"I respectfully submit these poems as experiments in which I endeavor
to carry this vaudeville form back towards the old Greek precedent
of the half-chanted lyric. In this case the one-third of music
must be added by the instinct of the reader. He must be Iophon.
And he can easily be Iophon if he brings to bear upon the piece
what might be called the Higher Vaudeville imagination. . . .
"Big general contrasts between the main sections should be the rule
of the first attempts at improvising. It is the hope of the writer
that after two or three readings each line will suggest
its own separate touch of melody to the reader who has become
accustomed to the cadences. Let him read what he likes read,
and sing what he likes sung."
It was during this same visit in Chicago, at `Poetry's' banquet
on the evening of March first, 1914, that Mr. Yeats honored Mr. Lindsay
by addressing his after-dinner talk primarily to him as "a fellow craftsman",
and by saying of `General Booth':
"This poem is stripped bare of ornament; it has an earnest simplicity,
a strange beauty, and you know Bacon said, `There is no excellent beauty
without strangeness.
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