Dear Sir, Dear Madam, or Dear Friend,
With ease are written at the top;
When those two happy words are penned,
A youthful writer oft will stop,
And bite his pen, and lift his eyes
As if he thinks to find in air
The wished-for following words, or tries
To fix his thoughts by fix?d stare.
But haply all in vain—the next
Two words may be so long before
They’ll come, the writer, sore perplext,
Gives in despair the matter o’er;
And when maturer age he sees
With ready pen so swift inditing,
With envy he beholds the ease
Of long-accustomed letter-writing.
Courage, young friend; the time may be
When you attain maturer age,
Some young as you are now may see
You with like ease glide down a page.
Even then when you, to years a debtor,
In varied phrase your meanings wrap,
The welcomest words in all your letter
May be those two kind words at top.
(Charles Lamb)
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Based on Topics: Time Poems, Youth Poems, Friendship Poems, Age Poems, Courage PoemsBased on Keywords: wished-for, vain-, perplext, maturer, inditing, long-accustomed, welcomest