However, O'Shaughnessy's true passion was for literature. He published his first collection of poetry,
Epic of Women, in 1870, followed two years later by
Lays of France in 1872, and then
Music and Moonlight in 1874. He is now best remembered for the first poem in his collection
Music and Moonlight, entitled "Ode", which begins with the words: "We are the music makers, / And we are the dreamers of dreams". O'Shaughnessy's most quoted poem is his ode to the place of art, beginning We are the music-makers. And we are the dreamers of dreams. Wandering by lone sea-breakers. And sitting by desolate streams; World-losers and world-forsakers. On whom the pale moon gleams Yet we are the movers and shakers Of the world for ever, it seems When he was 30, he married and did not produce any more volumes of poetry for the last seven years of his life. His last volume,
Songs of a Worker, was published posthumously in 1881. O'Shaughnessy was both formally and aesthetically cutting-edge. For example, he is one of the few
Pre-Raphaelite poets to have needed a steady income, and his corpus often explores the relationship between art and work. Unlike other Pre-Raphaelites, O'Shaughnessy saw poetry as the result of toil rather than the consequence of a moment's frenetic inspiration. In his influential 1957 essay,
T. S. Eliot gives O'Shaughnessy as an example of "poets who have written just one, or only a few good poems," and says that, despite his uneven output, "We Are the Music Makers" belongs in any 19th century verse anthology. ==Personal life==