and of course it was wrong 
to label him as that – in just that tone of voice;  
a touch of envy there,  no doubt 
 
implying a comfortable life,  
a smart careerist, older poets youthfully 
cultivated, poems in the right magazines,  
editors gently kept in touch with;  
keeping on the right side of his peers,  
'interesting' reviews of their poetry skilfully woven,  
professional favours quietly exchanged;  
academic posts gracefully filled, and 
moved on from; leaving grateful ex-students 
recommended for the vacancy;  
and an acquired ability 
to write just enough, but not less;  
 
so it should be rather, a lifelong devotee of poetry,  
and when he started to read to us I felt mean 
for assuming him to be some artificial thing 
a professional poet;  
 
I wanted to inhabit his poetry, the 
house of his poetry; but some doors 
to rooms were open, some were shut;  
would I give the time to find and love the key?  
 
He read his own poems 
as if they were step-children – 
proud to show them off, and yet, not really his;  
the audience, taken aback by this,  
hesitated to applaud. 
 
But when he read the poems of others,  
he read them as though they were miracles 
to stun and to admire, yet he was, we were, barely worthy of;  
dropping as fine mercy, as the gentle dew of heaven; he read like 
an amateur would read the great, in awe; as - 
a lifelong devotee of poetry. He shone. 
In each of us, a poet was born and lived.
Michael Shepherd
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-professional-poet/