My Literary Friend
My Literary Friend - meaning Summary
Critique and Creative Compromise
The speaker recounts repeatedly revising a short poem at the behest of a self-styled literary friend. Each time the friend praises one aspect then finds another flaw—rhythm, rhyme, echo of something read—so the speaker keeps reworking the piece. The tone is wry and ironic: friendly criticism becomes endless tinkering that undermines confidence and originality, while onlookers conclude the poet would have been better off not showing his copy around.
Read Complete AnalysesOnce I wrote a little poem which I thought was very fine, And I showed the printer’s copy to a critic friend of mine, First he praised the thing a little, then he found a little fault; ‘The ideas are good,’ he muttered, ‘but the rhythm seems to halt.’ So I straighten’d up the rhythm where he marked it with his pen, And I copied it and showed it to my clever friend again. ‘You’ve improved the metre greatly, but the rhymes are bad,’ he said, As he read it slowly, scratching surplus wisdom from his head. So I worked as he suggested (I believe in taking time), And I burnt the ‘midnight taper’ while I straightened up the rhyme. ‘It is better now,’ he muttered, ‘you go on and you’ll succeed, ‘It has got a ring about it the ideas are what you need.’ So I worked for hours upon it (I go on when I commence), And I kept in view the rhythm and the jingle and the sense, And I copied it and took it to my solemn friend once more It reminded him of something he had somewhere read before. Now the people say I’d never put such horrors into print If I wasn’t too conceited to accept a friendly hint, And my dearest friends are certain that I’d profit in the end If I’d always show my copy to a literary friend.
 
					
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