LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Chap. Copyright No....;__ JS97 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. RIMES TO BE READ BY J. EDMUND V. COOKE, Author of "A PATCH OF PANSIES," Etc. CHICAGO W. B. CONKEY COMPANY L L 3 o o to c •Tf- Ort^ 4269 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 18q7, by J. EDMUND V. COOKE, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. Author's Note. TO the proprietors and editors of the New York Sun, Youth's Companion, St. Nicholas, Munsey's Magazine, Overland Monthly, Puck, Truth, New York Clipper, New York Recorder, Chicago Times-Herald, Up-to-Date, Cleveland Press, Cleveland Voice, Cycling Gazette, Traveler's Record, Pittsburg Bulletin, The New Bohemian and Iroquois Magazine, the author desires to express his thanks for the courtesy extended in gi anting him permission to reprint his verses previously appearing in their publications. / CONTENTS. PAGE. Author's Note -- iii Proem: "I'm Glad to See You" ----- 3 The Story of Old Glory 7 The Anarchist - - - - - - - - -n Connor McCarthy 21 The Young Man Waited ------ 30 Brotherton's Baby - - - -.-.-"-- 33 How They Heard La Prima 37 The Labors of Hercules ------ 41 Gog 50 The World A-Wheel 55 Revenge -----56 Omni Utilitarian -------- 57 Comedy or Tragedy ? -------58 My Lover Says -------- 59 Matched 60 "Our Club" — The Irish Member's Toast - - - 63 "Our Ladies" — The Poet's Toast 65 v PAGE. After-Dinner Apology of Le Comte Crapaud - 63 Fin de Siecle 73 An Unconventional Rustic 76 Before Playing Tinkertown ------ 80 A Little Saunter 82 "If I Didn't Forget How Old I Was" - - - 84 A Besetting Sin 85 Unverstaendlich 88 Katie an' Me - - 90 Dat Gawgy Watahmillon 91 Dear Mother Earth 95 Ohio 96 A Mule of Arkansas 98 The Organ Grinder --------99 The Dear Little Fool 100 The Minor Role 102 Panacea 103 But O, Boys, Know Boys 105 Iced Tea 107 At A Railroad Junction ------ 109 Oliver Hazard Perry - - - - - - - m Rip Van Winkle - - - 112 The Old Year and the New 113 vi PAGE. The Day of Labor - - - - - - - "5 Grandmother's Song - - - - - - - H7 Little Marggy -------- 118 The Armies of the Corn - - - - - -120 Assurance --------- 123 Completeness - - - -124 Reiteration - - - - - - - - -125 A Little Song For Two - - - - - 126 Your Tears 127 Your Voice 127 Your Touch - - - - 127 Tout ou Rien 128 En Rapport 128 Love's First Kisses - 130 Love's Deceit - - - 130 In Sorrow, Not in Anger 131 Asleep, Adream, Awake 132 The Parting Point 135 At a Car Window 136 Three Kisses 137 Bill Nye 139 Foreboding 14° Good-Bye 141 vii To The People of the Platform This Volume is cordially and fraternally inscribed. PROEM. "I'M GLAD TO SEE YOU." Folks are often glad to meet other folks, yon know, But they sometimes falter when it comes to saying so ; Or they say, " I'm glad t' see y' ," O, so faint and low That you wonder just how far their gladsome feelings go. Say " i'm glad to see you," when you mean it. Speak it out ; Don't bite off a piece of it and leave the rest in doubt. Let your lips know what your soul is thinking most about. It doesn't take an orator to say the sentence right ; It doesn't ?ieed much rhetoric to make you feel its might ; It has a hundred hundred tongues which tell its meaning quite. You feel it when you' re going home and catch the window light, You see it in a sweetheart' s smile, flashing warm and bright, ' Tisfelt in mother's morning kiss and in the last at night, And baby's little reaching arms express the same delight. " Glad to see you ! " O, you friends of dead yesterday, Could we only hear it from your dear lips far away ; Could we tell it into ears which mingle now with clay, We might gain that fuller meaning which the simple words convey. Say, " Fm glad to see you," then, to friends who still are here. Say it with that meaning which is music to the ear. More than simply say it; words are cheap, but deeds are dear ; And men will say it back to you and ?nake their meaning clear. Tales, Grave and Gay. THE STORY OF OLD GLORY. [ TELL a tale which is not new, * But O, as long as truth is true, As long as Freedom sets the pace Of progress for the human race, As long as it is our intent That All shall be the Government, As long as Rights of Man shall be The heritage of you and me, As long as unslaved thought is dear, So long will all men pause to hear The story of Old Glory. In seventeen seventy-six its red First from the rising sun is shed ; In seventeen seventy-six its white First blends along the gladdened light; Its thirteen starry gems of heaven Flash forth in loyal seventy-seven. O, not of warp and woof and dye Is born that banner of the sky! It forms from out the heart and brain Of Patrick Henry, Franklin, Paine! It floats out proud and high and free In souls of Otis, Adams, Lee! Of Quincy, Sherman, Jefferson! Of Hancock, Warren, Washington! And so in valor is begun The story of Old Glory. Then Gage, Howe, Clinton and Burgoyne And Hessians hired by British coin; Cornwallis, with his lordly crest, Rhal, Tarleton, Parker and the rest, Strive hard to blot that flag from sight But, armored in their sense of right, Come Putnam, Prescott, Allen, Stark, Men of a strong and sturdy mark ; Come Ward, Montgomery, Schuyler, Greene. And all the list which lies between, From Marion to LaFayette. Right gallantly the foe is met ! They make the flag acknowledged free, For kingcraft's rule is not to be The story of Old Glory. In times of war or times of peace, Its marches onward never cease. 'Tis borne by Clark and Lewis on To far-off shores of Oregon. 'Tis seen on Fulton's boat, which steam First forces up against the stream And see ! how on the air it rides In triumph o'er Old Ironsides. 'Tis borne by Perry on the Lakes And proud defiance nobly shakes From Tripoli to Mexico! Not always right, too well we know, But all the more, then, must we care That no oppression more shall share The story of Old Glory. Then comes the time its own stern sons Turn on it their perverted guns. But though Lee musters all his horde, With Jackson's swift and sudden sword, With Johnston's cool and cunning skill, With Bragg and Longstreet's strenuous will; Though Morgan makes audacious dash, Though Stuart seems the lightning flash, Though Hood's impetuous men are hurled And Pickett's charge astounds the world, Yet — Grant and Appomatox come, And stifled is the warlike drum. The monster, Civil Hate, is slain ; State clasps the hand of State again, And, from the rock-bound coasts of Maine To every sunlit Texan plain, There echoes back, in glad refrain, The story of Old Glory. Still floats the flag! Its stars increase Through the triumphant times of peace. Still floats the flag — in 'seventy-six, When all the nations intermix In honor of our liberty. Still floats the flag in 'ninety-three, When mankind comes from earth and sea To that Dream City of the West, Where Art and Marvel greet the guest. Still floats the flag and floats today, And may its colors float alway ! Exulting that its sons are strong, And strength's best use is righting wrong. So be it told in speech and song — The story of Old Glory. I know that we are told its red Is of the blood its heroes shed, Its white the smoke of battle air, Its blue the garb its soldiers wear ; But O, believe not that its stars Are only bursting shells of wars ! Believe not that its red and white But symbolize the stripes which smite ! Nay, let us think those stars are eyes, Eternal, godlike, of the skies; Its red the flame of loyalty, Its white the badge of purity, Its blue the blue of Freedom's sky — And so we know shall never die The story of Old Glory! 10 THE ANARCHIST. V/ES, Wallace Wright was an anarchist. Nay, sir, * hold back your blame ; And pause, O woman of high degree, before you cry his shame ; And you, fair maid with the spotless soul, shrink not before his name. But why for Anarchy? Would he turn the world from its ways of work? Would he make the scholar a millman, or the untaught ditcher clerk? Did he covet the honest spoil of toil, himself content to shirk? Listen and know. / think not so, and yet it well might be, With a boyhood spent at a working bench instead of a mother's knee; With ten hours toiling daily, for a pittance, year by year, For children are many and cheap, my friends, and dollars scarce and dear. Yet he did not coarsen in mind or heart, that kin or comrades saw, But he worked, he thrived, matured and wived, and still he believed in law. Her softest wish was a law to him, and sweet was the hard-won bread, And the steadiest man in all the shops was Wallace Wright, they said. But the times grew hard and the wage was cut, and amid the ensuing strife The first black shadow of Anarchy came into our workman's life, For his bench-mate there, in the shop, was one from the far-off Volga's side, Who had seen his sister dragged to shame and his father scourged till he died, Who had seen his mother go raving mad, had seen it all dry-eyed, And then he had sworn such an oath of oaths that the depths of hell replied. And Wallace was stirred by the Russian and hon- estly shared his grief, But would not hear of the Red Reform with its promise of swift relief — Relief from the grinding greed of man, from the wrongs of class and state, Relief from a hundred things he saw, with the fer- vor of honest hate. Yes, he knew his own and his fellows' wrongs, and his very soul grew sore, But what of that? It was all forgot when he entered his cottage door. Then the times waxed worse and they let men go, and Wallace among the rest. Discharged for his long, hard service; for it made his wage the best, And the high must go to retain the low, when price is the crucial test. No work! 'tis a thought to rebuke the heart for its dance within the breast. Then the Russian came. "Are you ready now to mingle with Free- dom's set?" But Wallace had only gravely smiled and had shaken his head: "Not yet." Then day by day he sought for work. Do you under- stand? He sought, As no man ever sought gold or fame, for toil — and he found it not. * The quick, curt word, the rough rebuff, the careless sign of the head, Were his till his face was sharp with care and his heavy heart like lead. And every night when he sought his home, with an aching, haunting dread, His wife looked up. She spoke no word, but mourn- fully drooped her head To hide the fear of her mother-heart, the fear that would not be gone ; The fear for the babe unborn, whom want already laid clutches on. Then there came a day when they had to face the terrible word, "Vacate!" The owner was "Sorry of course, but then, that didn't keep the estate. " And the Russian came. "Are you ready, Wright?" "Not yet!" he gasped, "not yet! I have still my wife and hope and life! and there must be work to get. ' ' A. wretched hovel received them. They struggled from bad to worse, Till death seemed only happiness and life was the greater curse. And then she sickened; her life ebbed, ebbed, and nevermore turned its tide. And Wallace had only wildly prayed that he might be laid at her side, 14 For he knew she had died from cruel want, in a fruitful, generous earth ; And the quiet babe at her side, he knew, was starved before its birth. And the Russian came. "Well, Wallace Wright, are you still content with life? You talked to me of Society's claim, and Society killed your wife. Society grinds and kills us all, and you will not make it rue it. You talked to me of your God, and He — He let Society do it. ' ' Can you blame the man, who, in wild despair, pressed lips to the lips of his dead And arose and looked at the Russian? "Lead on! I will go, ' ' he said. A month had passed and the Red Reform to which he had joined his fate Had issued its edict against a man who had earned its cruel hate — Who had earned its hate, for his wealth was used to oppress and not to raise ; And the sterner the bargain in flesh and blood, the more was his own self-praise. «5 And hence the decree of the Red Reform, with fifty men in the plot, Where forty and nine had voted "Kill!" and one had voted not. That one you know, yet his name was first to be drawn in the fateful lot, And his Russian friend was the second, so the Red Reform decreed "That the monster yield his life to man, and that these two do the deed. ' ' 'Twas the fated day — a holiday — and the noisy throng poured out, Full-fed with the chaff of cheers and jeers, of the sounding laugh and shout, In that strange way that a world is gay, all heedless of what about. Then down the street came the day's event, the glit- tering grand parade, And Wallace knew that the man they sought was one of the cavalcade. That man was the man for whom his brow had sweat with the wet of years, Who had drained his life of hope and joy and left there want and tears, 16 Who had taken work from his hand when work was another name for life, Who had taken his home from his head — from hers — who had killed, yes killed his wife. Half dazed, half crazed, stood Wallace Wright, with the single thought in his head That the life of this man of plenty would pay for his stricken dead. Then the Russian said: "When the carriage comes to the crossing just below, You spring and seize the horses' heads and I will deal the blow ; Then shout: 'This much for the Red Reform!' but if I should chance to miss, As soon as I'm clear of the carriage you finish the work with this. ' ' And The Deed came near and nearer, when, close at his side, a child Cried out her baby greeting, and the doomed man looked and smiled And flung from his glove a kiss, as of love unselfish and undented. Lo ! the purpose of Wallace vanished, like the dark before the sun, At the love in the wee child's laughter and the thought if The Deed were done 17 How she would be robbed as he had been and the sweet face marred with grief, How a hate would fill the little soul for him, who had been the thief. Yet there was his friend, the Russian, no cause should make betray ; And there was the man who had wronged him, who blighted the summer day. A moment of wavering anguish, a moment of doubt and dread, Then, disregarding the passing steeds, he sprang for his friend instead. But the terrible knife was naked. It glittered, it rose, it sank, But it did not find its target. 'Twas Wallace's blood it drank, While the crowd closed in on the Russian, who fought them front and flank. With curses and cries and blows they closed. Wright madly strove to save him ; Was seized, was bound, and on him they found the bomb that the Russian gave him. The rest is simply, quickly told. They scented the deeper plot And offered Wallace a pardon's bribe, but he answered them, "For what? 18 Do you think I would bring another here to ease or share my lot? Betray a friend for a pardon? For a thousand I would not, Though you keep me here in prison walls till they or I shall rot ! ' ' So they juried and judged him guilty and gave him the law's extent, And all of his wrongs re-woke in him and his inmost soul was rent, Yet he smiled to the Russian a sad "Good-by, " as into his cell he went. He did not hear the confession that the other's tongue poured out, As, with calm and clear conciseness which the list- eners could not doubt, He told the story of Wallace : how the workshop thrust him out ; Of all the bitter battle ; of how it had come about He had cast his lot with the Red Reform ; how, alone, he plead for life For the man the clan had sworn should die ; and at last he had stopped the knife With his own rag-covered bosom; how he even then proved true To him who had pierced his body, though with unintent, God knew! 19 "And this is the man," said the Russian, "you have dared to condemn you, you — By the Lord ! no soul in all the whole of your Mam- mon-serving crew Should think it other than honor to latch that hero's shoe ! ' ' And then they remembered his boyhood days, remembered his manhood shown In a hundred kindly, simple acts amongst people he had known, Remembered the Russian's story, yes, even a trifle more; Why, even the man whose life he saved said "He wasn't bad, at the core!" So the Governor sent a pardon and they opened his grated door And found him as dead as the pitiless stone which formed his prison floor. They said that his wound had bled within. I doubt it not. Ah me ! There's many a wound which bleeds within we haven't the trick to see. But they said that his face wore a smile of grace. Was it joy to escape from earth? Or was it for wife — and that little one, which had starved before its birth? 20 connor McCarthy. "AH, GUD marnin", sir, 'dadeand I'm hearty and **■ glad that the weather is fine. Sure it isn't ould Connor McCarthy that's goin' to mope and to whine Because he can't make the world over. Yes, sir, that's me bit of a place. Sure I love every leaf on the clover and know every buttercup's face. "Dan says its a toomble-down shanty, and not fit to live in, says Lou ; So they're payin' me board. They have planty and both of 'em free wid it, too. And I'm takin' me sup where they bid me, but most of the time I'll be found Right here, where there's nobody wid me — or nobody still on the ground. "Of course it's an ould fellow's notion, and yet I'm half thinkin' it's true That the girl I brought over the ocean is a-doin' her waitin' here, too. The childer see no cause fer sorrow and say I'm a-weakenin' fast, But young people live fer tomorrow, while ould people live fer the past. "The girl I brought over was Mary — my Mary, God's peace to her soul! And never a word went contrary and never a heart- ache but stole Straight back to the land it was born in, afraid of the peace in her eyes, Eyes soft as the stars of the mornin' and blue wid the blue of the skies. "And never a worriment found me, but Mary's kiss laid it to rest. And whin her two arms went around me, I held all the world to me breast ! You smile, sir, because I'm revealin' what most of us hide. But it's true, And surely you know that same feelin', or else — well, God's mercy on you! "I loved her. I envied her shadow because it could lay at her feet, While I, wid the stock in the m'adow or down in the corn and the wheat. Was workin' fer bread fer the darlin'. And she was as jealously warm And vowed she was often fer quarrelin' wid the coat that was touchin' me arm. "And so we lived on here together, as happy as childer at play, Till Danny was born, sir, and whether I blessed or regretted the day I couldn't have told at your biddin'. I loved the wee broth of a boy As he lay there, all swaddled and hidden — ten pounds, sir, of genuine joy! "And yet even joy goes contrary and has a best side and a worst, Fer soon I was second to Mary and Danny the baby was first. What! jealous, you say, of a baby? That baby me own blood and bone? You call me a fool, sir, but maybe your love never burned like me own. "I was jealous; I know it; I knew it. But never a word did I say, But loved wife and baby all through it, and worked fer them day after day. 23 But O, things had changed. Why, the garden had lost half its green to me sight. I felt 'most like askin' God's pardon fer bringin' such stuff to the light. "The long-legged calf and the cow there; the new, nakid lamb in the field, The shaggy, ould horse in the plow there ; the corn wid its promisin' yield Were yesterday pictures of beauty. The common- est rail in the fence Seemed proud to be doin' its duty, but now 'twas all dollars. and cents. Ah, sad is the day that must borrow its light from a day of the past, And sad when you turn from tomorrow to a yester- day never to last. "Then came baby Lucy, a-makin' a change I don't yet understand, But all the delight Dan had taken came back in her wee, baby hand. Ah, she was my bit of a fairy! Me soul warmed again in me breast. I was fonder of her than of Mary, and she learned to love me the best, And would turn from her mother's own shoulder and cry to be taken by me, 24 And somehow that made Mary colder, but I never noticed, you see, For I was that taken wid Lucy. The color came back to the sky; The sun seemed to shine wid a use he had almost forgotten to try, The use, sir, of warmin' a fellow, the inside as well as the out, Of spendin' his glorious yellow to buy us from worry and doubt And all of that foolish complainin' the happiest folks seem possessed Forever to be entertainin', like Mary and me, wid the rest. "You might not have thought, had you seen us, each one wid a child to the heart, Those babies had come in between us and were pushing us farther apart. Though both of us keenly could feel it, we let it run on to the worst ; The years failed to stop it or heal it, and one day the awful storm burst. "When married folks keep on a livin', each holdin' some things from the light, They both must do lots of forgivin' before matters settle down right 25 And Mary was little on meekness and I — I could hardly be bent, And both counted kindness a weakness ; and so she took Danny — and went. You've heard that she went wid another. A lie! on me soul, 'tis a lie! And yet, sir, in some way or other, you've heard — but of that by and by. "Bit by bit, sir, I sold every acre, exceptin' this lot that you see, A tryin' to find her and make her take money enough to be free From poverty's pinch, till one marnin' (it still sets me heart beatin' hard) Widout the least bit of a warnin' I saw a lad run up me yard And open me door. It was Danny ! The rascal had grown full a head. Ah, but I was as soft as a granny and hugged him and kissed him and said 'Your mother, Dan? Quick, don't torment me wid waitin',' and then He gave me the letter she sent me. I mind every scratch of the pen. " 'Dear Connor; I send you me jewel. I've kept him as long as I could, 26 But now, though it's horribly cruel and hurts me, it's all for his good. I'm not fit to raise him, so, Connor, you make him the man he should be. Forgive his poor mother's dishonor and kiss little Lucy for me. ' "That was all. But O, Father in Heaven ! the words seemed to burn in me brain And everything else there was driven away by their terrible pain. 'Dishonor!' No more a pure woman, nevermore wid a right to the name, • The highest of everything human? I cried like a child wid the shame. And then I determined to reach her, to find her and help her to live, To give her a chance and to teach her that God, yes, and I — could forgive. "Then came every friend and relation, wid, 'Connor, it never will do. ' 'The childer, ' they said, 'Reputation,' and 'Just at their time of life, too. ' And so, for the son and the daughter, I gave up the mother and wife, But O, it was hard, hard to blot her quite out of me heart and me life. 27 "The childer grew up. Lucy married, position and money and all. Dan made his way easy and carried the town for recorder last fall. 'Last fall.' Yes, last fall in September, I heard from me Mary. She sent And begged me to come, to remember the dear, early days we had spent As husband and wife, and to hasten, to come widout losin' a day. My! my! how me ould legs went racin' to Danny and Lucy, but they, They said, "Send her money, but, father, you can't carry out all yer plan. Don't let her come back, for we'd rather let bygones be dead, when we can. ' " 'Send money. ' God's mercy! what's money when souls are a-starvin' to death? Dan said if the campaign were done he wouldn't have hindered a breath, But now — . Ah, 'but now;' the same reason that always was ready to tell — 'But now!' Was there never a season when mercy was free from its spell? "I went to me Mary. I found her that sick that me heart nearly broke. 28 She died, but my arms were around her. My name was the last word she spoke. She always had loved me, and better than that, she had always been pure. The terrible words of her letter were not what we fancied, for sure, Her heart was that true to her Connor, her con- science so tender, you see, Her leavin' her home seemed dishonor and so she had called it to me. "I hope you don't mind my relatin' me story. It's nothin', but I, I lived it, you see. Now I'm ivaitin , yes, waitin', contented, to die. I've got no reproach for the livin'. I've nothin' but love for the dead. I hope me own past is forgiven, and as for what's comin' ahead, Who can tell? Maybe joy, maybe sorrow, but surely there's some place, at last. Where old people live for tomorrow, as well as look into the past. ' ' 29 THE YOUNG MAN WAITED. N the room below the young man sat, With an anxious face and a white cravat, A throbbing heart and a silken hat, And various other things like that, Which he had accumulated. And the maid of his heart was up above, Surrounded by hat and gown and glove, And a thousand things which women love, But no man knoweth the names thereof — And the young man sat and — waited. You will scarce believe the things I tell, But the truth thereof I know full well, Though how may not be stated; But I swear to you that the maiden took A sort of a half-breed, thin stove-hook And heated it well in the gaslight there And thrust it into her head, or hair! Then she took a something off the bed, ' And hooked it onto her hair, or head, And piled it high, and piled it higher, And drove it home with staples of wire ! And the young man anxiously — waited. 30 Then she took a thing she called "a puff," And some very peculiar, whitish stuff, And using about a half a peck, She spread it over her face and neck, (Deceit was a thing she hated!) And she looked as fair as a lilied bower, (Or a pound of lard, or a sack of flour) And the young man wearily — waited. Then she took a garment of awful shape, And it wasn't a waist, nor yet a cape, But it looked like a piece of ancient mail, Or an instrument from a Russian jail, And then with a fearful groan and gasp, She squeezed herself in its deathly clasp — So fair and yet so fated! And then with a move like I don't know what, She tied it on with a double knot ; And the young man woefully — waited. Then she put on a dozen different things, A mixture of buttons and hooks and strings, Till she strongly resembled a notion store ; Then taking some seventeen pins, or more, She thrust them between her ruby lips, Then stuck them around from waist to hips, And never once hesitated. 3' And the maiden didn't know perhaps, That the man below had had seven naps, And that now he sleepily — waited. And then she tried to put on her hat. Ah me, a trying ordeal was that! She tipped it high and she tried it low, But every way that the thing would go Only made her more agitated. It wouldn't go straight and it caught her hair, And she wished she could hire a man to swear, But alas ! the only man lingering there Was the man who wildly — waited. Then a little dab here and a wee pat there, And a touch or two to her hindmost hair, Then around the room with the umost care She thoughtfully circulated. Then she siezed her gloves and a chamois skin, Some breath perfume and a long stick pin, A bon bon box and a cloak and some Eau de cologne and chewing gum, Her opera glass and a sealskin muff, A fan and a heap of other stuff ; ■ Then she hurried down, but ere she spoke, Something about the maiden broke, So she scurried back to the winding stair, And the young man looked in wild despair, And then he — evaporated ! .32 BROTHERTON'S BABY. DLEASE score one more for the human race. A There's a baby come to Brotherton's place. It's a little bit of a pudgy imp Of a color a cross between a shrimp And a lobster — boiled. It has no hair (There's a place for some, but it isn't there) And it has the most expressionless eyes And its nose is a most ridiculous size, Or, rather, it's no size. Then its legs And arms stick out like wobbly pegs. In short, it's a misfit thing all 'round, But chock up full of dolorous sound. I've often pondered and wondered why A baby's first knowledge is how to cry. Before it can see, or smell, or feel, Before it imbibes its earliest meal ; Eleven months before it can walk, Seventeen months before it can talk And even several months and a half Before the creature knows how to laugh ; Before it can sit, or stand, or crawl, Before it knows anything else at all, The infant human knows how to bawl 33 But Brotherton's baby has come to town And Brotherton's house is upside down. He has hired a nurse at "twenty per week" To keep him reminded he mustn't speak, And mustn't wear boots or shoes that squeak, And mustn't as much as open a door, For fear that the baby should stop a pore, And mustn't drink anything wet, or damp, As his breath might give the baby a cramp! But Brotherton's baby has come to stay And Brotherton came to me one day And — most munificent mark of favor! He said that I might call on "the little shaver. So I went, but no sooner were we inside Than the baby (as usual) wailed and cried And Brotherton called "Is my laddy-waddy A kyin' to see him's daddy-waddy, Or is him's tummick a'havin' baddy?" And then he observed it was plain to see The baby was frightened because of me. Then the mother said "Is ze tooksy-wooksy So 'faid of ze man and him's orsul looksy?" And she granted me such a frosty stare I could see my breath, when it struck the air. And the nurse said, "Why didn't popsy-wopsy Tell him's own little lolly-popsy 34 The manky-panky would visit he?" And then all three of them glowered at me. And so I tried to swallow my shame And gracefully get in the popular game By remarking, "Really, its head is fuzzy! Er — tell me, is it a buzzy-wuzzy Or is it a cissy-wissy child?" — But I was the only one that smiled. Then, after awhile, they asked my view Concerning a name. Any name would do If it wasn't too common, or wasn't too odd, Wasn't too short, or wasn't too broad, Wasn't too new and wasn't too old, Wasn't too backward and wasn't too bold, Wasn't too little and wasn't too long, Wasn't too mild and wasn't too strong, Wasn't too wild and wasn't too tame, But just a domestic, well-bred name, Warranted sound and gentle and kind — ' ' But though I willingly searched my mind, There wasn't a name I could think or say, From Beelzebub to Old Dog Tray, But Mr. grunted and Mrs. sniffed, And even the baby looked somewhat miffed. And then they proceeded to show his points, His style, his action, his hide, his joints, 35 Until I learned that the only way Was to watch for anything they might say And then agree, or more than agree, So when Mrs. Brotherton said to me, "Hasn't him dot a nice, bald head?" "Yes, so much nicer than hair," I said. "And hasn't him dot ze sweetest toes?" "And so remarkably placed in rows!" I cried, and she smiled, as if to say, "Most toes were adjusted any old way." "An' look at ze cheek of ze tsweet 'ittle lad." "Immense!" I said. "Resembles his dad." "And hasn't him dot ze tunninest eyes?" "And how closely they correspond in size!" Then Brotherton mentioned "Him's wonderful head!" "Ah, a block off the old chip there!" I said. "An' him's rosebud mouf !" said the wife. "Yes, but— I thought rosebuds were mostly shut\\ % Then Brotherton bridled and said "Some folks Never seemed to learn there were jokes — and jokes." And his wife chimed in, "Zey wouldn't stay To be 'boosed in such a orsul way. " And the baby screamed from his lofty seat Some scurrillous flings I scorn to repeat! 36 HOW THEY HEARD LA PRIMA. I. THE MAN OF IT. "]~\ID I hear Madame Prima sing?" *-' Well, I noticed her quaver And wabble and waver, But hearing? Well, that was a different thing; For I had a seat on the outside edge, Jammed in as tight as a wooden wedge In a hickory log, and there I sat, Dodging the high, proverbial hat; But once in awhile I'd tunnel though, And the great La Prima met my view. A petrified smile adorned her face, And, being a stranger to the place, Of course she never could find the way, And so, like a boat in a foreign bay, The impresario sought her side And towed her down, in her stately pride. Her train flowed out, like a vessel's wake; She churned a little and gave a shake, Came up in the wind and luffed and tacked, While the little tug-man swiftly backed ■ 37 And the orchestra signaled "Toot! — toot! toot!" As La Prima anchored and gave salute. O, yes, I heard La Prima sing. To my right sat a man with a cold and cough, Who sneezed till his head came almost off. And I wished it had. Then a mongrel dog, Which seemed to be doing the town incog. , (As he wouldn't allow any name to fit, From "Nice old doggie" to "Here you, git!") He had some grievance against the crowd, And proceeded to tell it, right out loud. Then some one had brought a baby there, Whose harmony matched its lack of hair. It howled a very monotonous air, And just as La Prima took high E, It pitched its pipe in another key And struggled to carry her up to G. O, yes, I heard La Prima sing ! She winked and blinked and wrinkled her nose, vShe opened her mouth to swallow her foes, Sank back again to a normal pose, Then suddenly reared and raged and rose And wiggled and waggled and stood on her toes. It was something marvelous, I suppose, But we couldn't tell, as a man remarked, Whether she coughed, or cried, or barked! O, yes, I heard La Prima sing. 38 II. THE WOMAN OF IT. O, yes, I heard La Prima sing! She had on a bodice Fit for a goddess. Indeed, the whole gown was the sweetest thing! The waist was chiffon, and cut quite low, And the skirt had an apron front, you know, And the colors were lovely, cerise and green, The prettiest shade of Nile I've seen. Then it must have been nine yards round and fell In those ripply folds I like so well. Her voice? Why, soprano, I think, and O, yes! The skirt was made of a satin duchesse With a train, Marie Antoinette, I guess. Then the bodice was also Antoinette, With a point, you know, and the neck was set With the dearest, sweetest, jeweled net. O, I almost forgot her Van Dykes ! They fell From the bodice, of course, and they did look swell. They were sapphire blue, and they matched so well. Then a belt with a buckle of jeweled gold ; Of course it was hooked to make it hold, But the buckle itself was awfully sweet. And then, to make the whole thing complete — Those bewitching sleeves ! They were point de gent And — let's see; how can I make it plain — 39 They had each three puffs ; I think it was three ; "Was she good?" Why, I'm telling you, can't you see? They were just the kind of sleeves for me. And that point de geiie ; well you never saw One-half the effect with mousse line de soic. What did she sing? Why, I don't know. But I'm awfully glad I heard her, though' 40 THE LABORS OF HERCULES. (Worked Over in Easy-Going Verse. ) TN ANCIENT Greece, long time ago, a man was ■ born — or, maybe, I ought to say a god was born — or, better yet, a baby. His father's name was Jupiter; Alcmena was his mother, Who vowed he was "the sweetest pet," and "never such another!" But Juno, wife of Jupiter, pretended not to know it; She didn't like young Hercules, and straightway sought to show it. She sent two horrid, monstrous snakes, to eat him in his cradle. Which reptiles found him sitting eating sugar with a ladle. They smiled to see how sweet he'd be, but lo! the boy gave battle : He killed them both and used their tails to make a baby-rattle. Then Juno let him thrive in peace ; but, after he was grown, He found that she had kept him from a kingdom and a throne. 41 Eurystheus obtained these plums, but night and day was haunted By tales of mighty Hercules — the hero and un- daunted! So, after some deep thinking, Eurystheus planned to send him To do a dozen labors, any one of which might end him. Labor I. The Nemean lion, accustomed to ravage The country around, being voted too savage, Our hero was sent to remove him from earth, With no arms, save the two that he had at his birth. Brave Hercules blocks up one hole of the den And enters the other. A silence, and then Comes a growl, and a roar and a rush, and a shock — Like waves in the tempest they struggle and rock, Till Hercules wins the renowned "strangle lock," And the lion goes down like a log or a post, Repents of his sins, and is only a ghost. Labor II. There lived at that epoch, according to story, A terrible monster, whose principal glory Consisted of heads, which a strict inventory Declared to be nine ; and one of the same Was as deathless as Jove, so authorities claim. 42 Nothing daunted, our Hercules went forth to fight it ; He cut off one head and two others were sighted. And thus the solution appeared to his view : "When you take one from one, the result will be two. ' ' Rather taken aback, but still thoroughly game, He called his hired help, Iolaus by name. Then he shaved off the heads as a man would a beard, And the necks (by his servant) were carefully seared, Till the deathless head soon was left grinning alone, And that one he buried beneath a big stone. Labor III. The Arcadian stag was a curious kind, Golden-horned, brazen-hoofed, and could outrun the wind ; Whoever pursued him was soon left behind. The mandate was given to capture him living, So our hero set out without any misgiving. All over the kingdom he followed the brute, Till a year was consumed in the useless pursuit. "Confound you!" said Hercules, seizing his bow, "I've got something here which I'll wager can go As fast as two stags. ' ' And it proved to be so. The arrow succeeded in laying him low. The wound wasn't fatal, so Hercules caught him, And into the king's haughty presence he brought him. 43 Labor IV. The boar of Erymanthus was de trop Which is French for saying how Bores are looked on, even now. Our hero ran the rascal through the snow, Snared him neatly in a net, Picked him up, like any pet, And took him to the capital to add him to the show. Labor V. Augeas, King of Elis, it appears, Had several thousand oxen in his stable, But hadn't cleaned the place for thirty years. The hard taskmaster heard, pricked up his ears And cried, "Ho! ho! my Hercules, you're able To do great things. I give you just one day For this spring cleaning. ' ' Stranger to dismay, Our hero sought the stables of Augeas, Turned into them the river named Alpheus, And re-enforced it with the swift Peneus These brooms soon swept the dirt away, you have my word. Perhaps they swept the stables with it. That I haven't heard. Labor VI. The Stymphalian birds were a horrible lot, And everyone thought 44 That they ought To be shot ; Yet no one had" done it, till Hercules brought His little snake-rattle to set them to flying And then popped them over, as easy as lying. Labor VII. A bull, sent by Neptune to die in his honor (?) Not having been killed was made mad by the donor. Eurystheus must have been running a "Zoo," And having the stag and the boar, wanted, too, The mad bull of Crete ; so he ordered ' ' Go get him ! ' ' Though Hercules never so much as had met him. But our hero set sail, Grabbed the bull by the tail, And took him to Hellas; but not for the Garden, For, having arrived, he then (begging his pardon Because he had given his tail such a pull) Set him free — and all Greece was as mad as the bull. Labor VIII. Diomedes Used to feed his Mares on human flesh. Hercules just cut him up, Found the mares inclined to sup, And fed him to them, fresh. 45 'Twas a most successful plan; Though before they liked a man More than oats or anything, Strange to say, this master-diet Made them docile, kind and quiet, To be taken to the king. Labor IX. The Amazon queen had a beautiful belt. 'Twas given by Mars, and the queen justly felt Quite proud of the trifle, but Hercules started To see if the belt and queen couldn't be parted. At first it appeared he had only to ask • To receive it, but this was too easy a task To please Mrs. Juno, who stirred up a bolt In the ranks of the Amazons. When the revolt Was reported to Hercules, he rather thought The queen was a traitress and covertly wrought To undo him ; so seizing the girdle he sought, He slew her, and thus was it bloodily bought. Which shows that a man may be brave as the best, And yet ungallant, when it comes to a test. Labor X. Geryones had a fine herd of red cattle, With a two-headed dog and a giant to battle With any who trespassed upon his domain. Dog, owner and keeper were met and were slain, 4<3 Yet Hercules still had to fight heavy odds, (A number of men and a parcel of gods) But in spite of them all, he conducted the string Of handsome, red beasts to his brute of a king. Labor XL When Juno was married, the goddess of Earth Presented some apples of excellent worth, Made all of fine gold From the smooth, shiny skin to the pips in the core. (Alas ! I am told Such beautiful apples don't grow any more.) But wealth is a worry. Nobody need doubt it, Unless, like myself, he is always without it. And Juno was worried until she grew pale ; Her nectar was fiat, her ambrosia was stale. The fear of a burglar had entered her head, And so every night she looked under the bed. No matter what Jupiter argued or said, She'd wake him at midnight to vow and declare There must be an apple-thief round about there. At last, growing tired of the worry and wear, She placed them in care Of the sisters Hesperides, living just where The sun sets at night. Our hero met Atlas, who held up the height Of the heavens in air, And a bargain was struck that the hero should bear 47 The dome for a while, and the action should earn The apples, which Atlas brought back in return. Though I can't understand Why a chap with a chance to steal apples at hand. Scot-free of all blame, Should so lose his head As to give up his claim And let somebody else do it for him instead. Labor XII. Pluto, in his world below, Had a great three-headed beast Called a dog. Perhaps 'twas so, But I doubt his breed, at least. House-dog? Hardly. Poison-drops Fell from out his gaping chops, And his fangs were sharp as hate, And he guarded Pluto's gate. Hercules was told to fetch This repulsive, savage wretch. Hercules with little fuss Seized the snarling Cerberus, Took him to the Earth from Hades, Scared the king in playful sport, Showed him round to all the court, Made him bark for all the ladies. Then the hero let him go, And he sank to realms below, 48 One head growling, One head yowling One head howling, Out dog-curses, As mythology rehearses. And the fun Of the Labors — all was done. So are these doggerel verses. 49 GOG. /^ OG was a dog who was owned by Smith — ^-* You have heard of Smith; his first name's Mister — And May was a baby most seen with Miss Maud, her grown-up, pretty sister. So far the story is plain, no doubt, But the rest of the tale demands reflection, For every evening the dog went out, And he always went in the baby's direction. And it puzzles me and it puzzled Gog, But you — well you are experienced, maybe — Why the maid so longingly looked for the dog, And the man so frequently called on the baby ! And why did the young man sigh such sighs? And why did the maid's sweet voice grow sweeter? And why did they seem to realize Maud's father paid for the gas by meter? And how distant the young man was, at the start ! (This fact, by the way, is one of the oddest) Though they both so bashfully kept apart, Their chairs, somehow, were not so modest! 5° And it puzzles me and it puzzled Gog. But you — well, you can explain it, maybe — Now, why did the maid caress the dog? And why did the young man trot the baby? And the young man said, "Dear baby, how I love brown eyes and clear-cut features And rare, long hair and a classic brow, Such as nature gives some favored creatures!" And the maiden said, "Good boy, good boy! If I thought that dogs had understanding, I'd tell you of eyes which give me joy; Oh, they're beautiful eyes and most command- ing!" And it puzzles me and it puzzled Gog — But your wiser sense can explain it, maybe — For she didn't seem to describe the dog And his remarks did not fit the baby. And the young man said, "O baby May! Don't you think you would like to have a brother, Who would worship you in the wildest way As he loves — he loves — he loves — another?" And the maid responded, "Goggy dear, Do you love your master? Say! is it true, sir? For somehow, although it seems so queer, I somehow feel that I feel like you, sir. ' ' 5i Then the young man said, "Now, Gog, my boy, If you love me, give her a sign to show it ; Sit up on your haunches, grin for joy And bark three times, and then she'll know it. " And the maiden said, ' 'O my darling May, If he loves me, as I love — you, so dearly, Just pat-a-cake with your hands to say That I may believe that he speaks sincerely." But alas! 'twas the young man's luckless lot To rock on the tail of the canine creature. And the poor dog's howls and the young man's thought Would have shocked the soul of priest or preacher. And then, despite what the maid could do, The baby took a contrary notion, And instead of patting a cake or two, It joined the dog in a wild commotion. And it puzzles me as it puzzled Gog, But you — well you can explain it, maybe — Oh, why did the young man kick the dog? And why did the maiden spank the baby? 52 STORIETTES. THE WORLD A-WHEEL. I DREAMED this globe of sea and land * Became enameled steel ; The poles developed pedals, and The world was now a-wheel So, taking one of heaven's stars From out the scarf of night, A Saturn or perhaps a Mars, I made a lantern-light. But how to meet another need It puzzled me to tell, Until I thought 'twas true indeed That Venus was a belle. I mounted on my wheel and sped For many years' ellipses And finished several laps ahead Of twenty-one eclipses. Then up the sky I pumped at day Behind the sun-god's track, Till coasting down the westward way I left him at my back. 55 So feeling somewhat parched and dry At close of such a day, I took the Dipper from on high And drank the Milky Way. 'Twas all a dream, and yet I know At least a part was real, For looking from my window, lo ! The world is now a-wheel. REVENGE. \7EN ich und Gretchen married got, * Mein olt frient Dunkelschwarzenrath, He don'd coom vere my veddin ees, Becos I nefer gone by hees! Aber, I get me efen yet. Dot Dunkelschwarzenrath is deat. I don'd go by hees* fooneral — nein! — Becos he nefer gone by mine ! 56 OMNI-UTILITARIAN. QUOTH I : "Good friend, the sky is gray And keen the air doth feel. Where is thine outer garment pray?" Quoth he, "I have my wheel. " "Thou lookest faint. Hast thou forgot To take thy noonday meal?" "Odzooks!" quoth he, "I had it not, For I did ride my wheel. ' ' "How fareth business? Booms it still? Or runs it down at heel?" "It goeth well, or goeth ill, " Quoth he. "I have my wheel. " "It grieveth me thy sweetheart, lad, Is deaf to thine appeal. " He answered light and grinned glad "Yea, but I have my wheel. " "Poor lad! Dead are thy parents both, The grave their bones conceal. ' ' "Oh, yea, I speed there oft," he quoth, "Because I have my wheel. " 57 "How stand'st thou on affairs of state? Which party hath thy zeal?" "I have forgot my views of late," Quoth he, "I have my wheel. " "Goest thou to church on Sabbath days For spiritual weal?" He gave a look of blank amaze. Quoth he, "I have my wheel." I oped my mouth to question more. Up gat his steed of steel, • And quoth he: "When I meet a bore, I'm glad I have my wheel !" COMEDY OR TRAGEDY? (The Coquette, loquitur.) [ SAY I do not love you. I am gay * And with my laughter waft your vows away For you, you say you love me, smile and sigh, And fire me with the fervor of your eye. Ah me, the pity of our mimic play ! If only either of us did not lie! 58 MY LOVER SAYS. T_T E SAYS I should not give a glance *■ *■ To other men ; But 'tis no gift, for, by some chance, I'm sure to get one back again — Or two, or ten ; Besides, I only look to see If any of them look at me. He says I ought to see as through My lover's eyes; But I reply that so I do, For where he looks there I look too ; For I am wise, And know that he must look — to see If any of them look at me! 59 MATCHED. " I would fain have it a match!' — Shakespeare. A LPHONSE and Claribel have met, ** A match will surely come ; He nurses at a cigarette, She widely chews her gum. Alphonse and Claribel should haste To bid the guests convene, For flaring colors suit his taste And she is gaudy green. Alphonse and Claribel should tell Their marriage vows, methinks. She likes a man "who looks real well," And he'd cz/Alook the Sphinx. Alphonse and Claribel will draw Together well, I ween, For when he asks her, "Have you saw?' She answers him, "I seen." 60 "Across the Walnuts and the Wine: "OUR CLUB"— THE IRISH MEMBER'S TOAST THE sharp edge of hunger was turned and the Chair Arose to inform us we all might prepare For a story, a toast, or any good bit Which entered the head of an owner of wit, And for fear Brother Milliken's tongue should grow balky, By mixing Kentucky with part of Milwaukee, We'd hear from him first, and his toast was "Our Club." As soon as his fellows had laughed at the rub Which the chairman had given, the Irishman rose, Upholding his liquid, and said, "I suppose Ivry mother's gossoon of ye's achin' to drink The toast to our club, so let yer bowls clink ! Yez can drink it in potcheen or drink it in watter, An', barrin' the taste, I would say, drink the latter; Fer if yez do not, I will give ye fair warnin', Ye'll find that it's watter ye want in the marnin. ' But drink watter now an ye'll feel extry foine An' won't be a wantin' a hat noomber noine, 63 Fer I'll tell ye the trut' — to the shame of the divil — It don't do to treat the potcheen over civil. Just as sure as ye open yer door to the cratur He hints that his brother is finer or nater, An' then they both say that their coosm is swater, An' then that the family should be more complater. An' they have a gay toime an' ye find, to yer sorra, Though ye'll swear they were lodged in yer stomach, begorra, Yet all of 'em's oop in yer head, by tomorra! But drink to our club in what liquid yc wish; Drink deep as a camel and free as a fish. Though we call it a club, let that club be a staff! Let it always be used in a brother's behalf — A support for his need and a rest for his hand ! Though we call it a club, let that club be a wand ! — The same as thim wands that the fairies used much. Let no heart be so hard but to melt at its touch ! As we call it a club, when we see anny wrang, Let us take up our club an' go after it Strang; Let it swing for the right, brothers, nightly and daily. Though we call it a club, let it be a shillaly!" 64 "OUR LADIES,"— THE POET'S TOAST. " A TOAST from the poet, I think, would be '*"* pleasant," Cried he at the banquet's head. "A toast from the poet!" cried every one present, And the poet arose and said : "Mr. Chairman, I greet you and all of your host; My comrades, your friendship is ever my boast ; And lastly, fair ladies, 'tis you whom I toast. Though I mention you last, it is not my intent To reckon you least. First in worth is not meant When we place the soft mollusk or thin consomme" At the top of the menu, and no one will say That sherbet and fruit are at all less delicious Just because farther down on the list than the fish is. "Mother Eve, you remember, was last in formation, But that proves she was apex of all the creation, For first appeared grasses and herbs and the fruits, And then came the fishes, the fowls and the brutes, Then Adam; and mark you how each form grew higher. But still there was left something more to desire, 5 65 For though all life was there, flora, fauna and human, Paradise could not be utitil also was woman. And so she was made from a small, bony part Which is nearest (please note well the symbol) man's heart. And hence, since that time, 'tis man's chiefest en- deavor To get back tliat rib, and 'twill be so forever. "How broad is the theme of my toasting — Our Ladies ! Proud daughters of Guelph and the Misses O' Grady s, The Fraiilein of Berlin, the Donas of Cadiz, The Annas, the Fannies, the Adas, the Sadies, All, all, in some masculine hearts are ' Our ladies. ' "Our Ladies? Our mothers, queen-angels of Earth. Our wives, or our sweethearts — tongue fails at your worth ! O, is there a grief which o'ershadows the day, That a woman's soft breath cannot waft it away? O, is there a heart, adamantine, austere, Which melts not beneath a pure, womanly tear? And what soured ascetic who does not rejoice In the grace of her glance, of her smile, of her voice? "O, have you an armor, so tempered, so true, That a woman s sharp tongue cannot pierce through and through? 66 And tell me of arguments, reasons or laws, Which bear half of the weight of a woman's ' Because. "Our Ladies, enduring, considerate, meek; Our Ladies, contrary, irrational, weak ; Kind hearted, yet cruel; obliging, perverse, Which is why they are taken 'for better or worse. ' "Do you think the description is rather complex? So it is, but just so is the feminine sex ; Yet without the sex, Heaven itself were a Hades, For Heaven is anywhere where are Our Ladies. ' ' 67 AFTER-DINNER APOLOGY OF LE COMTE CRAPAUD. " T VOULD you make ze little speak avec plaisir, *■ Boat eet ees not moach long zat I been here Ant' I am timid zat I speak soam wrong, Becos I know zis langvids not moach long. "Zis Englees langvids I not understand me moach. Eet ees not logical, eef I can joage, For eet ees not long since ago zat I Did not receif somesing for which I try; And zen a friend of mine, he coam ant say, 'Olt man, I seenk zat you are in ze consommt. ' "Boat zen anuzzer frient coam ze next minute Ant say, 'My boy, I moach regret you are not in it.' "Ant still anuzzer frient he coam to me. 'Ze sing ees not moach good at all,' say he. 'Eet ees all right zat you are left.' How ees zat been Zat I am right and left ant out ant in? "Ant so I seenk perhaps I not know well Zis Englees langvids, or I vould you tell Ze little speak zat I s'ould like to make, Boat I am timid zat I speak meestake. 68 "For eet ees soach a fonie langvids, out! Not long ago, one evening, coam to me One ver' good friend, as eet ees getting dark Ant say, 'Coam, let us go upon ze lark. ' I say 'Eh bien, I go,' for I not like to tell Zat I not understand him ver' moach well. A lark? Zat ees a bird, selon Webstaire, Ze gentilman zat write ze dictionaire ; Boat, ah ! I fint I haf not understood. I fint sis lark ees not a bird moach good. "Eet ees ver' late zat I am get to bed Ant zen I feel so strange oap in ze head. I am so bad I not can sleep, ant so I rise moach early ant I go below ; Ant zere I fint my landladie who coam ant say 'Monsieur, you get oap wiz ze lark today!' I say 'Non, non, madame; oh, my poor head! Eet ees wiz zat bad bird I went to bed ! I not get oap wiz him. You are moach wrong ; I am alreaty wiz zat bird too long. ' "She laugh so moach I seenk her face ees break ; I not know why onless I speak meestake ; Ant so, I will not make ze speak tonight, For I am timid zat I not speak right. " 69 Quaint Characters. FIN DE SIECLE. ''THIS life's a hollow bubble, Don't you know? Just a painted piece of twouble, Don't you know? We come to earth to cwy, We gwow oldeh and we sigh, Oldeh still and then we die, Don't you know? It is all a howwid mix, Don't you know? Business, love, and politics, Don't you know? Clubs and pawties, cliques and sets Fashions, follies, sins, wegwets, vStwuggle, stwife, and cigawettes Don't you know? And we wowwy through each day, Don't you know? In a sort of, kind of, way. Don't you know? We are hungwy, we are fed, Some few things are done and said, We are tihed, we go to bed, Don't you know? Business? O, that's beastly twade, Don't you know? Something's lost or something's made, Don't you know? And you wowwy, and you mope And you hang youah highest hope On the pwice, pe'haps, of soap! Don't you know? Politics? O, just a lawk, Don't you know? Just a nightmaeh in the dawk, Don't you know? You pe'spiah all day and night And afteh all the fight, Why pe'haps the w'ong man's wight, Don't you know? Society? Is dwess, Don't you know? And a sou'ce of much distwess, Don't you know? To detehmine what to weah, When to go and likewise wheah And how to pawt youah haih, Don't you know? 74 Love? O, yes! You meet some gi'l, Don't you know? And you get in such a whi'l, Don't you know? That you kneel down on the floah And imploah and adoah — And it's all a beastly boah! Don't you know? So theah's weally nothing in it, Don't you know? And we live just for the minute, Don't you know? For when you've seen and felt, Dwank and eaten, heahd and smelt, Why all the cawds are dealt, Don't you know? You've one consciousness, that's all, Don't you know? And one stomach, and it's small, Don't you know? You can only weah one tie, One eye-glass in youah eye, And one coffin when you die, Don't you know? 75 AN UNCONVENTIONAL RUSTIC. F)0'TRY fellers says we like to drink * Worter from the ole mill stream, Like to git down on the brink So's it runs right down our stummik — "like a dream, ' ' Says them po'try men. Then again They say how we love to draw it from the well, — "Moss-bound bucket," and that sort o' thin'. Says we much prefer a gourd, er ole sea shell, Er a rusty dipper, made o' tin Fer to drink it in, But, by Gee ! Yer cut glass, Sewers chiny stuff is good enough fer me. Po'try fellers says there ain't no bed Quite so good as that un in the old homestead. / say durn it And dad burn it ! Durn its feather bed-tick that's so lean Yeh sag between All the slats and almost touch the floor If yeh weighs ten pounds or more. 76 If you're thin Not a bone fits in To a soft spot Like it ought, But rubs, rubs, rubs, on some blame slat ; So if I know where I'm at, Hairy, springy, couchy city beds'll do Fer me, I jus' tell you! Po'try fellers says if we have stacks Of ham fer breakfas', coffee an' flap- jacks, With a dinner of biled cabbage an* corn beef, An' p'serves an' pie fer supper, you got lief To have all the rest. Is 'at so? Guess if they met me they'd likely know That I'd take some olives, lemon ice, Lobster salad, bullion an' a slice Of boiled tarpot, with some tutty-frutty, An' a little of that stuff, a la spagliutty, Frummidge, ice cream an' assorted pie, Quail on puddin', sherbet, oyster fry — Any thin' else yeh got, An' fetch her quick an' hot. Coffee? No sir, take the stuff away; Pomeroy, Chartruse, extry dry will do me any day. Po'try fellers says we love to walk, Cause its healthfuller an' lots. more air Sizzles through yer lungs, an' they talk 77 Mow when we do ride 'at we don't care Fer no bridles, but jest slides On a horse an' gits, Say it sort o' fits Us most to take straw-rides, 'R else to ride the good ole-fashioned way, In the family shay, Which ain't got no springs, Ner cushions, an' which slings You 'n yer girl together (which yeh like) Till it steadies when yeh strike The ole turn-pike. Po'try fellers talks that way, But a speakin' fer myself, I say A tallyho, Victory coup' will do me any day. Po'try fellers further says our homes Is pomes, Says the flicker of the fire-place is a sight Chuck full of warm delight, While the winter breezes kindly fans yer backs Through the cracks; Says the suller an' the butt'ry is the best To keep things sweet in, An' the sittin' room's fer rest, An' the kitchen fer to eat in. Says there ain't no place on earth quite like the attic, Speshly when the weather's rainy an' rumattic, 78 An' it spatters on the roof an' on the pane, (Not the rumytism doesn't, but the rain!) Which is very slick an' pretty, But them houses in the city, All fixed up like ole Queen Annie's used to be, Brown stone roof an' mansard front — by Gee! Such a house is good enough for me ! Po'try fellers takes a lot o' pains To show they got no brains, But the foolest thing they does — it seems to me — Is to chalk Down the darndest lot of words you ever see An' say that's how we talk. Gosh all hemlock ! Why they chop Half the words to pieces an' they stop 'Fore they've finished spellin' of 'em, An' they're full of little wiggles up above 'em. Why, ther spellin' would disgrace the dumbest fool In the spellin class at Districk School. An' ther grammer's the most worse you ever see Why, if you an' me Couldn't talk no more correcter — Geemeenee! 'Scuse me, but it makes me hot to see things wrote that way. Good, old Angly Saxon English talk is my ch'ice any day. 79 BEFORE PLAYING TINKER/TOWN. (a disinterested citizen advises the advance AGENT.) 4, QO YOU'RE goan to give a show. ^ Well, I s'pose you likely know Yer own bus'ness, but I'm glad — Ez fer me — I never had Money in the show biz here, Fer our folks is mighty queer. An' you see when they first built Our new Op'ry House, they kilt The hull bus'ness, 'cause they give More shows than could run — an' live. "Give two in one week, one time. One was minstrels. They was prime ! But what kilt us was the other ; Some blame lecturer or-ruther Talked about a Chiny wall An' a Pyramids an' all That there sort o' rot. An' so, Bein' as folks had paid, you know, Fifteen cents to see a show, Lots of 'em felt ruther sore An' don't go to shows no more. 80 "Course your show is good? No doubt. But you see the town's showed out; Less'n three weeks back we had Hamlut. Had it purty bad. Actors — they was purty fair, Speshly one with yeller hair. He had talunt ! He could shout An' jes' drown the others out! But the play itself was sad. 'Sides it was a draggy, bad Sort of sadness. Didn't begin To come up to ol' East Lynne! " Jabez Tubbs, he sez, sez he, 'I'll take ol' East Lynne fer me. Mebbe these new plays is fine, But I'll take the old fer mine. ' 'Scuse me fer goan on this way, But I'm feared yer show won't pay. "It's a bad week fer a show, 'Cause most folks that gits to go Is a-restin' up jest now Fer the Social. An' that's how Things most always is 'round here. P'r'aps there's nothin' fer a year, Then, first thing a feller knows, We're just overrun with shows. 81 "P'r'aps a little later might Find a better week an' night. Still, I dunno, fer ye see P'tracted meetin' soon'll be, An' of course you know that's free, An' of course that kills a show Where you got to pay to go. ' ' A LITTLE SAUNTER. \1 7 HEN the sun's a-comin' up 'nd ole Earth is wet, * * Jest as though he'd washed his face 'nd hedn't dried it yet ; Birds fer miles 'nd miles around chipperin' 'n' singin', Pigs a-gruntin' music fer the feed the man's a bringin', Rooster crowin' fit to split round the kitchen door, Ans'erin' " Good mornin'," to a half a dozen more, — Other folks can roust around, but for me I wanter Take a little saunter, Fill up full of green 'nd blue in a little saunter. 82 When the sun's a-goin' down, lazy ez you please, Settin' good example fer a man to take his ease ; Cows a-lyin, ' chewin', 'nd a wobblin, ' early bat Er a sparreh, half asleep, flies a-past yer hat ; When yev hed yer supper 'nd the world seems good ; When the air, jest lazin' round, smells of piney wood, — 'Tain't no time to roust around, 'nd fer me, I wanter Take a little saunter, Jest hang back 'n' let my legs take a little saunter. When you almost y^7 the moon a-shinin' on yer back, (See her in the warter 'nd she seems to make a track Leadin' off to Heaven, jest a easy distance walkin') When it's all so still, a sound seems like silence talkin' ; Starry eyes a-gawpin' like the childern's to a story; Room fer nothin' nowhere 'ceptin' night 'nd God 'nd glory, — /jest dassent roust around, 'nd I never wanter Do no more than saunter, Fill up full of shiny peace in a little saunter. 83 IF I DIDN'T FORGET HOW OLD I WAS IF I DIDN'T forget how old I was, * Do you think I'd act like I often does? Do you think I'd swing on the front-yard gate, If I could remember that I was eight? If I didn't forget how soon I'd grow To be a big man like Uncle Joe, Do you think my pa would have to scold 'Cuz I didn't do what I was told? Do you think I'd set my ma so wild, An' act so much like a little child. If I didn't forget I was half -past eight? An' would Miss Brown have to keep me late? Miss Brown said I was "a little fiend," An' I didn't. know what the old thing meaned; But she said 'twas becuz I played so rough, An' it made my ma just cry — sure 'nough. If I didn't forget, do you s'pose that I Would ever act so's to make her cry? And don't you suppose I'd behave just fine, If I didn't forget I was going-on-nine? 84 If I could remember, do you suppose I wouldn't take care of my Sunday clo'es? An' would I get mad at my cousin Ben Without getting right away good again? Pa says he believes I was just born bad, An' Uncle Joe says that I'm "like my dad, An' Aunt Lou says she don't suppose I'll ever be better, but ma — she knows, An' she hugs me clost with a kiss, becuz She says, ' ' I forgot how old I was. ' ' A BESETTING SIN. (as confessed by a youthful penitent.) T SHAN'T be bad no more, I shan't! I'm goan * to be reel good. I heard a preacher-man, an' he said ^tr'body could, Ef they jus' kep a-tryin' and a-tryin', day b' day, An' ef they didn't try, they'd go — some place I mus'n't say. Er mother says I mus'n't, 'nd so, o' course, I shan't. Don't see why preachers says it, ef another feller can't. But I'm a-goin' to be reel good. I shan't pull pussy's tail, Ner tie our poor, old Nodie to a nasty, old tin pail, 8$ Like I did once, 'cause Tommy Johnson said I didn't dast ; I'd like to fix that feller, but my wickid days is past. I shan't git mad when baby sucks the paint off all my blocks, Ner spend the cent pa gives me fer the missionary box; I'm goan to be a martire, and shan't be bad one speck ; Ain't even goin' to cry no more when mother makes me wash my neck. Most martire fellers wasn't much. Why, any circus man '11 Cuff them lions 'round an' do it jus' as slick as Dan'l. Aunt Becky thinks it's somethin' great to live in sacks 'nd ashes. I think it's fun! An' hairy-cloth shirts! I bet they got the rashes 'Nd wear them shirts to scratch 'em. Course that Jony feller Inside that big, old whale, all dark like down-in-our cellar, He had a heap o' spunk, he had; but I tol' Aunty Beck, Anyhoiv he didn't alius have to go an' wash his neck 36 That's goin' to be the worstest thing, an' orful hard, I know, But I'm dissolved to do it, ef I do hate it so. It's funny hatey things is good; but I suppose it's true, An' things you like is mostly things you hadn't ought to do. An' water's cold, er ef it's het, it's het so much it's scaldy; An', 'sides, it wets yer collar all around yer Garry- baldy, An' runs all down yer back, an' then the soap gits in yer eyes, 'Cause the towel ain't where you want it — an' tlicn sometimes I cries. But I shan't cry no more, though p'r'aps I'll want to, I expec', — But when I'm groivcd — I ain't a-goan to never wash my neck ! 37 UNVERSTAENDLICH. PvHE contrariest t'ing on dhe Erd is men, *— ' Aber vimmens arr twice so contrary again, Andt I am yoost so contrary as you, Andt you arr as worse as dhe worst one, too ; Now, ain'd dhat zo? You like to haf hoonger by dinner, you say, Aber vhy do you eadt, so dhat hoonger go 'vay? You like to be tired, so you schleep like a top, Andt you like to go schleep, so dhat tired feeling shtop ; Now, ain'd dhat zo? You like to have sugar on sauer t'ings you eadt Andt you like to haf sauer mit dhe t'ings vhat arr sweet. You like to be cold vhen dhe vetter is hot. Andt vhen it is cold, ach, how varm you vould got ! Now, ain'd dhat zo? How you shdare at dhe man vhat can valk up dhe street On his handts, yet you valk twice so goodt on your feet. Vhat a long mind you haf, if I am in your debt, Budt if you arr in mine, O, how quick you forget ! Now, ain'd dhat zo? You vant yoost a liddle more money? Dhat's true; Andt dhere's Mistare Vanderbilt; he vants dhat too. You remember dhat time dhat you vish you arr deadt? Budt if I trry to kill you, you boost in my headt ; Now, ain'd dhat zo? Zo, I t'ink I pelief only half vhat I know Andt dhe half I pelief is dhe part vhat ain'd zo. Aber, I don'd complain, for dhat makes me no use, For if I am a Esel, vhy you arr a goose ; Now, ain'd dhat zo? It is bedter to laugh ; it is foolish to fight Yoost because I am wrong and because you ain'd right. It is bedter to laugh mit dhe vorld, up andt down From dhe sole of our headt to dhe foot of our crown ; Now, ain'd dhat zo? Zo, dhen, you laugh at me andt dhen I laugh at you, Andt dhe more dhat you laugh vhy dhe more I laugh, too, Andt ve laugh till ve cry! Vhen ve cry, aber dhen, Ve will bot' feel zo goot ve go laughing again! Now, ain'd dhat zo? 8 talkiii \ but I 'clar to Gord I'se willin' Foh to nebeh hab no heab'n 'cept dat Gawgy gal an' millon! Foh dey filled de haht an' stomach ob dis happy Gawgy niggah, An' he couldn' be no fullah, 'less de Lohd done make him biggah. Lohdy, Lohd! I'se done been dreamin' an' my haht is mos' a breakin', An' ma lips dey is a burnin' an' ma stomach is a achin'. I been dreamin' ob de summah an' ma mouf is jes' a fiHin' Foh dat honey gal ob Gawgy an' dat Gawgy watah- millon ! From Going To and Fro in the Earth." DEAR MOTHER EARTH. pvEAR Mother Earth, full oft I long *-^ To sing thy praises in a song ; I ache to lay me down to rest Somewhere upon thy yielding breast, To turn my pavement-wearied feet Beyond the seeming endless street, And seek some dimpled country place, Half cool, half warm, for thy embrace; Then kiss thee, prone upon my face, Dear Mother Earth! Like old Antaeus long ago, Whose strength surged up from earth below, I feel there is a peace in thee, Which thou dost whisper unto me, When thus I press thee, cheek to cheek. Thou art so strong and I so weak ; And some time there shall come a day When tender, trembling hands shall lay Me deep, to mingle with thy clay, Dear Mother Earth. Thy gift to me shall come to thee, And as thou art, so shall I be. 95 I owe thee all, and so must try To make thee better ere I die ; And as we twain are one, I see To better self may better thee. And so I rise from thy embrace Revived, and with a hopeful grace, Thus having met thee face to face, Dear Mother Earth. OHIO. THERE'S a word to be heard for the old Buckeye State Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! For 'tis dear to the ear both of lowly and great Is Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! Cry aloud you are proud to be counted the son Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! And heap honor upon her for all she has done — Old Ohio, Ohio, Ohio ! Then ho ! for Ohio, Ohio, 0, ho! We'll sing of her glory wherever we go; Only right is the frie?id, only wrong is the foe, Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! 96 Send the shout to the outermost part of the earth For Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! For the soil, for the toil, and for all of the worth Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! But the most for the host she has given to fame — Old Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! And again for the men who have honored the name Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! Then ho ! for Ohio, Ohio, 0, ho ! We '11 sing of her glory zvherever we go; Only right is the friend, only wrong is the foe, Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! She is crowned by the round of the lake's breezy space, Is Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! And below is the flow where the river adds grace To Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! While between lies the green of the land that we love — Old Ohio, Ohio, Ohio ! And the storied Old Glory floats ever above Our Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! Then ho! for Ohio, Ohio, 0, ho! We'll sing of her glory wherever we go; Only right is the friend, only wrong is the foe, Of Ohio, Ohio, Ohio! » 97 A MULE OF ARKANSAS. ""THOU patient, plodding piece of bone and flesh * Thou sentient something, tangled in a mesh Of fatal being ! I could weep for thee, But thou, thou couldst as surely weep for me. Not knowing why nor whither I am driven, To me the urging lash is likewise given ; Hitched to this drag of life, I may not falter, Nor wander past the pull of rein or halter. Poor thou, poor I ! yet, comrade, were we free, The world might lose the little we may be. Along this straitened path, perhaps 'tis best, We may not linger and we dare not rest. 98 THE ORGAN GRINDER. HE STANDS outside my window in the street, A humble minstrel of a dozen lays, A memory of simpler, happier days. Dear "Home, Sweet Home," and faithless" Mar- guerite," I did not know their music was so sweet ; The "Washerwoman" and the "Marsellaise, " I know not which should have my highest praise, Their very crudeness makes them so complete. Weary of Wagner and his turgid notes, Of florid Verdi's acrobatic throats, I revel in this arm-delivered air, Which whips a score of years from out my sight, Refills me with a bubbling boy's delight, And leaves me scant of pennies and of care. 99 THE DEAR LITTLE FOOL. HACH man is a master in a school — *-' Heigh ho, my deary! Where he trains himself to be a fool — Folly is so cheery. And he trains him well and he trains him long, He trains him true and he trains him strong; And this is the burden of my song — Wit and wisdom weary. The man finds out that he's a fool — Heigh ho, my deary ! And puts himself on the dunce's stool — Folly grows a- weary. And he says to himself : "You beast, you worm ! You're the biggest fool I've had this term." And he laughs to see the poor fool squirm — Wisdom is so cheery. He sets down many a sapient rule — Heigh ho, my deary ! For the future course of the wretched fool — Folly is so weary. And the poor little fool, he says: "Ah, me! That I was a fool I plainly see, But never again such a fool I'll be!" — Wisdom is so cheery. The man and the fool they live along — Heigh ho, my deary ! Till the man is weak and the fool is strong — Folly is so cheery. And the little fool says: "Oh, master dear, This never is long, and the world is drear ! Let me loose! Let me loose, and have no fear!' Wit and wisdom weary. The dear little fool, he has his way — Folly is so cheery! The good man laughs that the fool is gay — Wit and wisdom weary ; Till he finds that the fool is really he, And the stronger the fool the worse when free, And again he groans, "Ah, woe is me!" — Heigh ho, my deary! 101 THE MINOR ROLE. /^vFT have you seen a star upon the stage ^ - ' Uttering his transports of despair or rage» Until the whole house wondered at his skill And thundered plaudits with a hearty will. But did you note that other player there Who watched the leading actor's mock despair, Who had no line to speak, or work to do, Yet who was there to make the background true ; Whose every thought must aid (as each might mar) The bright effulgence of the flaming star? And did you stop to think his thankless part Of doing nothing took the greater art? 'Tis so in life. We oftentimes admire The man whom nothing seems to daunt or tire, Whose energies are like battalions hurled Against his foe (and audience!) the world. You hardly note that other actor there, That woman of his household — and his care, Who can do nothing more, nor would do less, Than live the background of his life's success — A waiting, watching, suffering, silent soul, Without the outlet of a leading role. And sure am I her patient, minor part, Doomed to do nothing, takes the greater heart. PANACEA. TT'S no great oddity * That one commodity Has such demand Throughout the land. You know what it is, I think. Ah yes, It is nothing more and nothing less Than a double X brand of happiness. Now think what a place this world would be, What a jolly old place for you and me, What a wonderful place if you and I Would only try To meet the demand with a certain supply. Consider, my son, How easily done, To make one happy, only one ; A father, mother, Sister, brother, Or if they be supplied, why then some other. And, my daughter, see How well 'twould be. Why, the thing is as plain as A B C ! If each of us were engaged in keeping One happy soul from dawn to sleeping, 103 If each of us were busy in making One soul peaceful from dusk to waking. What a happy old place this world would be, What a jolly old place for you and me ! And if every one else then did the same, Why wouldn't it be the cleverest game? But, pray, don't try To oversupply Somebody already floating high. 'Tis the sinking wretch we need to save, And not the one on the topmost wave. And remember, too, This much — that you And I will profit by what we do. 'Tis a curious fact, but past all doubt, That the more of happiness one gives out The more he has left and the more his powers. As the gardener strips a bed of flowers That more shall bloom, so strip your soul That another's happiness be made whole. And lo! in the quick- winged second after, 'Tis filled with blooms of love and laughter. 104 BUT O, BOYS, KNOW BOYS. '"THERE'S a certain sort of pleasure in a mingling * with the boys, In keeping up your end of it and adding to the noise With "Fill the cup And lift it up To every gallant soul of us. Drink! drink, my men, and come again! the devil guards the whole of us ! " There's a pleasing palpitation to the liquid of the jugs, As it mingles with the music of the clinking of the mugs; There's a pretty, pleasing popping, When the bottles are unstopping, And a fizzy fascination carries folly to its height. But O, boys, Know boys — That folly has its flight, And a greater fascination Is a healthy, clean sensation That your brain is still in session and your eye is clear and bright, When the time comes for waking in the morning. 105 There's a certain sort of pleasure in the gayety of girls, In the pat of pretty fingers, in the brush of beauty's curls, With "Here's a glass To any lass Who offers tempting lips to us! The night is kind, the world is blind, so who can debit slips to us?" There's a certain fascination in the giddiness of guile, There's a certain strange temptation in the wicked- ness of wile, When the wicked wit is dashing And the wicked smiles are flashing, So if all the world be wicked, is our wickedness amiss? But O, boys, Know boys — There comes an end to this And a higher fascination, And a wholesomer sensation, Is to realize your lips are clean and worthy of the kiss Of a sweetheart, wife, or mother in the morning. 106 ICED TEA. /*\ THERE are drinks and drinks and drinks, ^^ Enough to drown the sea; But of the multitude, methinks, The best is iced tea. O come not here with bitter beer, Though foamy or though fiat ; And do not come with wicked rum, To minimize one's hat. Off with the glass of carbon gas ; It fills me full of ire, And fizzes back along its track, Much like a punctured tire. Treat me no treat of sticky sweet Called "cream with pure fruit juices"; It leaves a coat upon the throat Too thick for summer uses. But get a tea of such degree Of Oriental flavor That for a drop a man might swap His hope of heaven's favor. 107 Then gently pour hot water o'er Its tiny rolls of fragrance, But do not stew as makers do Who feed poor railway vagrants. Then cool it nicely, add your ice, And churn it in a shaker ; 'Twill show a broth of creamy froth, And be a blessed slaker. Squeeze o'er the ice a tiny slice Of lemon till it's tart, And handle well your sugar .shell — And O, my pulsing heart ! O, hear the tinkle and the clink * Of winter's cool bequeathing! O, gaze into that amber hue, And breathe against its breathing! O, let it slip beyond your lip, And for your comfort perish ; And deep within your soul shall grin, And long the memory cherish. O, there are drinks and drinks and drinks, Enough to drown the sea ; But of the multitude, methinks, The best is iced tea. 1 08 AT A RAILROAD JUNCTION. f O! HERE am I at Junction Town, *-* At slow and woful Junction Town, Where devils laugh and angels frown To see a traveler set down ; Where trains run only with a view To help a restaurant or two ; Where rusty rails and barren boards Are all the point of view affords. But O, the barren board of all Is that within that eating-stall ! Yes, stall, I said, and well deserved The name ! where beastly feed is served And so I say without compunction My curses on this Railroad Junction. What shall I do at Junction Town? At drear and weary Junction Town? The martyr's cross without the crown Awaits the stranger here set down O, one may wait and wait and wait, Or one may rail against his fate, Or eyes and ears may strain and strain, As later, later grows the train 109 The while the lagging minutes mock His witless watching of the clock ; Or one may watch the station clerk Performing his relentless work. O, wretched man, of wretched function, Existing at this Railroad Junction! God's pity on this Junction Town, This dead and dreadful Junction Town ! O, what nepenthe-well can drown The cares of travelers here set down. The thought may give some passing cheer One may escape within a year, Or else the sentence be commuted And only death be executed ! And if 't be so, I only pray There be no Resurrection Day, For think of Gabriel coming down And finding one at Junction Town ! And so I say, with fervent unction, God's pity on this Railroad Junction! no OLIVER HAZARD PERRY. "\17E'VE MET the enemy and they are ours; * * Two ships, two brigs, one schooner and one sloop. ' ' His words charge down the years — a warlike group, Grim, gallant, glorious! All the flowers Matured by summer suns and autumn showers We use to deck the memory of that group, Born of the times when banners rise or droop In the harsh conflict of contending powers. But look thou, Perry ! gallant man and true ! See'st thou that smoke of commerce, not of war? Rejoice with us that now no battles mar, And now there is no work for thee to do ; No lookout's eye sights carnage from afar; No dismal red is mixed with Erie's blue. in RIP VAN WINKLE. CONDER of Schnapps and Schneider than of right, * A shiftless, thriftless, rude, unlettered log Who wallowed in a slimy, drunken bog; Well-meaning and ill-acting ; appetite As dry as was his wit ; a jolly wight With follies to exhaust the catalogue ; Weak-willed, good-tempered, sinful and contrite, Without one element of manly might, Save that the children loved him — and his dog. And yet he makes the laughter-laden lip Turn to a tremble, while the hot tears flow ; Then mock its own emotion by some slip To sudden mirth, because we love him so; For human weakness in the rascal, Rip, Becomes a humane strength in actor Joe. 112 THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW. THE poor Old Year is dead. His work is done. * His course is sped. His last, disloyal Sun Fled down the field, with shield upon his back, And left the night to pall him in its black. His old time friend, December, turned aside And hardly stayed to mark that he had died. And all the Weeks, who served his banner, sped To serve the New, and cried, "The Old is dead!" Yes, even each disdainful, little Day Flung him the hour he owed and shrieked away. Nor were we mortals better ; even you Called in his failing ear, "The New! The New!" "The New!" And why the New? Ho, stand you forth, You little New-come. Say, why is your worth Rung to the zenith with its wave on wave? We find you seated on a new-made grave, Which holds our friend, the Old Year. He and we Shared many joys together. Some there be Which still invoke the memory and make That fat rogue, Laughter, hold his sides and shake. "3 Can I recall that feasting and that mirth And never weep that he is gone from Earth? And there are stronger ties, for, be it said, We sometimes ate together bitter bread. Oh, smiling one, too new of life to know What friendship roots within a common woe ! But haply you may learn, and haply, too, You will renounce the sobriquet "The New." Poor, pale novitiate, how smooth you are ! Your skin has not the semblance of a scar. You should have seen the Old Year! He was one Seamed by the winter's wind and summer's sun, Torn by the teeth of storm and scorched by fire, Leashed in by circumstance, spurred by desire ! But he is gone, and you are come to reign. I do not bow before you, for 'tis plain I can not know what purpose lies within The soft encompass of your baby skin. Why should I cry you, and deny my friend, Nor wait to see how your regime shall end? What have you done? You were not till just now. What are you doing? Staring at the bow The Earth makes to you. And what will you do? Will you avoid the false and seek the true? Will you reward the right and ban the wrong? Will you protect the weak and curb the strong? 114 Ah, little princeling! 'Tis a pretty thing To hear the cannons roar and belfries sing Because you come to earth, to hear your name On every lip, together with the claim Of all your happy worth. But there is work, Beyond this holiday, you may not shirk. I raise my voice and do not call you blest, Unless this happy day foretells the rest. Work on, toil on, press on, my little one, And when there falls the last December sun, Then, when all men turn from you to acclaim Another, and a newer, fresher name, Then you may have the measure of my praise As you have wisely spent your wealth of days. THE DAY OF LABOR. A LL of you men of the arm and the hammer, **■ All of you women of needle and thread, All of you children whose lesson in grammar Is cut for the lesson of earning your bread, This is our day. All of you men who are lining and dotting Over the desk where the debit is dealt, You are of those whom the iron-dust is blotting 115 Under the shadow of pulley and belt; This is our day. All of you maidens whose fingers are chiming, Running the tune which is written by Trade, You are of those whom the depths are begriming Down where the coal-food of Motion is made ; This is our day. All of you men who are leaders and planners, Forcing the ends of your commerce to meet, You are enlisted beneath the same banners As he with the paper-pack, out on the street ; This is our day. All of you delvers and traders and thinkers, No matter what honest calling you own, If you be not of the robbers and slinkers, If you be not of the hive of the drone, This is our day. Let it, then, stand for us all, save the shirker ! Let it, then, hasten the time on its way, When brother to brother, and worker to worker, Girdling their hands 'round the nations, shall say- "This is our day!" 1 16 GRANDMOTHER'S SONG. r> RANDMOTHER'S voice was always mild, ^-*" And at everyday troubles she always smiled ; For she used to say Frowns didn't pay, As she had learned when the merest child. So whenever we cried for a fancied wrong, Grandmother used to sing this song: "Today, today, Let's all be gay; Tomorrow We may sorrow. My dear, don't fret For what's not yet; For you make a trouble double when you borrow. ' Ah me! 'tis many a lonesome year Since grandmother's song has reached my ear; And I sigh my sigh For the days gone by, For you went with them, grandmother dear. But I still have left your quaint old song, And that I shall sing and pass along: "Today, today, Let's all be gay; 117 Tomorrow We may sorrow. My dear, don't fret For what's not yet; For you make a trouble double when you borrow. LITTLE MARGGY. \\ 7HO is grandma's dear delight? W Little Marggy. Who is mamma' s blessed sprite, Dream of day and need of night? Who is papa's precious bite? Little Marggy. Margaret we named this elf, Little Marggy. But all names of place or pelf, Hohenzollern, Rothschild, Guelph, Are as common clay to delf To this name she named herself, " Tttle Mawgy." Say, who owns this snubby nose? " 'Ittle Mawgy," Whose blue eyes do you suppose? 1x8 Whose soft lips which shame the rose? Who can claim ten teenty toes? " 'Ittle Mawgy. " Though you care not why nor how, Little .Marggy, Love is eager to endow Blessings on your baby brow, Little Marggy. May he keep as constant vow, When you need him more than now, Little Marggy. May there be some baby boy, Busy now with top or toy, Little Marggy, Growing up to bring you joy And a love without alloy, Little Marggy. One more blessing would I pray, Little Marggy. May there come some blissful day When your mother-lips shall say "Little Marggy" To a precious piece of clay Like you, Marggy. I!Q THE ARMIES OF THE CORN. DANK upon rank they stood, and row on row; *■ *■ Plumed, tasseled, uniformed in green, With rations in their knapsacked husks between The myriad blades they brandished at the foe. Long held the brave brigades and would not yield Till shattered by the destiny of War. Then (gallant tribute from the conqueror!) Thev stacked their arms and tented on the field. 130 Little Love Lyrics. ASSURANCE. ""TODAY you turned your face away *■ And seemed to doubt me. Tonight your acme of delight Is but to flout me. But, sweetheart, I will wait; Love has no laggard gait, And though he seem away, Far off he cannot stay. Tomorrow you will say: 1 Dear heart, of all the things thou art, The best is boldness. Believe me not whene'er I grieve Thy heart with coldness. Take me within thy arms, Shield me from doubting harms, For I am thine alway. My love can never stray, And did not yesterday!" 123 COMPLETENESS. [ SAID, ere yesterday had fled * I loved you truly In every part, mind, soul and heart, Nor was it said unduly. Yet more than that which was before Is that which holds me, And so today, again I say Love wholly now enfolds me. But O, if one least whit I grow By joy or sorrow, Hear, sweetheart, now my tender vow I'll love you more tomorrow. 124 REITERATION. CROM out the long ago, A There steals the beauty of a thought A noble poet nobly wrought. Its every word I know, And yet I read it o'er and o'er And every reading makes it more. From out the dreamy past, A grand old air, a dear old strain, Floats back to memory again, And memory holds it fast. And still I love its sound as much As though not knowing every touch. You love me. Yes, I know; I know it well by life and death ! I know it by your latest breath That whispered, sweet and low. Ah, me, the music of its vow ! O, sweetheart, say you love me, now! 125 A LITTLE SONG FOR TWO. A SONG from me to you, you say, ** A tender song for every day, A little song for two? Why, dearest heart, no note or word Which I have sung and you have heard But sings to you, to you. To you, my love, to you, to you. My every song is ever true, And gladly, gladly yields its due, As does my heart — to you ! And were there but one theme to choose, One motive evermore to use, It were no task to do. I'd sing all songs of life in one, And when the gallant strain were done 'Twould be a song to you. To you, my love, to you, to you, The tender strain were fully true, And ever would it sing its due, As does my heart — to you ! 126 YOUR TEARS. TPWIN jeweled drops of purest ray, beyond a * prince's prize; The brilliance of the diamond on the blueness of the skies ! Sweet! let my eager kisses quaff away the tender tears, As poorer pearls from baser cups were drunk in olden years. YOUR VOICE. VOU sing, and then I think, "Not wholly wrong * Was faith to picture heaven a constant song. " Yet heavenly song is but a lesser good ; More heavenly still is pure, sweet womanhood. YOUR TOUCH. IF KINGS uncounted knelt before you now * Into obeisance crushed, I should not prize the hour. I rather praise the power Within your lightest touch which smooths the brow Your fervent kiss has brushed. 127 TOUT OU RIEN. f LOVE the happy habit of your laughter, * Care-free as any May-song - of a bird, But ever in the silence coming after, I think: "The world has heard!" Your smiles are like the blossoms of a garden, With perfumed sunlight sifting in between; Yet even then, my selfish heart will harden And cry : ' ' The world has seen ! ' ' EN RAPPORT. WOULD tell you, sweet, a thousand things * I feel when the robin redbreast sings And the earth is softly warm and bright And the sky has donned its blue and white, As once in the long ago, But, O, dear heart, 'there's never a word, By man pronounced or woman heard, Which tells that touch, which the redbreast sings. For words are coarse and cumbrous things, As surely you know, you know. 128 If I could but think the thousand things I feel when the springtime bluebird sings, I would send the dream its quiet course Like the brooks' and breezes' flow and force From out of the long ago, But, sweetest heart, there's never a thought Which poet or sage has ever wrought To tell that thrill that the bluebird sings, For thoughts are feeble, futile things, As surely you know, you know. Yet truly, my own, we know the things Which the gentle springtime softly sings ; And the happy heart leaps up in praise Of the ceaseless flow of blessed days From out of the long ago, For the quivering life my lips would tell Is all that your own soul knows so well, As the heart-string's truest note is known By the chording heart to that same tone, So surely you know, you know. 129 LOVE'S FIRST KISSES. ""THERE are no other kisses like to those. * They own the sweet of violet and rose, The softness of the moonlight on the sea, The thrill of music's deepest ecstasy, The warmth of springtime — and your love for me. They serve all good, and master every ill ; They strengthen and revive the wounded will ; They tell the inner tempest "Peace; be still!" They are the triumph of the pure and true ; They are the rapture (in one word) of you. LOVE'S DECEIT. Y\ 70ULD it were yesterday and I were dead; '" Would it were morrow and this pain were crushed ; Or would that our today had never blushed To read the reason that my peace has fled ! Look on this bleeding faith. See where the red From out his tender bosom warmly gushed, Mark how he limply lies, his glad song hushed, Slain by the lie-tipped arrow thou hast sped. 130 And yet, I only suffer wrong — thou sufferest guilt, So I forgive thee, even as thou wilt; But O, "forgiveness" is so incomplete. It ever leaves a bitter in the sweet ; It never quite refills the cup once spilt, And trust tangs ever from but one deceit. IN SORROW, NOT IN ANGER. CAIR face, besmirched with kisses of dead men ; * Proud eyes, which did not melt at their distress, Which feign, but never know, a tenderness; White hands, which I shall never touch again ; Sweet breath, which poisons like a stagnant fen ; Rare hair, which hides a serpent in each tress ; Rich lips, with honeyed falsehood to confess; I scorn you now, just as I loved you then. Yet, were it given me to sit above Your petty world, that I might judge your shame, (A shame you do not guess the burden of) In calm, dispassioned judgment I should name The penalty incurred by all your blame : 'Twere only this, that some day you should love. 131 ASLEEP, ADREAM, AWAKE. A SERENADE. A SLEEP, adream, awake — ■*"*• I know not which thou art Yet would my spirit make A song for thee, dear heart. O, if 'twere I asleep, And sleeping knew not thee, I'd rouse from out its deep That dreams might come to me. Or if 'twere I adream, And dreaming knew not thee, I would renounce the theme For waking thought to be. Or if 'twere I awake, And waking knew not thee, I'd sleep for sleep's own sake For what were life to me? 133 Poems of Parting. THE PARTING POINT. DECAUSE your way was West and mine is East, *-' I stand and look along the frosted track As if by gazing I could call you back. The Earth is clad in homespun, patched and pieced With gray and green. The fields have had a feast And left the fragments. Desolate and black The river slinks away, and from the stack There crawls an airy genie, sable -fleeced. The naked, shivering trees re-wave "Good-by, " The mummied leaves leap up as on we fly. The rails grow dim and narrow in our wake, Till half I wish, half fancy, they could make A pair of leading strings, that they might tie Our lives together, nevermore to break. "35 AT A CAR WINDOW. " Vereint sint Liebe und Letiz." — Wagner. A N INFANT river creeps across a field, ** A level green spreads out with lazy air, And orchard trees lift arms as if in prayer For strength again to live, to bloom, to yield. The patient plow has recently unsealed This stretch of honest earth, while here and there A pale old farm-house seems to stand and stare, Or some low cringing thicket is revealed. But I see none of these. My longing gaze Wanders to where a bare wood's melting maze Up-reaches to the sky. So all my thought Leaves this on-rushing car where you are not, To mass around that fading parting-spot, Till it and I are lost in bluish haze. 136 THREE KISSES. WHEN first I kissed you, dear, The moon's bright glory mocked the sun; And moons ! why, every star was one ; All men were good and brave and just, All women fair, and fair to trust, All happiness was thrall to me And all the Earth was Arcady, When first I kissed you, dear. When last I kissed you, dear, I scorned all being — save the worm To be with you a little term. The stars had burned to cinders all, The sky was nothing but a pall, God was not God, but clumsy Knave, All Earth was but your open grave, When last I kissed you, dear. When next I kiss you, dear, It may be aeons hence, and you Impalpable as Heaven's blue; It may be soon, it may be here, It may be on some distant sphere ; •37 But though an atom or a soul, Unstable dust or perfect whole ; Though nodding violet be you And I a drop of morning dew ; Though suns may fade and Earth may end, Together we shall meet and blend, And in that blending there shall be The Universe for you and me ! And I shall kiss you, dear. 138 BILL NYE. "Ifive do meet again, why we shall smile." — Shakespeare. "THE curious brain, the gentle heart, are still. * Who speaks but in the tone of warmest praise? Or who denies the laurel leaf and bays To that plain name? He did not wail of ill. But he was one who had the power and will To teach the saddened earth to turn her gaze And look on life in sunnier, happier ways ; He, Edgar Wilson — nay, say rather "Bill." Give him the dear, familiar name of years — Him, honest, generous-hearted and refined — For he himself, and not his fame, endears His memory most. Thou true and kind ! These tributes to thy noble soul and mind — Smiles for the past, but for the present, tears ! »39 FOREBODING. [ SHOULD be so lonely without you, dear. * Why, even now, if you be not here For the shortest day, there's a certain lack Which does not vanish till you come back. And if you were gone forever, dear, The aching throat and the hot, swift tear Were a feeble vent and a futile due To the aching absence, dear, of you. I should be so lonely without you, dear. Kiss me again, so I know you're near! Ah, should I reach for the old embrace And my arms should close on a formless space ! In the midst of the world and its hollow cheer, In the gayest throng, I should thrill with fear— The fear of the void which the world would be If you were gone from the earth and me. I should be so lonely without you, dear. Though I still might heed the passing year, Though I still might toil from sun to sun, What would it be when the work were done? You would not see and you could not share, And who, of the rest, would really care? 140 And if I were gone and 'twere you were left, I know your breast were as much bereft ; And if I were away while you were here, Though God were good and the seraphs near, I should still be lonely without you, dear. GOOD-BYE. [ SAY "Good-bye;" I clasp your hand; * I hope that you may understand, For somehow I can speak no word Beyond the commonplaces heard On every side. My tongue had planned A hundred partings, yet I stand, And, empty both of gay and grand, I say "Good-bye." My heart-strings tighten, strand by strand ; Again I struggle to command Some meaning speech. Your eyes are blurred, Your lips are parted. Mine are stirred With unborn kisses, and I — and — I say "Good-bye." 141