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	 |  Drawing On Horace-- and Shakespeare , The Ancients and modern Ancients like |  |  |  
	
		| Guest_RonPrice_* | 
				  Feb 5 05, 19:43 |  
		| Guest 
 
 
 
 
 
  
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				PERHAPS
 As forests change their leaves with the declining years....so the old generation of words perishes, and those newly born blossom and flourish like young men. -Horace in Enemies of Poetry, W.B. Stanford, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1980, p.113.
   
 Shakespeare has more meaning and value now than he had in his own day.  -A contemporary critic of English Literature in ibid., p.114.
   
 So may my words perish
 after this spiritual springtime,
 after the leaves of men’s lives
 have been arrayed with fresh blossoms
 and fruits of a consecrated joy;
 but it may be, just maybe, that
 they come to have more meaning in a future age
 when the deluge has gone,
 the frenetic busyness has abated,
 the mental tests have swept past:
 purging, purifying and preparing us
 for the noble mission which is
 our future as a race. Then, perhaps then,
 there will be people who can submit
 themselves to time’s process, to this
 dance of words and ideas that I have
 drunk with my mind in these darkest hours
 before the dawn of peace.
 
 Ron Price
 3 December 1995
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