnold


George Arnold's other poems:
  1. October
  2. Recrimination
  3. The Jolly Old Pedagogue
  4. Introspection
  5. Wool-Gathering


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Charles Calverley Beer ("In those old days which poets say were golden")

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