[Before I was famous] Embedded within the article "Bohemianism: The American Authors Who Met in a Cellar" is Fawcett's poem recollecting his time at Pfaff's and dropping the names of fellow Pfaffians. Before I was famous I used to sit In a dull old underground room I know, And sip cheap beer, and be glad for it, With a wild Bohemian friend or two. There was artist George with the blonde Greek head, And the startling creeds and the loose cravat; There was splenetic journalistic Fred Of the sharp retort and the shabby hat; There was dreamy Frank of the lounging fait, Who lived on nothing a year or less, And always meant to be something great, But only meant; and smoked to excess. And last myself, whom their merry sneers Annoyed no whit as they laughed and said, "I listened to all their grand ideas, And wrote them out for my daily bread." . . . . But there came a change in my life at last, And fortune forgot to starve and stint, And the people chose to admire aghast The book I had eaten dirt to print. And new friends gathered about me then, New voices summoned me there and here; The world went down in a dingy den And drew me forth from my pipe and beer. . . . . But now and then I would break the thrall, I would yield to a pang of dumb regret, And steal to join them, and find them all With the amber wassail near them yet. But the wit would lag and the mirth would lack, And the god of jollity hear no call. And the prosperous broadcloath on my back Hung over the spirits like a pall. . . . . Well, and what has it all been worth? May not my soul to my soul confess That "succeeding" here on earth Does not always assume success. . . . . I would cast, and gladly, from this gray head Its crown, to regain one sweet lost year With artistic George, with splenetic Fred, With dreamy Frank, with the pipes and beer.