Poet's Note: This poem was inspired by what I read about the education of Algernon Charles Swinburne in A.N. Wilson's book God's Funeral: A Biography of Faith and Doubt in Western Civilization.

Temperament

A Daft Fool is within each man
Whose play untamed will turn him
About himself, inter him
In soot of burnt decorum,
And ply his movements mill.
A man himself a lover
Is doomed to once uncover
The Fool before another,
And thence his Daftness kill.
But Daftness is a virtue
And cannot be to hurt you,
Just cool you when things flame you,
And do you good he will --
If birch him when he’s naughty,
‘Til blood erupts his body,
You do, and 'til you’re haughty,
So Daftness lies there still.