Ode to the Medieval Poets
W.H. Auden
Chaucer, Langland, Douglas, Dunbar, with all your
 brother Anons, how on earth did you ever manage,
     without anaesthetics or plumbing,
     in daily peril from witches, warlocks,
 lepers, The Holy Office, foreign mercenaries
 burning as they came, to write so cheerfully,
     with no grimaces of self-pathos?
     Long-winded you could be but not vulgar,
 bawdy but not grubby, your raucous flytings
 sheer high-spirited fun, whereas our makers,
     beset by every creature comfort,
     immune, they believe, to all superstitions,
 even at their best are so often morose or
 kinky, petrified by their gorgon egos.
     We all ask, but I doubt if anyone
     can really say why all age-groups should find our
 Age quite so repulsive. Without its heartless
 engines, though, you could not tenant my book-shelves,
     on hand to delect my ear and chuckle
     my sad flesh: I would gladly just now be
 turning out verses to applaud a thundery
 jovial June when the judas-tree is in blossom,
     but am forbidden by the knowledge
     that you would have wrought them so much better.
 W.H. Auden (1907-1973) was a British-American poet
