The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley, V1

James Whitcomb Riley

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  • JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY—A SKETCH
  • A BACKWARD LOOK
  • PHILIPER FLASH
  • THE SAME OLD STORY
  • TO A BOY WHISTLING
  • AN OLD FRIEND
  • WHAT SMITH KNEW ABOUT FARMING
  • A POET'S WOOING
  • MAN'S DEVOTION
  • A BALLAD. WITH A SERIOUS CONCLUSION
  • THE OLD TIMES WERE THE BEST
  • A SUMMER AFTERNOON
  • AT LAST
  • FARMER WHIPPLE—BACHELOR
  • MY JOLLY FRIEND'S SECRET
  • THE SPEEDING OF THE KING'S SPITE
  • JOB WORK
  • PRIVATE THEATRICALS
  • PLAIN SERMONS
  • "TRADIN' JOE"
  • DOT LEEDLE BOY
  • I SMOKE MY PIPE
  • RED RIDING-HOOD
  • IF I KNEW WHAT POETS KNOW
  • AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
  • SQUIRE HAWKINS'S STORY
  • A COUNTRY PATHWAY
  • THE OLD GUITAR
  • "FRIDAY AFTERNOON"
  • "JOHNSON'S BOY"
  • HER BEAUTIFUL HANDS
  • NATURAL PERVERSITIES
  • THE SILENT VICTORS
  • DEAD IN SIGHT OF FAME
  • THE IRON HORSE
  • DEAD LEAVES
  • OVER THE EYES OF GLADNESS
  • ONLY A DREAM
  • OUR LITTLE GIRL
  • THE FUNNY LITTLE FELLOW
  • SONG OF THE NEW YEAR
  • A LETTER TO A FRIEND
  • LINES FOR AN ALBUM
  • TO ANNIE
  • FAME
  • AN EMPTY NEST
  • MY FATHER'S HALLS
  • THE HARP OF THE MINSTREL
  • HONEY DRIPPING FROM THE COMB
  • JOHN WALSH
  • THAT OTHER MAUD MULLER
  • A MAN OF MANY PARTS
  • THE FROG
  • DEAD SELVES
  • A DREAM OF LONG AGO
  • WASH LOWRY'S REMINISCENCE
  • THE ANCIENT PRINTERMAN
  • PRIOR TO MISS BELLE'S APPEARANCE
  • WHEN MOTHER COMBED MY HAIR
  • A WRANGDILLION
  • GEORGE MULLEN'S CONFESSION
  • "TIRED OUT"
  • HARLIE
  • SAY SOMETHING TO ME
  • LEONAINIE
  • A TEST OF LOVE
  • FATHER WILLIAM
  • WHAT THE WIND SAID
  • MORTON
  • AN AUTUMNAL EXTRAVAGANZA
  • THE ROSE
  • THE MERMAN
  • THE RAINY MORNING
  • WE ARE NOT ALWAYS GLAD WHEN WE SMILE
  • A SUMMER SUNRISE
  • DAS KRIST KINDEL
  • AN OLD YEAR'S ADDRESS
  • A NEW YEAR'S PLAINT
  • LUTHER BENSON
  • "DREAM"
  • WHEN EVENING SHADOWS FALL
  • YLLADMAR
  • A FANTASY
  • A DREAM
  • DREAMER, SAY
  • BRYANT
  • BABYHOOD
  • LIBERTY
  • TOM VAN ARDEN

  • TO
    THE MEMORY OF
    James Whitcomb Riley
    AND
    IN PLEASANT RECOLLECTION OF MORE THAN THIRTY-FIVE YEARS
    OF BUSINESS AND PERSONAL ASSOCIATION
    THESE FINAL VOLUMES
    ARE AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
     
    BORN:                       DIED:
    October 7, 1849,            July 22, 1916
    Greenfield, Ind.            Indianapolis, Ind.

    JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY—A SKETCH

    On Sunday morning, October seventh, 1849, Reuben A. Riley and his wife, Elizabeth Marine Riley, rejoiced over the birth of their second son. They called him James Whitcomb. This was in a shady little street in the shady little town of Greenfield, which is in the county of Hancock and the state of Indiana. The young James found a brother and a sister waiting to greet him—John Andrew and Martha Celestia, and afterward came Elva May—Mrs. Henry Eitel— Alexander Humbolt and Mary Elizabeth, who, of all, alone lives to see this collection of her brother's poems.

    James Whitcomb was a slender lad, with corn-silk hair and wide blue eyes. He was shy and timid, not strong physically, dreading the cold of winter, and avoiding the rougher sports of his playmates. And yet he was full of the spirit of youth, a spirit that manifested itself in the performance of many ingenious pranks. His every-day life was that of the average boy in the average country town of that day, but his home influences were exceptional. His father, who became a captain of cavalry in the Civil War, was a lawyer of ability and an orator of more than local distinction. His mother was a woman of rare strength of character combined with deep sympathy and a clear understanding. Together, they made home a place to remember with thankful heart.

    When James was twenty years old, the death of his mother made a profound impression on him, an impression that has influenced much of his verse and has remained with him always.

    At an early age he was sent to school and, "then sent back again," to use his own words. He was restive under what he called the "iron discipline." A number of years ago, he spoke of these early educational beginnings in phrases so picturesque and so characteristic that they are quoted in full:

    "My first teacher was a little old woman, rosy and roly-poly, who looked as though she might have just come tumbling out of a fairy story, so lovable was she and so jolly and so amiable. She kept school in her little Dame-Trot kind of dwelling of three rooms, with a porch in the rear, like a bracket on the wall, which was part of the play-ground of her 'scholars,'—for in those days pupils were called 'scholars' by their affectionate teachers. Among the twelve or fifteen boys and girls who were there I remember particularly a little lame boy, who always got the first ride in the locust-tree swing during recess.

    "This first teacher of mine was a mother to all her 'scholars,' and in every way looked after their comfort, especially when certain little ones grew drowsy. I was often, with others, carried to the sitting-room and left to slumber on a small made- down pallet on the floor. She would sometimes take three or four of us together; and I recall how a playmate and I, having been admonished into silence, grew deeply interested in watching a spare old man who sat at a window with its shade drawn down. After a while we became accustomed to this odd sight and would laugh, and talk in whispers and give imitations, as we sat in a low sewing-chair, of the little old pendulating blind man at the window. Well, the old man was the gentle teacher's charge, and for this reason, possibly, her life had become an heroic one, caring for her helpless husband who, quietly content, waited always at the window for his sight to come back to him. And doubtless it is to-day, as he sits at another casement and sees not only his earthly friends, but all the friends of the Eternal Home, with the smiling, loyal, loving little woman forever at his side.

    "She was the kindliest of souls even when constrained to punish us. After a whipping she invariably took me into the little kitchen and gave me two great white slabs of bread cemented together with layers of butter and jam. As she always whipped me with the same slender switch she used for a pointer, and cried over every lick, you will have an idea how much punishment I could stand. When I was old enough to be lifted by the ears out of my seat that office was performed by a pedagogue whom I promised to 'whip sure, if he'd just wait till I got big enough.' He is still waiting!

    "There was but one book at school in which I found the slightest interest: McGuffey's old leather-bound Sixth Reader. It was the tallest book known, and to the boys of my size it was a matter of eternal wonder how I could belong to 'the big class in that reader.' When we were to read the death of 'Little Nell,' I would run away, for I knew it would make me cry, that the other boys would laugh at me, and the whole thing would become ridiculous. I couldn't bear that. A later teacher, Captain Lee O. Harris, came to understand me with thorough sympathy, took compassion on my weaknesses and encouraged me to read the best literature. He understood that he couldn't get numbers into my head. You couldn't tamp them in! History I also disliked as a dry thing without juice, and dates melted out of my memory as speedily as tin-foil on a red-hot stove. But I always was ready to declaim and took natively to anything dramatic or theatrical. Captain Harris encouraged me in recitation and reading and had ever the sweet spirit of a companion rather than the manner of an instructor."

    But if there was "only one book at school in which he found the slightest interest," he had before that time displayed an affection for a book—simply as such and not for any printed word it might contain. And this, after all, is the true book-lover's love. Speaking of this incident—and he liked to refer to it as his "first literary recollection," he said: "Long before I was old enough to read I remember buying a book at an old auctioneer's shop in Greenfield. I can not imagine what prophetic impulse took possession of me and made me forego the ginger cakes and the candy that usually took every cent of my youthful income. The slender little volume must have cost all of twenty-five cents! It was Francis Quarles' Divine Emblems,—a neat little affair about the size of a pocket Testament. I carried it around with me all day long, delighted with the very feel of it.

    " 'What have you got there, Bub?' some one would ask. 'A book,' I would reply. 'What kind of a book?' 'Poetry-book.' 'Poetry!' would be the amused exclamation. 'Can you read poetry?' and, embarrassed, I'd shake my head and make my escape, but I held on to the beloved little volume."

    Every boy has an early determination—a first one—to follow some ennobling profession, once he has come to man's estate, such as being a policeman, or a performer on the high trapeze. The poet would not have been the "Peoples' Laureate," had his fairy god- mother granted his boy-wish, but the Greenfield baker. For to his childish mind it "seemed the acme of delight," using again his own happy expression, "to manufacture those snowy loaves of bread, those delicious tarts, those toothsome bon-bons. And then to own them all, to keep them in store, to watch over and guardedly exhibit. The thought of getting money for them was to me a sacrilege. Sell them? No indeed. Eat 'em—eat 'em, by tray loads and dray loads! It was a great wonder to me why the pale-faced baker in our town did not eat all his good things. This I determined to do when I became owner of such a grand establishment. Yes, sir. I would have a glorious feast. Maybe I'd have Tom and Harry and perhaps little Kate and Florry in to help us once in a while. The thought of these play-mates as 'grown-up folks' didn't appeal to me. I was but a child, with wide-open eyes, a healthy appetite and a wondering mind. That was all. But I have the same sweet tooth to-day, and every time I pass a confectioner's shop, I think of the big baker of our town, and Tom and Harry and the youngsters all."

    As a child, he often went with his father to the court-house where the lawyers and clerks playfully called him "judge Wick." Here as a privileged character he met and mingled with the country folk who came to sue and be sued, and thus early the dialect, the native speech, the quaint expressions of his "own people" were made familiar to him, and took firm root in the fresh soil of his young memory. At about this time, he made his first poetic attempt in a valentine which he gave to his mother. Not only did he write the verse, but he drew a sketch to accompany it, greatly to his mother's delight, who, according to the best authority, gave the young poet "three big cookies and didn't spank me for two weeks. This was my earliest literary encouragement."

    Shortly after his sixteenth birthday, young Riley turned his back on the little schoolhouse and for a time wandered through the different fields of art, indulging a slender talent for painting until he thought he was destined for the brush and palette, and then making merry with various musical instruments, the banjo, the guitar, the violin, until finally he appeared as bass drummer in a brass band. "In a few weeks," he said, "I had beat myself into the more enviable position of snare drummer. Then I wanted to travel with a circus, and dangle my legs before admiring thousands over the back seat of a Golden Chariot. In a dearth of comic songs for the banjo and guitar, I had written two or three myself, and the idea took possession of me that I might be a clown, introduced as a character-song-man and the composer of my own ballads.

    "My father was thinking of something else, however, and one day I found myself with a 'five-ought' paint brush under the eaves of an old frame house that drank paint by the bucketful, learning to be a painter. Finally, I graduated as a house, sign and ornamental painter, and for two summers traveled about with a small company of young fellows calling ourselves 'The Graphics,' who covered all the barns and fences in the state with advertisements."

    At another time his, young man's fancy saw attractive possibilities in the village print-shop, and later his ambition was diverted to acting, encouraged by the good times he had in the theatricals of the Adelphian Society of Greenfield. "In my dreamy way," he afterward said, "I did a little of a number of things fairly well—sang, played the guitar and violin, acted, painted signs and wrote poetry. My father did not encourage my verse-making for he thought it too visionary, and being a visionary himself, he believed he understood the dangers of following the promptings of the poetic temperament. I doubted if anything would come of the verse-writing myself. At this time it is easy to picture my father, a lawyer of ability, regarding me, nonplused, as the worst case he had ever had. He wanted me to do something practical, besides being ambitious for me to follow in his footsteps, and at last persuaded me to settle down and read law in his office. This I really tried to do conscientiously, but finding that political economy and Blackstone did not rhyme and that the study of law was unbearable, I slipped out of the office one summer afternoon, when all out-doors called imperiously, shook the last dusty premise from my head and was away.

    "The immediate instigator of my flight was a traveling medicine man who appealed to me for this reason: My health was bad, very bad,—as bad as I was. Our doctor had advised me to travel, but how could I travel without money? The medicine man needed an assistant and I plucked up courage to ask if I could join the party and paint advertisements for him.

    "I rode out of town with that glittering cavalcade without saying good-by to any one, and though my patron was not a diplomaed doctor, as I found out, he was a man of excellent habits, and the whole company was made up of good straight boys, jolly chirping vagabonds like myself. It was delightful to bowl over the country in that way. I laughed all the time. Miles and miles of somber landscape were made bright with merry song, and when the sun shone and all the golden summer lay spread out before us, it was glorious just to drift on through it like a wisp, of thistle-down, careless of how, or when, or where the wind should anchor us. 'There's a tang of gipsy blood in my veins that pants for the sun and the air.'

    "My duty proper was the manipulation of two blackboards, swung at the sides of the wagon during our street lecture and concert. These boards were alternately embellished with colored drawings illustrative of the manifold virtues of the nostrum vended. Sometimes I assisted the musical olio with dialect recitations and character sketches from the back step of the wagon. These selections in the main originated from incidents and experiences along the route, and were composed on dull Sundays in lonesome little towns where even the church bells seemed to bark at us."

    On his return to Greenfield after this delightful but profitless tour he became the local editor of his home paper and in a few months "strangled the little thing into a change of ownership." The new proprietor transferred him to the literary department and the latter, not knowing what else to put in the space allotted him, filled it with verse. But there was not room in his department for all he produced, so he began, timidly, to offer his poetic wares in foreign markets. The editor of The Indianapolis Mirror accepted two or three shorter verses but in doing so suggested that in the future he try prose. Being but an humble beginner, Riley harkened to the advice, whereupon the editor made a further suggestion; this time that he try poetry again. The Danbury (Connecticut) News, then at the height of its humorous reputation, accepted a contribution shortly after The Mirror episode and Mr. McGeechy, its managing editor, wrote the young poet a graceful note of congratulation. Commenting on these parlous times, Riley afterward wrote, "It is strange how little a thing sometimes makes or unmakes a fellow. In these dark days I should have been content with the twinkle of the tiniest star, but even this light was withheld from me. Just then came the letter from McGeechy; and about the same time, arrived my first check, a payment from Hearth and Home for a contribution called A Destiny (now A Dreamer in A Child World). The letter was signed, 'Editor' and unless sent by an assistant it must have come from Ik Marvel himself, God bless him! I thought my fortune made. Almost immediately I sent off another contribution, whereupon to my dismay came this reply: 'The management has decided to discontinue the publication and hopes that you will find a market for your worthy work elsewhere.' Then followed dark days indeed, until finally, inspired by my old teacher and comrade, Captain Lee O. Harris, I sent some of my poems to Longfellow, who replied in his kind and gentle manner with the substantial encouragement for which I had long thirsted."

    In the year following, Riley formed a connection with The Anderson (Indiana) Democrat and contributed verse and locals in more than generous quantities. He was happy in this work and had begun to feel that at last he was making progress when evil fortune knocked at his door and, conspiring with circumstances and a friend or two, induced the young poet to devise what afterward seemed to him the gravest of mistakes,—the Poe-poem hoax. He was then writing for an audience of county papers and never dreamed that this whimsical bit of fooling would be carried beyond such boundaries. It was suggested by these circumstances.

    He was inwardly distressed by the belief that his failure to get the magazines to accept his verse was due to his obscurity, while outwardly he was harassed to desperation by the junior editor of the rival paper who jeered daily at his poetical pretensions. So, to prove that editors would praise from a known source what they did not hesitate to condemn from one unknown, and to silence his nagging contemporary, he wrote Leonainie in the style of Poe, concocting a story, to accompany the poem, setting forth how Poe came to write it and how all these years it had been lost to view. In a few words Mr. Riley related the incident and then dismissed it. "I studied Poe's methods. He seemed to have a theory, rather misty to be sure, about the use of 'm's' and 'n's' and mellifluous vowels and sonorous words. I remember that I was a long time in evolving the name Leonainie, but at length the verses were finished and ready for trial.

    "A friend, the editor of The Kokomo Dispatch, undertook the launching of the hoax in his paper; he did this with great editorial gusto while, at the same time, I attacked the authenticity of the poem in The Democrat. That diverted all possible suspicion from me. The hoax succeeded far too well, for what had started as a boyish prank became a literary discussion nation-wide, and the necessary expose had to be made. I was appalled at the result. The press assailed me furiously, and even my own paper dismissed me because I had given the 'discovery' to a rival."

    Two dreary and disheartening years followed this tragic event, years in which the young poet found no present help, nor future hope. But over in Indianapolis, twenty miles away, happier circumstances were shaping themselves. Judge E. B. Martindale, editor and proprietor of The Indianapolis Journal, had been attracted by certain poems in various papers over the state and at the very time that the poet was ready to confess himself beaten, the judge wrote: "Come over to Indianapolis and we'll give you, a place on The Journal." Mr. Riley went. That was the turning point, and though the skies were not always clear, nor the way easy, still from that time it was ever an ascending journey. As soon as he was comfortably settled in his new position, the first of the Benj. F. Johnson poems made its appearance. These dialect verses were introduced with editorial comment as coming from an old Boone county farmer, and their reception was so cordial, so enthusiastic, indeed, that the business manager of The Journal, Mr. George C. Hitt, privately published them in pamphlet form and sold the first edition of one thousand copies in local bookstores and over The Journal office counter. This marked an epoch in the young poet's progress and was the beginning of a friendship between him and Mr. Hitt that has never known interruption. This first edition of The Old Swimmin' Hole and 'Leven More Poems has since become extremely rare and now commands a high premium. A second edition was promptly issued by a local book dealer, whose successors, The Bowen-Merrill Company—now The Bobbs-Merrill Company—have continued, practically without interruption, to publish Riley's work.

    The call to read from the public platform had by this time become so insistent that Riley could no longer resist it, although modesty and shyness fought the battle for privacy. He told briefly and in his own inimitable fashion of these trying experiences. "In boyhood I had been vividly impressed with Dickens' success in reading from his own works and dreamed that some day I might follow his example. At first I read at Sunday- school entertainments and later, on special occasions such as Memorial Days and Fourth of Julys. At last I mustered up sufficient courage to read in a city theater, where, despite the conspiracy of a rainy night and a circus, I got encouragement enough to lead me to extend my efforts. And so, my native state and then the country at large were called upon to bear with me and I think I visited every sequestered spot north or south particularly distinguished for poor railroad connections. At different times, I shared the program with Mark Twain, Robert J. Burdette and George Cable, and for a while my gentlest and cheeriest of friends, Bill Nye, joined with me and made the dusty detested travel almost a delight. We were constantly playing practical jokes on each other or indulging in some mischievous banter before the audience. On one occasion, Mr. Nye, coming before the foot-lights for a word of general introduction, said, 'Ladies and gentlemen, the entertainment to-night is of a dual nature. Mr. Riley and I will speak alternately. First I come out and talk until I get tired, then Mr. Riley comes out and talks until YOU get tired!' And thus the trips went merrily enough at times and besides I learned to know in Bill Nye a man blessed with as noble and heroic a heart as ever beat. But the making of trains, which were all in conspiracy to outwit me, schedule or no schedule, and the rush and tyrannical pressure of inviolable engagements, some hundred to a season and from Boston to San Francisco, were a distress to my soul. I am glad that's over with. Imagine yourself on a crowded day-long excursion; imagine that you had to ride all the way on the platform of the car; then imagine that you had to ride all the way back on the same platform; and lastly, try to imagine how you would feel if you did that every day of your life, and you will then get a glimmer—a faint glimmer—of how one feels after traveling about on a reading or lecturing tour.

    "All this time I had been writing whenever there was any strength left in me. I could not resist the inclination to write. It was what I most enjoyed doing. And so I wrote, laboriously ever, more often using the rubber end of the pencil than the point.

    "In my readings I had an opportunity to study and find out for myself what the public wants, and afterward I would endeavor to use the knowledge gained in my writing. The public desires nothing but what is absolutely natural, and so perfectly natural as to be fairly artless. It can not tolerate affectation, and it takes little interest in the classical production. It demands simple sentiments that come direct from the heart. While on the lecture platform I watched the effect that my readings had on the audience very closely and whenever anybody left the hall I knew that my recitation was at fault and tried to find out why. Once a man and his wife made an exit while I was giving The Happy Little Cripple—a recitation I had prepared with particular enthusiasm and satisfaction. It fulfilled, as few poems do, all the requirements of length, climax and those many necessary features for a recitation. The subject was a theme of real pathos, beautified by the cheer and optimism of the little sufferer. Consequently when this couple left the hall I was very anxious to know the reason and asked a friend to find out. He learned that they had a little hunch-back child of their own. After this experience I never used that recitation again. On the other hand, it often required a long time for me to realize that the public would enjoy a poem which, because of some blind impulse, I thought unsuitable. Once a man said to me, 'Why don't you recite When the Frost Is on the Punkin?' The use of it had never occurred to me for I thought it 'wouldn't go.' He persuaded me to try it and it became one of my most favored recitations. Thus, I learned to judge and value my verses by their effect upon the public. Occasionally, at first, I had presumed to write 'over the heads' of the audience, consoling myself for the cool reception by thinking my auditors were not of sufficient intellectual height to appreciate my efforts. But after a time it came home to me that I myself was at fault in these failures, and then I disliked anything that did not appeal to the public and learned to discriminate between that which did not ring true to my hearers and that which won them by virtue of its truthfulness and was simply heart high."

    As a reader of his own poems, as a teller of humorous stories, as a mimic, indeed as a finished actor, Riley's genius was rare and beyond question. In a lecture on the Humorous Story, Mark Twain, referring to the story of the One Legged Soldier and the different ways of telling it, once said:

    "It takes only a minute and a half to tell it in its comic form; and it isn't worth telling after all. Put into the humorous-story form, it takes ten minutes, and is about the funniest thing I have ever listened to—as James Whitcomb Riley tells it.

    "The simplicity and innocence and sincerity and unconsciousness of Riley's old farmer are perfectly simulated, and the result is a performance which is thoroughly charming and delicious. This is art—and fine and beautiful, and only a master can compass it."

    It was in that The Old Swimmin' Hole and 'Leven More Poems first appeared in volume form. Four years afterward, Riley made his initial appearance before a New York City audience. The entertainment was given in aid of an international copyright law, and the country's most distinguished men of letters took part in the program. It is probably true that no one appearing at that time was less known to the vast audience in Chickering Hall than James Whitcomb Riley, but so great and so spontaneous was the enthusiasm when he left the stage after his contribution to the first day's program, that the management immediately announced a place would be made for Mr. Riley on the second and last day's program. It was then that James Russell Lowell introduced him in the following words:

    "Ladies and gentlemen: I have very great pleasure in presenting to you the next reader of this afternoon, Mr. James Whitcomb Riley, of Indiana. I confess, with no little chagrin and sense of my own loss, that when yesterday afternoon, from this platform, I presented him to a similar assemblage, I was almost completely a stranger to his poems. But since that time I have been looking into the volumes that have come from his pen, and in them I have discovered so much of high worth and tender quality that I deeply regret I had not long before made acquaintance with his work. To-day, in presenting Mr. Riley to you, I can say to you of my own knowledge, that you are to have the pleasure of listening to the voice of a true poet."

    Two years later a selection from his poems was published in England under the title Old Fashioned Roses and his international reputation was established. In his own country the people had already conferred their highest degrees on him and now the colleges and universities—seats of conservatism—gave him scholastic recognition. Yale made him an Honorary Master of Arts in 1902; in 1903, Wabash and, a year later, the University of Pennsylvania conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Letters, and in 1907 Indiana University gave him his LL. D. Still more recently the Academy of Arts and Letters elected him to membership, and in 1912 awarded him the gold medal for poetry. About this time a yet dearer, more touching tribute came to him from school children. On October 7, 1911, the schools of Indiana and New York City celebrated his birthday by special exercises, and one year later, the school children of practically every section of the country had programs in his honor.

    As these distinguished honors came they found him each time surprised anew and, though proud that they who dwell in the high places of learning should come in cap and gown to welcome him, yet gently and sincerely protesting his own unworthiness. And as they found him when they came so they left him.

    Mr. Riley made his home in Indianapolis from the time judge Martindale invited him to join The Journal's forces, and no one of her citizens was more devoted, nor was any so universally loved and honored. Everywhere he went the tribute of quick recognition and cheery greeting was paid him, and his home was the shrine of every visiting Hoosier. High on a sward of velvet grass stands a dignified middle-aged brick house. A dwarfed stone wall, broken by an iron gate, guards the front lawn, while in the rear an old-fashioned garden revels in hollyhocks and wild roses. Here among his books and his souvenirs the poet spent his happy andncontented days. To reach this restful spot, the pilgrim must journey to Lockerbie Street, a miniature thoroughfare half hidden between two more commanding avenues. It is little more than a lane, shaded, unpaved and from end to end no longer than a five minutes' walk, but its fame is for all time.

     "Such a dear little street it is, nestled away
     From the noise of the city and heat of the day,
     In cool shady coverts of whispering trees,
     With their leaves lifted up to shake hands with the breeze
     Which in all its wide wanderings never may meet
     With a resting-place fairer than Lockerbie Street!"
    

    Riley never married. He lived with devoted, loyal and understanding friends, a part of whose life he became many years ago. Kindly consideration, gentle affection, peace and order,— all that go to make home home, were found here blooming with the hollyhocks and the wild roses. Every day some visitor knocked for admittance and was not denied; every day saw the poet calling for some companionable friend and driving with him through the city's shaded streets or far out into the country.

    And so his life drew on to its last and most beautiful year. Since his serious illness in 1910, the public had shown its love for him more and more frequently. On the occasion of his birthday in 1912, Greenfield had welcomed him home through a host of children scattering flowers. Anderson, where he was living when he first gained public recognition, had a Riley Day in 1913.

    The Indiana State University entertained him the same year, as did also the city of Cincinnati. In 1915 there was a Riley Day at Columbus, Indiana, and during all this time each birthday and Christmas was marked by "poetry-showers," and by thousands of letters of affectionate congratulation and by many tributes in the newspapers and magazines.

    His last birthday, October 7, 1915, was the most notable of all. Honorable Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior, suggested to the various school superintendents that one of Riley's poems be read in each schoolhouse, with the result that Riley celebrations were general among the children of the entire country. In a proclamation by Governor Ralston the State of Indiana designated the anniversary as Riley Day in honor of its "most beloved citizen." Thousands of letters and gifts from the poet's friends poured in—letters from schools and organizations and Riley Clubs as well as from individuals—while flowers came from every section of the country. Among them all, perhaps the poet was most pleased with a bunch of violets picked from the banks of the Brandywine by the children of a Riley school.

    It was on this last birthday that an afternoon festival of Riley poems set to music and danced in pantomime took place at Indianapolis. This was followed at night by a dinner in his honor at which Charles Warren Fairbanks presided, and the speakers were Governor Ralston, Doctor John Finley, Colonel George Harvey, Young E. Allison, William Allen White, George Ade, Ex-Senator Beveridge and Senator Kern. That night Riley smiled his most wonderful smile, his dimpled boyish smile, and when he rose to speak it was with a perceptible quaver in his voice that he said: "Everywhere the faces of friends, a beautiful throng of friends!"

    The winter and spring following, Riley spent quietly at Miami, Florida, where he had gone the two previous seasons to escape the cold and the rain. There was a Riley Day at Miami in February. In April, he returned home, feeling at his best, and, as if by premonition, sought out many of his friends, new and old, and took them for last rides in his automobile. A few days before the end, he visited Greenfield to attend the funeral of a dear boyhood chum, Almon Keefer, of whom he wrote in A Child-World. All Riley's old friends who were still left in Greenfield were gathered there and to them he spoke words of faith and good cheer. Almon Keefer had "just slipped out" quietly and peacefully, he said, and "it was beautiful."

    And as quietly and peacefully his own end came—as he had desired it, with no dimming of the faculties even to the very close, nor suffering, nor confronting death. This was Saturday night, July 22, 1916. On Monday afternoon and evening his body lay in state under the dome of Indiana's capitol, while the people filed by, thousands upon thousands. Business men were there, and schoolgirls, matrons carrying market baskets, mothers with little children, here and there a swarthy foreigner, old folks, too, and well-dressed youths, here a farmer and his wife, and there a workman in a blue jumper with his hat in his band, silent, inarticulate, yet bidding his good-by, too. On the following day, with only his nearest and dearest about him, all that was mortal of the people's poet was quietly and simply laid to rest.



    A BACKWARD LOOK



    As I sat smoking, alone, yesterday,
        And lazily leaning back in my chair,
    Enjoying myself in a general way—
    Allowing my thoughts a holiday
        From weariness, toil and care,—
    My fancies—doubtless, for ventilation—
        Left ajar the gates of my mind,—
    And Memory, seeing the situation,
        Slipped out in the street of "Auld Lang Syne."—


    Wandering ever with tireless feet
        Through scenes of silence, and jubilee
    Of long-hushed voices; and faces sweet
    Were thronging the shadowy side of the street
        As far as the eye could see;
    Dreaming again, in anticipation,
        The same old dreams of our boyhood's days
    That never come true, from the vague sensation
        Of walking asleep in the world's strange ways.

    Away to the house where I was born!
        And there was the selfsame clock that ticked
    From the close of dusk to the burst of morn,
    When life-warm hands plucked the golden corn
        And helped when the apples were picked.
    And the "chany dog" on the mantel-shelf,
        With the gilded collar and yellow eyes,
    Looked just as at first, when I hugged myself
        Sound asleep with the dear surprise.

    And down to the swing in the locust-tree,
        Where the grass was worn from the trampled ground,
    And where "Eck" Skinner, "Old" Carr, and three
    Or four such other boys used to be
        "Doin' sky-scrapers," or "whirlin' round":
    And again Bob climbed for the bluebird's nest,
        And again "had shows" in the buggy-shed
    Of Guymon's barn, where still, unguessed,
        The old ghosts romp through the best days dead!

    And again I gazed from the old schoolroom
        With a wistful look, of a long June day,
    When on my cheek was the hectic bloom
    Caught of Mischief, as I presume—
        He had such a "partial" way,
    It seemed, toward me.—And again I thought
        Of a probable likelihood to be
    Kept in after school—for a girl was caught
        Catching a note from me.

    And down through the woods to the swimming-hole—
        Where the big, white, hollow old sycamore grows,—
    And we never cared when the water was cold,
    And always "ducked" the boy that told
        On the fellow that tied the clothes.—
    When life went so like a dreamy rhyme,
        That it seems to me now that then
    The world was having a jollier time
        Than it ever will have again.



    PHILIPER FLASH



    Young Philiper Flash was a promising lad,
    His intentions were good—but oh, how sad
        For a person to think
        How the veriest pink
    And bloom of perfection may turn out bad.
    Old Flash himself was a moral man,
    And prided himself on a moral plan,
        Of a maxim as old
        As the calf of gold,
    Of making that boy do what he was told.

    And such a good mother had Philiper Flash;
    Her voice was as soft as the creamy plash
        Of the milky wave
        With its musical lave
    That gushed through the holes of her patent churn-dash;—
    And the excellent woman loved Philiper so,
    She could cry sometimes when he stumped his toe,—
        And she stroked his hair
        With such motherly care
    When the dear little angel learned to swear.

    Old Flash himself would sometimes say
    That his wife had "such a ridiculous way,—
        She'd, humor that child
        Till he'd soon be sp'iled,
    And then there'd be the devil to pay!"
    And the excellent wife, with a martyr's look,
    Would tell old Flash himself "he took
        No notice at all
        Of the bright-eyed doll
    Unless when he spanked him for getting a fall!"

    Young Philiper Flash, as time passed by,
    Grew into "a boy with a roguish eye":
        He could smoke a cigar,
        And seemed by far
    The most promising youth.—"He's powerful sly,
    Old Flash himself once told a friend,
    "Every copper he gets he's sure to spend—
        And," said he, "don't you know
        If he keeps on so
    What a crop of wild oats the boy will grow!"

    But his dear good mother knew Philiper's ways
    So—well, she managed the money to raise;
        And old Flash himself
        Was "laid on the shelf,"
    (In the manner of speaking we have nowadays).
    For "gracious knows, her darling child,
    If he went without money he'd soon grow wild."
        So Philiper Flash
        With a regular dash
    "Swung on to the reins," and went "slingin' the cash."

    As old Flash himself, in his office one day,
    Was shaving notes in a barberous way,
        At the hour of four
        Death entered the door
    And shaved the note on his life, they say.
    And he had for his grave a magnificent tomb,
    Though the venturous finger that pointed "Gone Home,"
        Looked white and cold
        From being so bold,
    As it feared that a popular lie was told.

    Young Philiper Flash was a man of style
    When he first began unpacking the pile
        Of the dollars and dimes
        Whose jingling chimes
    Had clinked to the tune of his father's smile;
    And he strewed his wealth with such lavish hand,
    His rakish ways were the talk of the land,
        And gossipers wise
        Sat winking their eyes
    (A certain foreboding of fresh surprise).

    A "fast young man" was Philiper Flash,
    And wore "loud clothes" and a weak mustache,
        And "done the Park,"
        For an "afternoon lark,"
    With a very fast horse of "remarkable dash."
    And Philiper handled a billiard-cue
    About as well as the best he knew,
        And used to say
        "He could make it pay
    By playing two or three games a day."

    And Philiper Flash was his mother's joy,
    He seemed to her the magic alloy
        That made her glad,
        When her heart was sad,
    With the thought that "she lived for her darling boy."
    His dear good mother wasn't aware
    How her darling boy relished a "tare."—
        She said "one night
        He gave her a fright
    By coming home late and ACTING tight."

    Young Philiper Flash, on a winterish day,
    Was published a bankrupt, so they say—
        And as far as I know
        I suppose it was so,
    For matters went on in a singular way;
    His excellent mother, I think I was told,
    Died from exposure and want and cold;
        And Philiper Flash,
        With a horrible slash,
    Whacked his jugular open and went to smash.



    THE SAME OLD STORY



    The same old story told again—
        The maiden droops her head,
    The ripening glow of her crimson cheek
        Is answering in her stead.
    The pleading tone of a trembling voice
        Is telling her the way
    He loved her when his heart was young
        In Youth's sunshiny day:
    The trembling tongue, the longing tone,
        Imploringly ask why
    They can not be as happy now
        As in the days gone by.
    And two more hearts, tumultuous
        With overflowing joy,
    Are dancing to the music
        Which that dear, provoking boy
    Is twanging on his bowstring,
        As, fluttering his wings,
    He sends his love-charged arrows
        While merrily be sings:
    "Ho! ho! my dainty maiden,
        It surely can not be
    You are thinking you are master
        Of your heart, when it is me."
    And another gleaming arrow
        Does the little god's behest,
    And the dainty little maiden
        Falls upon her lover's breast.
    "The same old story told again,"
        And listened o'er and o'er,
    Will still be new, and pleasing, too,
        Till "Time shall be no more."



    TO A BOY WHISTLING



    The smiling face of a happy boy
        With its enchanted key
        Is now unlocking in memory
    My store of heartiest joy.

    And my lost life again to-day,
        In pleasant colors all aglow,
        From rainbow tints, to pure white snow,
    Is a panorama sliding away.

    The whistled air of a simple tune
        Eddies and whirls my thoughts around,
        As fairy balloons of thistle-down
    Sail through the air of June.

    O happy boy with untaught grace!
        What is there in the world to give
        That can buy one hour of the life you live
    Or the trivial cause of your smiling face!



    AN OLD FRIEND



    Hey, Old Midsummer! are you here again,
        With all your harvest-store of olden joys,—
    Vast overhanging meadow-lands of rain,
    And drowsy dawns, and noons when golden grain
        Nods in the sun, and lazy truant boys
    Drift ever listlessly adown the day,
    Too full of joy to rest, and dreams to play.

    The same old Summer, with the same old smile
        Beaming upon us in the same old way
    We knew in childhood! Though a weary while
    Since that far time, yet memories reconcile
        The heart with odorous breaths of clover hay;
    And again I hear the doves, and the sun streams through
    The old barn door just as it used to do.

    And so it seems like welcoming a friend—
        An old, OLD friend, upon his coming home
    From some far country—coming home to spend
    Long, loitering days with me: And I extend
        My hand in rapturous glee:—And so you've come!—
    Ho, I'm so glad! Come in and take a chair:
    Well, this is just like OLD times, I declare!



    WHAT SMITH KNEW ABOUT FARMING



    There wasn't two purtier farms in the state
    Than the couple of which I'm about to relate;—
    Jinin' each other—belongin' to Brown,
    And jest at the edge of a flourishin' town.
    Brown was a man, as I understand,
    That allus had handled a good 'eal o' land,
    And was sharp as a tack in drivin' a trade—
    For that's the way most of his money was made.
    And all the grounds and the orchards about
    His two pet farms was all tricked out
    With poppies and posies
    And sweet-smellin' rosies;
    And hundreds o' kinds
    Of all sorts o' vines,
    To tickle the most horticultural minds
    And little dwarf trees not as thick as your wrist
    With ripe apples on 'em as big as your fist:
    And peaches,—Siberian crabs and pears,
    And quinces—Well! ANY fruit ANY tree bears;
    And th purtiest stream—jest a-swimmin' with fish,
    And—JEST O'MOST EVERYTHING HEART COULD WISH!
    The purtiest orch'rds—I wish you could see
    How purty they was, fer I know it 'ud be
    A regular treat!—but I'll go ahead with
    My story! A man by the name o' Smith—
    (A bad name to rhyme,
    But I reckon that I'm
    Not goin' back on a Smith! nary time!)
    'At hadn't a soul of kin nor kith,
    And more money than he knowed what to do with,—
    So he comes a-ridin' along one day,
    And HE says to Brown, in his offhand way—
    Who was trainin' some newfangled vines round a bay-
    Winder—"Howdy-do—look-a-here—say:
    What'll you take fer this property here?—
    I'm talkin' o' leavin' the city this year,
    And I want to be
    Where the air is free,
    And I'll BUY this place, if it ain't too dear!"—
    Well—they grumbled and jawed aroun'—
    "I don't like to part with the place," says Brown;
    "Well," says Smith, a-jerkin' his head,
    "That house yonder—bricks painted red—
    Jest like this'n—a PURTIER VIEW—
    Who is it owns it?" "That's mine too,"
    Says Brown, as he winked at a hole in his shoe,
    "But I'll tell you right here jest what I KIN do:—
    If you'll pay the figgers I'll sell IT to you.,"
    Smith went over and looked at the place—
    Badgered with Brown, and argied the case—
    Thought that Brown's figgers was rather too tall,
    But, findin' that Brown wasn't goin' to fall,
    In final agreed,
    So they drawed up the deed
    Fer the farm and the fixtures—the live stock an' all.
    And so Smith moved from the city as soon
    As he possibly could—But "the man in the moon"
    Knowed more'n Smith o' farmin' pursuits,
    And jest to convince you, and have no disputes,
    How little he knowed,
    I'll tell you his "mode,"
    As he called it, o' raisin' "the best that growed,"
    In the way o' potatoes—
    Cucumbers—tomatoes,
    And squashes as lengthy as young alligators.
    'Twas allus a curious thing to me
    How big a fool a feller kin be
    When he gits on a farm after leavin' a town!—
    Expectin' to raise himself up to renown,
    And reap fer himself agricultural fame,
    By growin' of squashes—WITHOUT ANY SHAME—
    As useless and long as a technical name.
    To make the soil pure,
    And certainly sure,
    He plastered the ground with patent manure.
    He had cultivators, and double-hoss plows,
    And patent machines fer milkin' his cows;
    And patent hay-forks—patent measures and weights,
    And new patent back-action hinges fer gates,
    And barn locks and latches, and such little dribs,
    And patents to keep the rats out o' the cribs—
    Reapers and mowers,
    And patent grain sowers;
    And drillers
    And tillers
    And cucumber hillers,
    And horries;—and had patent rollers and scrapers,
    And took about ten agricultural papers.
    So you can imagine how matters turned out:
    But BROWN didn't have not a shadder o' doubt
    That Smith didn't know what he was about
    When he said that "the OLD way to farm was played out."
    But Smith worked ahead,
    And when any one said
    That the OLD way o' workin' was better instead
    O' his "modern idees," he allus turned red,
    And wanted to know
    What made people so
    INFERNALLY anxious to hear theirselves crow?
    And guessed that he'd manage to hoe his own row.
    Brown he come onc't and leant over the fence,
    And told Smith that he couldn't see any sense
    In goin' to such a tremendous expense
    Fer the sake o' such no-account experiments
    "That'll never make corn!
    As shore's you're born
    It'll come out the leetlest end of the horn!"
    Says Brown, as he pulled off a big roastin'-ear
    From a stalk of his own
    That had tribble outgrown
    Smith's poor yaller shoots, and says he, "Looky here!
    THIS corn was raised in the old-fashioned way,
    And I rather imagine that THIS corn'll pay
    Expenses fer RAISIN' it!—What do you say?"
    Brown got him then to look over his crop.—
    HIS luck that season had been tip-top!
    And you may surmise
    Smith opened his eyes
    And let out a look o' the wildest surprise
    When Brown showed him punkins as big as the lies
    He was stuffin' him with—about offers he's had
    Fer his farm: "I don't want to sell very bad,"
    He says, but says he,
    "Mr. Smith, you kin see
    Fer yourself how matters is standin' with me,
    I UNDERSTAND FARMIN' and I'd better stay,
    You know, on my farm;—I'm a-makin' it pay—
    I oughtn't to grumble!—I reckon I'll clear
    Away over four thousand dollars this year."
    And that was the reason, he made it appear,
    Why he didn't care about sellin' his farm,
    And hinted at his havin' done himself harm
    In sellin' the other, and wanted to know
    If Smith wouldn't sell back ag'in to him.—So
    Smith took the bait, and says he, "Mr. Brown,
    I wouldn't SELL out but we might swap aroun'—
    How'll you trade your place fer mine?"
    (Purty sharp way o' comin' the shine
    Over Smith! Wasn't it?) Well, sir, this Brown
    Played out his hand and brought Smithy down—
    Traded with him an', workin' it cute,
    Raked in two thousand dollars to boot
    As slick as a whistle, an' that wasn't all,—
    He managed to trade back ag'in the next fall,—
    And the next—and the next—as long as Smith stayed
    He reaped with his harvests an annual trade.—
    Why, I reckon that Brown must 'a' easily made—
    On an AVERAGE—nearly two thousand a year—
    Together he made over seven thousand—clear.—
    Till Mr. Smith found he was losin' his health
    In as big a proportion, almost, as his wealth;
    So at last he concluded to move back to town,
    And sold back his farm to this same Mr. Brown
    At very low figgers, by gittin' it down.
    Further'n this I have nothin' to say
    Than merely advisin' the Smiths fer to stay
    In their grocery stores in flourishin' towns
    And leave agriculture alone—and the Browns.



    A POET'S WOOING



        I woo'd a woman once,
    But she was sharper than an eastern wind.
                             —TENNYSON.

    "What may I do to make you glad,
    To make you glad and free,
        Till your light smiles glance
        And your bright eyes dance
    Like sunbeams on the sea?
        Read some rhyme that is blithe and gay
        Of a bright May morn and a marriage day?"
    And she sighed in a listless way she had,—
    "Do not read—it will make me sad!"

    "What shall I do to make you glad—
    To make you glad and gay,
        Till your eyes gleam bright
        As the stars at night
    When as light as the light of day
        Sing some song as I twang the strings
        Of my sweet guitar through its wanderings?"
    And she sighed in the weary way she had,—
    "Do not sing—it will make me sad!"

    "What can I do to make you glad—
    As glad as glad can be,
        Till your clear eyes seem
        Like the rays that gleam
    And glint through a dew-decked tree?—
        Will it please you, dear, that I now begin
        A grand old air on my violin?"
    And she spoke again in the following way,—
        "Yes, oh yes, it would please me, sir;
    I would be so glad you'd play
        Some grand old march—in character,—
    And then as you march away
    I will no longer thus be sad,
    But oh, so glad—so glad—so glad!"



    MAN'S DEVOTION



    A lover said, "O Maiden, love me well,
    For I must go away:
    And should ANOTHER ever come to tell
    Of love—What WILL you say?"

    And she let fall a royal robe of hair
    That folded on his arm
    And made a golden pillow for her there;
    Her face—as bright a charm

    As ever setting held in kingly crown—
    Made answer with a look,
    And reading it, the lover bended down,
    And, trusting, "kissed the book."

    He took a fond farewell and went away.
    And slow the time went by—
    So weary—dreary was it, day by day
    To love, and wait, and sigh.

    She kissed his pictured face sometimes, and said:
        "O Lips, so cold and dumb,
    I would that you would tell me, if not dead,
        Why, why do you not come?"

    The picture, smiling, stared her in the face
        Unmoved—e'en with the touch
    Of tear-drops—HERS—bejeweling the case—
        'Twas plain—she loved him much.

    And, thus she grew to think of him as gay
        And joyous all the while,
    And SHE was sorrowing—"Ah, welladay!"
        But pictures ALWAYS smile!

    And years—dull years—in dull monotony
        As ever went and came,
    Still weaving changes on unceasingly,
        And changing, changed her name.

    Was she untrue?—She oftentimes was glad
        And happy as a wife;
    But ONE remembrance oftentimes made sad
        Her matrimonial life.—

    Though its few years were hardly noted, when
        Again her path was strown
    With thorns—the roses swept away again,
        And she again alone!

    And then—alas! ah THEN!—her lover came:
        "I come to claim you now—
    My Darling, for I know you are the same,
        And I have kept my vow

    Through these long, long, long years, and now no more
        Shall we asundered be!"
    She staggered back and, sinking to the floor,
        Cried in her agony:

    "I have been false!" she moaned, "_I_ am not true—
        I am not worthy now,
    Nor ever can I be a wife to YOU—
        For I have broke my vow!"

    And as she kneeled there, sobbing at his feet,
        He calmly spoke—no sign
    Betrayed his inward agony—"I count you meet
        To be a wife of mine!"

    And raised her up forgiven, though untrue;
        As fond he gazed on her,
    She sighed,—"SO HAPPY!" And she never knew
        HE was a WIDOWER.



    A BALLAD. WITH A SERIOUS CONCLUSION



    Crowd about me, little children—
        Come and cluster 'round my knee
    While I tell a little story
        That happened once with me.

    My father he had gone away
        A-sailing on the foam,
    Leaving me—the merest infant—
        And my mother dear at home;

    For my father was a sailor,
        And he sailed the ocean o'er
    For full five years ere yet again
        He reached his native shore.

    And I had grown up rugged
        And healthy day by day,
    Though I was but a puny babe
        When father went away.

    Poor mother she would kiss me
        And look at me and sigh
    So strangely, oft I wondered
        And would ask the reason why.

    And she would answer sadly,
        Between her sobs and tears,—
    "You look so like your father,
        Far away so many years!"

    And then she would caress me
        And brush my hair away,
    And tell me not to question,
        But to run about my play.

    Thus I went playing thoughtfully—
        For that my mother said,—
    "YOU LOOK SO LIKE YOUR FATHER!"
        Kept ringing in my head.

    So, ranging once the golden sands
        That looked out on the sea,
    I called aloud, "My father dear,
        Come back to ma and me!"

    Then I saw a glancing shadow
        On the sand, and heard the shriek
    Of a sea-gull flying seaward,
        And I heard a gruff voice speak:—

    "Ay, ay, my little shipmate,
        I thought I heard you hail;
    Were you trumpeting that sea-gull,
        Or do you see a sail?"

    And as rough and gruff a sailor
        As ever sailed the sea
    Was standing near grotesquely
        And leering dreadfully.

    I replied, though I was frightened,
        "It was my father dear
    I was calling for across the sea—
        I think he didn't hear."

    And then the sailor leered again
        In such a frightful way,
    And made so many faces
        I was little loath to stay:

    But he started fiercely toward me—
        Then made a sudden halt
    And roared, "_I_ think he heard you!"
        And turned a somersault.

    Then a wild fear overcame me,
        And I flew off like the wind,
    Shrieking "MOTHER!"—and the sailor
        Just a little way behind!

    And then my mother heard me,
        And I saw her shade her eyes,
    Looking toward me from the doorway,
        Transfixed with pale surprise

    For a moment—then her features
        Glowed with all their wonted charms
    As the sailor overtook me,
        And I fainted in her arms.

    When I awoke to reason
        I shuddered with affright
    Till I felt my mother's presence
        With a thrill of wild delight—

    Till, amid a shower of kisses
        Falling glad as summer rain,
    A muffled thunder rumbled,—
        "Is he coming 'round again?"

    Then I shrieked and clung unto her,
        While her features flushed and burned
    As she told me it was father
        From a foreign land returned.

    . . . . . . .

    I said—when I was calm again,
        And thoughtfully once more
    Had dwelt upon my mother's words
        Of just the day before,—

    "I DON'T look like my father,
        As you told me yesterday—
    I know I don't—or father
        Would have run the other way."




    THE OLD TIMES WERE THE BEST



    Friends, my heart is half aweary
        Of its happiness to-night:
    Though your songs are gay and cheery,
        And your spirits feather-light,
    There's a ghostly music haunting
        Still the heart of every guest
    And a voiceless chorus chanting
        That the Old Times were the best.


            CHORUS

    All about is bright and pleasant
        With the sound of song and jest,
    Yet a feeling's ever present
        That the Old Times were the best.



    A SUMMER AFTERNOON



    A languid atmosphere, a lazy breeze,
        With labored respiration, moves the wheat
    From distant reaches, till the golden seas
        Break in crisp whispers at my feet.

    My book, neglected of an idle mind,
        Hides for a moment from the eyes of men;
    Or lightly opened by a critic wind,
        Affrightedly reviews itself again.

    Off through the haze that dances in the shine
        The warm sun showers in the open glade,
    The forest lies, a silhouette design
        Dimmed through and through with shade.

    A dreamy day; and tranquilly I lie
        At anchor from all storms of mental strain;
    With absent vision, gazing at the sky,
        "Like one that hears it rain."

    The Katydid, so boisterous last night,
        Clinging, inverted, in uneasy poise,
    Beneath a wheat-blade, has forgotten quite
        If "Katy DID or DIDN'T" make a noise.

    The twitter, sometimes, of a wayward bird
        That checks the song abruptly at the sound,
    And mildly, chiding echoes that have stirred,
        Sink into silence, all the more profound.

    And drowsily I hear the plaintive strain
        Of some poor dove . . . Why, I can scarcely keep
    My heavy eyelids—there it is again—
        "Coo-coo!"—I mustn't—"Coo-coo!"—fall asleep!



    AT LAST



    A dark, tempestuous night; the stars shut in
        With shrouds of fog; an inky, jet-black blot
    The firmament; and where the moon has been
        An hour agone seems like the darkest spot.
    The weird wind—furious at its demon game—
    Rattles one's fancy like a window-frame.

    A care-worn face peers out into the dark,
        And childish faces—frightened at the gloom—
    Grow awed and vacant as they turn to mark
        The father's as he passes through the room:
    The gate latch clatters, and wee baby Bess
    Whispers, "The doctor's tummin' now, I dess!"

    The father turns; a sharp, swift flash of pain
        Flits o'er his face: "Amanda, child! I said
    A moment since—I see I must AGAIN—
        Go take your little sisters off to bed!
    There, Effie, Rose, and CLARA MUSTN'T CRY!"
    "I tan't he'p it—I'm fyaid 'at mama'll die!"

    What are his feelings, when this man alone
        Sits in the silence, glaring in the grate
    That sobs and sighs on in an undertone
        As stoical—immovable as Fate,
    While muffled voices from the sick one's room
    Come in like heralds of a dreaded doom?

    The door-latch jingles: in the doorway stands
        The doctor, while the draft puffs in a breath—
    The dead coals leap to life, and clap their hands,
        The flames flash up. A face as pale as death
    Turns slowly—teeth tight clenched, and with a look
    The doctor, through his specs, reads like a book.

    "Come, brace up, Major!"—"Let me know the worst!"
        "W'y you're the biggest fool I ever saw—
    Here, Major—take a little brandy first—
        There! She's a BOY—I mean HE is—hurrah!"
    "Wake up the other girls—and shout for joy—
    Eureka is his name—I've found A BOY!"



    FARMER WHIPPLE—BACHELOR



    It's a mystery to see me—a man o' fifty-four,
    Who's lived a cross old bachelor fer thirty year' and more—
    A-lookin' glad and smilin'! And they's none o' you can say
    That you can guess the reason why I feel so good to-day!

    I must tell you all about it! But I'll have to deviate
    A little in beginnin', so's to set the matter straight
    As to how it comes to happen that I never took a wife—
    Kindo' "crawfish" from the Present to the Springtime of my life!

    I was brought up in the country: Of a family of five—
    Three brothers and a sister—I'm the only one alive,—
    Fer they all died little babies; and 'twas one o' Mother's ways,
    You know, to want a daughter; so she took a girl to raise.

    The sweetest little thing she was, with rosy cheeks, and fat—
    We was little chunks o' shavers then about as high as that!
    But someway we sort a' SUITED-like! and Mother she'd declare
    She never laid her eyes on a more lovin' pair

    Than WE was! So we growed up side by side fer thirteen year',
    And every hour of it she growed to me more dear!—
    W'y, even Father's dyin', as he did, I do believe
    Warn't more affectin' to me than it was to see her grieve!

    I was then a lad o' twenty; and I felt a flash o' pride
    In thinkin' all depended on ME now to pervide
    Fer Mother and fer Mary; and I went about the place
    With sleeves rolled up—and workin', with a mighty smilin'
    face.—

    Fer SOMEPIN' ELSE was workin'! but not a word I said
    Of a certain sort o' notion that was runnin' through my head,—
    "Some day I'd maybe marry, and a BROTHER'S love was one
    Thing—a LOVER'S was another!" was the way the notion run!

    I remember onc't in harvest, when the "cradle-in' " was done,
    (When the harvest of my summers mounted up to twenty-one),
    I was ridin' home with Mary at the closin' o' the day—
    A-chawin' straws and thinkin', in a lover's lazy way!

    And Mary's cheeks was burnin' like the sunset down the lane:
    I noticed she was thinkin', too, and ast her to explain.
    Well—when she turned and KISSED ME, WITH HER ARMS AROUND
    ME—LAW!
    I'd a bigger load o' Heaven than I had a load o' straw!

    I don't p'tend to learnin', but I'll tell you what's a fac',
    They's a mighty truthful sayin' somers in a' almanac—
    Er SOMERS—'bout "puore happiness"—perhaps some folks'll laugh
    At the idy—"only lastin' jest two seconds and a half."—

    But it's jest as true as preachin'!—fer that was a SISTER'S
    kiss,
    And a sister's lovin' confidence a-tellin' to me this:—
    "SHE was happy, BEIN' PROMISED TO THE SON O' FARMER BROWN."—
    And my feelin's struck a pardnership with sunset and went down!

    I don't know HOW I acted, and I don't know WHAT I said,—
    Fer my heart seemed jest a-turnin' to an ice-cold lump o' lead;
    And the hosses kind o'glimmered before me in the road,
    And the lines fell from my fingers—And that was all I knowed—

    Fer—well, I don't know HOW long—They's a dim rememberence
    Of a sound o' snortin' horses, and a stake-and-ridered fence
    A-whizzin' past, and wheat-sheaves a-dancin' in the air,
    And Mary screamin' "Murder!" and a-runnin' up to where

    _I_ was layin' by the roadside, and the wagon upside down
    A-leanin' on the gate-post, with the wheels a-whirlin' roun'!
    And I tried to raise and meet her, but I couldn't, with a vague
    Sort o' notion comin' to me that I had a broken leg.

    Well, the women nussed me through it; but many a time I'd sigh
    As I'd keep a-gittin' better instid o' goin' to die,
    And wonder what was left ME worth livin' fer below,
    When the girl I loved was married to another, don't you know!

    And my thoughts was as rebellious as the folks was good and kind
    When Brown and Mary married—Railly must 'a' been my MIND
    Was kind o' out o' kilter!—fer I hated Brown, you see,
    Worse'n PIZEN—and the feller whittled crutches out fer ME—

    And done a thousand little ac's o' kindness and respec'—
    And me a-wishin' all the time that I could break his neck!
    My relief was like a mourner's when the funeral is done
    When they moved to Illinois in the Fall o' Forty-one.

    Then I went to work in airnest—I had nothin' much in view
    But to drownd out rickollections—and it kep' me busy, too!
    But I slowly thrived and prospered, tel Mother used to say
    She expected yit to see me a wealthy man some day.

    Then I'd think how little MONEY was, compared to happiness—
    And who'd be left to use it when I died I couldn't guess!
    But I've still kep' speculatin' and a-gainin' year by year,
    Tel I'm payin' half the taxes in the county, mighty near!

    Well!—A year ago er better, a letter comes to hand
    Astin' how I'd like to dicker fer some Illinois land—
    "The feller that had owned it," it went ahead to state,
    "Had jest deceased, insolvent, leavin' chance to speculate,"—

    And then it closed by sayin' that I'd "better come and see."—
    I'd never been West, anyhow—a'most too wild fer ME,
    I'd allus had a notion; but a lawyer here in town
    Said I'd find myself mistakend when I come to look around.

    So I bids good-by to Mother, and I jumps aboard the train,
    A-thinkin' what I'd bring her when I come back home again—
    And ef she'd had an idy what the present was to be,
    I think it's more'n likely she'd 'a' went along with me!

    Cars is awful tejus ridin', fer all they go so fast!
    But finally they called out my stoppin'-place at last:
    And that night, at the tavern, I dreamp' I was a train
    O' cars, and SKEERED at somepin', runnin' down a country lane!

    Well, in the morning airly—after huntin' up the man—
    The lawyer who was wantin' to swap the piece o' land—
    We started fer the country; and I ast the history
    Of the farm—its former owner—and so forth, etcetery!

    And—well—it was interESTin'—I su'prised him, I suppose,
    By the loud and frequent manner in which I blowed my nose!—
    But his su'prise was greater, and it made him wonder more,
    When I kissed and hugged the widder when she met us at the
    door!—

    IT WAS MARY: . . . They's a feelin' a-hidin' down in here—
    Of course I can't explain it, ner ever make it clear.—
    It was with us in that meetin', I don't want you to fergit!
    And it makes me kind o'nervous when I think about it yit!

    I BOUGHT that farm, and DEEDED it, afore I left the town
    With "title clear to mansions in the skies," to Mary Brown!
    And fu'thermore, I took her and the CHILDERN—fer you see,
    They'd never seed their Grandma—and I fetched 'em home with me.

    So NOW you've got an idy why a man o' fifty-four,
    Who's lived a cross old bachelor fer thirty year' and more
    Is a-lookin' glad and smilin'!—And I've jest come into town
    To git a pair o' license fer to MARRY Mary Brown.



    MY JOLLY FRIEND'S SECRET



    Ah, friend of mine, how goes it,
        Since you've taken you a mate?—
    Your smile, though, plainly shows it
        Is a very happy state!
    Dan Cupid's necromancy!
        You must sit you down and dine,
    And lubricate your fancy
        With a glass or two of wine.

    And as you have "deserted,"
        As my other chums have done,
    While I laugh alone diverted,
        As you drop off one by one—
    And I've remained unwedded,
        Till—you see—look here—that I'm,
    In a manner, "snatched bald-headed"
        By the sportive hand of Time!

    I'm an "old 'un!" yes, but wrinkles
        Are not so plenty, quite,
    As to cover up the twinkles
        Of the BOY—ain't I right?
    Yet, there are ghosts of kisses
        Under this mustache of mine
    My mem'ry only misses
        When I drown 'em out with wine.

    From acknowledgment so ample,
        You would hardly take me for
    What I am—a perfect sample
        Of a "jolly bachelor";
    Not a bachelor has being
        When he laughs at married life
    But his heart and soul's agreeing
        That he ought to have a wife!

    Ah, ha I old chum, this claret,
        Like Fatima, holds the key
    Of the old Blue-Beardish garret
        Of my hidden mystery!
    Did you say you'd like to listen?
        Ah, my boy! the "SAD NO MORE!"
    And the tear-drops that will glisten—
        TURN THE CATCH UPON THE DOOR,

    And sit you down beside me,
        And put yourself at ease—
    I'll trouble you to slide me
        That wine decanter, please;
    The path is kind o' mazy
        Where my fancies have to go,
    And my heart gets sort o' lazy
        On the journey—don't you know?

    Let me see—when I was twenty—
        It's a lordly age, my boy,
    When a fellow's money's plenty,
        And the leisure to enjoy—
    And a girl—with hair as golden
        As—THAT; and lips—well—quite
    As red as THIS I'm holdin'
        Between you and the light.

    And eyes and a complexion—
        Ah, heavens!—le'-me-see—
    Well,—just in this connection,—
        DID YOU LOCK THAT DOOR FOR ME?
    Did I start in recitation
        My past life to recall?
    Well, THAT'S an indication
        I am purty tight—that's all!



    THE SPEEDING OF THE KING'S SPITE



    A king—estranged from his loving Queen
        By a foolish royal whim—
    Tired and sick of the dull routine
        Of matters surrounding him—
    Issued a mandate in this wise.—
        "THE DOWER OF MY DAUGHTER'S HAND
    I WILL GIVE TO HIM WHO HOLDS THIS PRIZE,
        THE STRANGEST THING IN THE LAND."

    But the King, sad sooth! in this grim decree
        Had a motive low and mean;—
    'Twas a royal piece of chicanery
        To harry and spite the Queen;
    For King though he was, and beyond compare,
        He had ruled all things save one—
    Then blamed the Queen that his only heir
        Was a daughter—not a son.

    The girl had grown, in the mother's care,
        Like a bud in the shine and shower
    That drinks of the wine of the balmy air
        Till it blooms into matchless flower;
    Her waist was the rose's stem that bore
        The flower—and the flower's perfume—
    That ripens on till it bulges o'er
        With its wealth of bud and bloom.

    And she had a lover—lowly sprung,—
        But a purer, nobler heart
    Never spake in a courtlier tongue
        Or wooed with a dearer art:
    And the fair pair paled at the King's decree;
        But the smiling Fates contrived
    To have them wed, in a secrecy
        That the Queen HERSELF connived—

    While the grim King's heralds scoured the land
        And the countries roundabout,
    Shouting aloud, at the King's command,
        A challenge to knave or lout,
    Prince or peasant,—"The mighty King
        Would have ye understand
    That he who shows him the strangest thing
        Shall have his daughter's hand!"

    And thousands flocked to the royal throne,
        Bringing a thousand things
    Strange and curious;—One, a bone—
        The hinge of a fairy's wings;
    And one, the glass of a mermaid queen,
        Gemmed with a diamond dew,
    Where, down in its reflex, dimly seen,
        Her face smiled out at you.

    One brought a cluster of some strange date,
        With a subtle and searching tang
    That seemed, as you tasted, to penetrate
        The heart like a serpent's fang;
    And back you fell for a spell entranced,
        As cold as a corpse of stone,
    And heard your brains, as they laughed and danced
        And talked in an undertone.

    One brought a bird that could whistle a tune
        So piercingly pure and sweet,
    That tears would fall from the eyes of the moon
        In dewdrops at its feet;
    And the winds would sigh at the sweet refrain,
        Till they swooned in an ecstacy,
    To waken again in a hurricane
        Of riot and jubilee.

    One brought a lute that was wrought of a shell
        Luminous as the shine
    Of a new-born star in a dewy dell,—
        And its strings were strands of wine
    That sprayed at the Fancy's touch and fused,
        As your listening spirit leant
    Drunken through with the airs that oozed
        From the o'ersweet instrument.

    One brought a tablet of ivory
        Whereon no thing was writ,—
    But, at night—and the dazzled eyes would see
        Flickering lines o'er it,—
    And each, as you read from the magic tome,
        Lightened and died in flame,
    And the memory held but a golden poem
        Too beautiful to name.

    Till it seemed all marvels that ever were known
        Or dreamed of under the sun
    Were brought and displayed at the royal throne,
        And put by, one by one
    Till a graybeard monster came to the King—
        Haggard and wrinkled and old—
    And spread to his gaze this wondrous thing,—
        A gossamer veil of gold.—

    Strangely marvelous—mocking the gaze
        Like a tangle of bright sunshine,
    Dipping a million glittering rays
        In a baptism divine:
    And a maiden, sheened in this gauze attire—
        Sifting a glance of her eye—
    Dazzled men's souls with a fierce desire
        To kiss and caress her and—die.

    And the grim King swore by his royal beard
        That the veil had won the prize,
    While the gray old monster blinked and leered
        With his lashless, red-rimmed eyes,
    As the fainting form of the princess fell,
        And the mother's heart went wild,
    Throbbing and swelling a muffled knell
        For the dead hopes of her child.

    But her clouded face with a faint smile shone,
        As suddenly, through the throng,
    Pushing his way to the royal throne,
        A fair youth strode along,
    While a strange smile hovered about his eyes,
        As he said to the grim old King:—
    "The veil of gold must lose the prize;
        For _I_ have a stranger thing."

    He bent and whispered a sentence brief;
        But the monarch shook his head,
    With a look expressive of unbelief—
        "It can't be so," he said;
    "Or give me proof; and I, the King,
        Give you my daughter's hand,—
    For certes THAT IS a stranger thing—
        THE STRANGEST THING IN THE LAND!"

    Then the fair youth, turning, caught the Queen
        In a rapturous caress,
    While his lithe form towered in lordly mien,
        As he said in a brief address:—
    "My fair bride's mother is this; and, lo,
        As you stare in your royal awe,
    By this pure kiss do I proudly show
        A LOVE FOR A MOTHER-IN-LAW!"

    Then a thaw set in the old King's mood,
        And a sweet Spring freshet came
    Into his eyes, and his heart renewed
        Its love for the favored dame:
    But often he has been heard to declare
        That "he never could clearly see
    How, in the deuce, such a strange affair
        Could have ended so happily!"


    JOB WORK



    "Write me a rhyme of the present time".
        And the poet took his pen
    And wrote such lines as the miser minds
        Hide in the hearts of men.

    He grew enthused, as the poets used
        When their fingers kissed the strings
    Of some sweet lyre, and caught the fire
        True inspiration brings,

    And sang the song of a nation's wrong—
        Of the patriot's galling chain,
    And the glad release that the angel, Peace,
        Has given him again.

    He sang the lay of religion's sway,
        Where a hundred creeds clasp hands
    And shout in glee such a symphony
        That the whole world understands.

    He struck the key of monopoly,
        And sang of her swift decay,
    And traveled the track of the railway back
        With a blithesome roundelay—

    Of the tranquil bliss of a true love kiss;
        And painted the picture, too,
    Of the wedded life, and the patient wife,
        And the husband fond and true;

    And sang the joy that a noble boy
        Brings to a father's soul,
    Who lets the wine as a mocker shine
        Stagnated in the bowl.

    And he stabbed his pen in the ink again,
        And wrote with a writhing frown,
    "This is the end." "And now, my friend,
        You may print it—upside down!"


    PRIVATE THEATRICALS



    A quite convincing axiom
        Is, "Life is like a play";
    For, turning back its pages some
        Few dog-eared years away,
            I find where I
            Committed my
    Love-tale—with brackets where to sigh.

    I feel an idle interest
        To read again the page;
    I enter, as a lover dressed,
        At twenty years of age,
            And play the part
            With throbbing heart,
    And all an actor's glowing art.

    And she who plays my Lady-love
        Excels!—Her loving glance
    Has power her audience to move—
        I am her audience.—
            Her acting tact,
            To tell the fact,
    "Brings down the house" in every act.

    And often we defy the curse
        Of storms and thunder-showers,
    To meet together and rehearse
        This little play of ours—
            I think, when she
            "Makes love" to me,
    She kisses very naturally!

        . . . . . .

    Yes; it's convincing—rather—
        That "Life is like a play":
    I am playing "Heavy Father"
        In a "Screaming Farce" to-day,
            That so "brings down
            The house," I frown,
    And fain would "ring the curtain down."


    PLAIN SERMONS



    I saw a man—and envied him beside—
        Because of this world's goods he had great store;
    But even as I envied him, he died,
        And left me envious of him no more.

    I saw another man—and envied still—
        Because he was content with frugal lot;
    But as I envied him, the rich man's will
        Bequeathed him all, and envy I forgot.

    Yet still another man I saw, and he
        I envied for a calm and tranquil mind
    That nothing fretted in the least degree—
        Until, alas! I found that he was blind.

    What vanity is envy! for I find
        I have been rich in dross of thought, and poor
    In that I was a fool, and lastly blind
        For never having seen myself before!


    "TRADIN' JOE"



    I'm one o' these cur'ous kind o' chaps
    You think you know when you don't, perhaps!
    I hain't no fool—ner I don't p'tend
    To be so smart I could rickommend
    Myself fer a CONGERSSMAN my friend!—
    But I'm kind o' betwixt-and-between, you know,—
    One o' these fellers 'at folks call "slow."
    And I'll say jest here I'm kind o' queer
    Regardin' things 'at I SEE and HEAR,—
    Fer I'm THICK o' hearin' SOMETIMES, and
    It's hard to git me to understand;
    But other times it hain't, you bet!
    Fer I don't sleep with both eyes shet!

    I've swapped a power in stock, and so
    The neighbers calls me "Tradin' Joe"—
    And I'm goin' to tell you 'bout a trade,—
    And one o' the best I ever made:

    Folks has gone so fur's to say
    'At I'm well fixed, in a WORLDLY way,
    And BEIN' so, and a WIDOWER,
    It's not su'prisin', as you'll infer,
    I'm purty handy among the sect—
    Widders especially, rickollect!
    And I won't deny that along o' late
    I've hankered a heap fer the married state—
    But some way o' 'nother the longer we wait
    The harder it is to discover a mate.

    Marshall Thomas,—a friend o' mine,
    Doin' some in the tradin' line,
    But a'most too YOUNG to know it all—
    On'y at PICNICS er some BALL!—
    Says to me, in a banterin' way,
    As 'we was a-loadin' stock one day,—
    "You're a-huntin' a wife, and I want you to see
    My girl's mother, at Kankakee!—
    She hain't over forty—good-lookin' and spry,
    And jest the woman to fill your eye!
    And I'm a-goin' there Sund'y,—and now," says he,
    "I want to take you along with ME;
    And you marry HER, and," he says, "by 'shaw I
    You'll hev me fer yer son-in-law!"
    I studied a while, and says I, "Well, I'll
    First have to see ef she suits my style;
    And ef she does, you kin bet your life
    Your mother-in-law will be my wife!"

    Well, Sundy come; and I fixed up some—
    Putt on a collar—I did, by gum!—
    Got down my "plug," and my satin vest—
    (You wouldn't know me to see me dressed!—
    But any one knows ef you got the clothes
    You kin go in the crowd wher' the best of 'em goes!)
    And I greeced my boots, and combed my hair
    Keerfully over the bald place there;
    And Marshall Thomas and me that day
    Eat our dinners with Widder Gray
    And her girl Han'! * * *


                Well, jest a glance
    O' the widder's smilin' countenance,
    A-cuttin' up chicken and big pot-pies,
    Would make a man hungry in Paradise!
    And passin' p'serves and jelly and cake
    'At would make an ANGEL'S appetite ACHE!—
    Pourin' out coffee as yaller as gold—
    Twic't as much as the cup could hold—
    La! it was rich!—And then she'd say,
    "Take some o' THIS!' in her coaxin' way,
    Tell ef I'd been a hoss I'd 'a' FOUNDERED, shore,
    And jest dropped dead on her white-oak floor!

    Well, the way I talked would 'a' done you good,
    Ef you'd 'a' been there to 'a' understood;
    Tel I noticed Hanner and Marshall, they
    Was a-noticin' me in a cur'ous way;
    So I says to myse'f, says I, "Now, Joe,
    The best thing fer you is to jest go slow!"
    And I simmered down, and let them do
    The bulk o' the talkin' the evening through.

    And Marshall was still in a talkative gait
    When he left, that evening—tolable late.
    "How do you like her?" he says to me;
    Says I, "She suits, to a 'T-Y-TEE'!
    And then I ast how matters stood
    With him in the OPPOSITE neighberhood?
    "Bully!" he says; "I ruther guess
    I'll finally git her to say the 'yes.'
    I named it to her to-night, and she
    Kind o' smiled, and said 'SHE'D SEE'—
    And that's a purty good sign!" says he:
    "Yes" says I, "you're ahead o' ME!"
    And then he laughed, and said, "GO IN!
    And patted me on the shoulder ag'in.

    Well, ever sense then I've been ridin' a good
    Deal through the Kankakee neighberhood;
    And I make it convenient sometimes to stop
    And hitch a few minutes, and kind o' drop
    In at the widder's, and talk o' the crop
    And one thing o' 'nother. And week afore last
    The notion struck me, as I drove past,
    I'd stop at the place and state my case—
    Might as well do it at first as last!

    I felt first-rate; so I hitched at the gate,
    And went up to the house; and, strange to relate,
    MARSHALL THOMAS had dropped in, TOO.—
    "Glad to see you, sir, how do you do?"
    He says, says he! Well—it SOUNDED QUEER:

    And when Han' told me to take a cheer,
    Marshall got up and putt out o' the room—
    And motioned his hand fer the WIDDER to come.
    I didn't say nothin' fer quite a spell,
    But thinks I to myse'f, "There's a dog in the well!"
    And Han' SHE smiled so cur'ous at me—
    Says I, "What's up?" And she says, says she,
    "Marshall's been at me to marry ag'in,
    And I told him 'no,' jest as you come in."
    Well, somepin' o' 'nother in that girl's voice
    Says to me, "Joseph, here's your choice!"
    And another minute her guileless breast
    Was lovin'ly throbbin' ag'in my vest!—
    And then I kissed her, and heerd a smack
    Come like a' echo a-flutterin' back,
    And we looked around, and in full view
    Marshall was kissin' the widder, too!
    Well, we all of us laughed, in our glad su'prise,
    Tel the tears come A-STREAMIN' out of our eyes!
    And when Marsh said "'Twas the squarest trade
    That ever me and him had made,"
    We both shuck hands, 'y jucks! and swore
    We'd stick together ferevermore.
    And old Squire Chipman tuck us the trip:
    And Marshall and me's in pardnership!


    DOT LEEDLE BOY



    Ot's a leedle Gristmas story
        Dot I told der leedle folks—
    Und I vant you stop dot laughin'
        Und grackin' funny jokes!—
    So help me Peter-Moses!
        Ot's no time for monkey-shine,
    Ober I vast told you somedings
        Of dot leedle boy of mine!

    Ot vas von cold Vinter vedder,
        Ven der snow vas all about—
    Dot you have to chop der hatchet
        Eef you got der sauerkraut!
    Und der cheekens on der hind leg
        Vas standin' in der shine
    Der sun shmile out dot morning
        On dot leedle boy of mine.

    He vas yoost a leedle baby
        Not bigger as a doll
    Dot time I got acquaintet—
        Ach! you ought to heard 'im squall!—
    I grackys! dot's der moosic
        Ot make me feel so fine
    Ven first I vas been marriet—
        Oh, dot leedle boy of mine!

    He look yoost like his fader!—
        So, ven der vimmen said,
    "Vot a purty leedle baby!"
        Katrina shake der head. . . .
    I dink she must 'a' notice
        Dot der baby vas a-gryin',
    Und she cover up der blankets
        Of dot leedle boy of mine.

    Vel, ven he vas got bigger,
        Dot he grawl und bump his nose,
    Und make der table over,
        Und molasses on his glothes—
    Dot make 'im all der sveeter,—
        So I say to my Katrine,
    "Better you vas quit a-shpankin'
        Dot leedle boy of mine!"

    No more he vas older
        As about a dozen months
    He speak der English language
        Und der German—bote at vonce!
    Und he dringk his glass of lager
        Like a Londsman fon der Rhine—
    Und I klingk my glass togeder
        Mit dot leedle boy of mine!

    I vish you could 'a' seen id—
        Ven he glimb up on der chair
    Und shmash der lookin'-glasses
        Ven he try to comb his hair
    Mit a hammer!—Und Katrina
        Say, "Dot's an ugly sign!"
    But I laugh und vink my fingers
        At dot leedle boy of mine.

    But vonce, dot Vinter morning,
        He shlip out in der snow
    Mitout no stockin's on 'im.—
        He say he "vant to go
    Und fly some mit der birdies!"
        Und ve give 'im medi-cine
    Ven he catch der "parrygoric"—
        Dot leedle boy of mine!

    Und so I set und nurse 'im,
        Vile der Gristmas vas come roun',
    Und I told 'im 'bout "Kriss Kringle,"
        How he come der chimbly down:
    Und I ask 'im eef he love 'im
        Eef he bring 'im someding fine?
    "Nicht besser as mein fader,"
        Say dot leedle boy of mine.—

    Und he put his arms aroun' me
        Und hug so close und tight,
    I hear der gclock a-tickin'
        All der balance of der night! . . .
    Someding make me feel so funny
        Ven I say to my Katrine,
    "Let us go und fill der stockin's
        Of dot leedle boy of mine."

    Vell.—Ve buyed a leedle horses
        Dot you pull 'im mit a shtring,
    Und a leedle fancy jay-bird—
        Eef you vant to hear 'im sing
    You took 'im by der topknot
        Und yoost blow in behine—
    Und dot make much spectakel
        For dot leedle boy of mine!

    Und gandies, nuts und raizens—
        Und I buy a leedle drum
    Dot I vant to hear 'im rattle
        Ven der Gristmas morning come!
    Und a leedle shmall tin rooster
        Dot vould crow so loud und fine
    Ven he sqveeze 'im in der morning,
        Dot leedle boy of mine!

    Und—vile ve vas a-fixin'—
        Dot leedle boy vake out!
    I t'ought he been a-dreamin'
        "Kriss Kringle" vas about,—
    For he say—"DOT'S HIM!—I SEE 'IM
        MIT DER SHTARS DOT MAKE DER SHINE!"
    Und he yoost keep on a-gryin'—
        Dot leedle boy of mine,—
    Und gottin' vorse und vorser—
        Und tumble on der bed!
    So—ven der doctor seen id,
        He kindo' shake his head,
    Und feel his pulse—und visper,
        "Der boy is a-dyin'."
    You dink I could BELIEVE id?—
        DOT LEEDLE BOY OF MINE?

    I told you, friends—dot's someding,
        Der last time dot he speak
    Und say, "GOOT-BY, KRISS KRINGLE!"
        —Dot make me feel so veak
    I yoost kneel down und drimble,
        Und bur-sed out a-gryin',
    "MEIN GOTT, MEIN GOTT IN HIMMEL!—
        DOT LEEDLE BOY OF MINE!"
    . . . . . . . . . .


    Der sun don't shine DOT Gristmas!
        . . . Eef dot leedle boy vould LIFF'D—
    No deefer-en'! for HEAVEN vas
        His leedle Gristmas gift!
    Und der ROOSTER, und der GANDY,
        Und me—und my Katrine—
    Und der jay-bird—is awaiting
        For dot leedle boy of mine.


    I SMOKE MY PIPE



    I can't extend to every friend
        In need a helping hand—
    No matter though I wish it so,
        'Tis not as Fortune planned;
    But haply may I fancy they
        Are men of different stripe
    Than others think who hint and wink,—
        And so—I smoke my pipe!

    A golden coal to crown the bowl—
        My pipe and I alone,—
    I sit and muse with idler views
        Perchance than I should own:—
    It might be worse to own the purse
        Whose glutted bowels gripe
    In little qualms of stinted alms;
        And so I smoke my pipe.

    And if inclined to moor my mind
        And cast the anchor Hope,
    A puff of breath will put to death
        The morbid misanthrope
    That lurks inside—as errors hide
        In standing forms of type
    To mar at birth some line of worth;
        And so I smoke my pipe.

    The subtle stings misfortune flings
        Can give me little pain
    When my narcotic spell has wrought
        This quiet in my brain:
    When I can waste the past in taste
        So luscious and so ripe
    That like an elf I hug myself;
        And so I smoke my pipe.

    And wrapped in shrouds of drifting clouds,
        I watch the phantom's flight,
    Till alien eyes from Paradise
        Smile on me as I write:
    And I forgive the wrongs that live,
        As lightly as I wipe
    Away the tear that rises here;
        And so I smoke my pipe.



    RED RIDING-HOOD



    Sweet little myth of the nursery story—
        Earliest love of mine infantile breast,
    Be something tangible, bloom in thy glory
        Into existence, as thou art addressed!
    Hasten! appear to me, guileless and good—
        Thou are so dear to me, Red Riding-Hood!

    Azure-blue eyes, in a marvel of wonder,
        Over the dawn of a blush breaking out;
    Sensitive nose, with a little smile under
        Trying to hide in a blossoming pout—
    Couldn't be serious, try as you would,
        Little mysterious Red Riding-Hood!

    Hah! little girl, it is desolate, lonely,
        Out in this gloomy old forest of Life!—
    Here are not pansies and buttercups only—
        Brambles and briers as keen as a knife;
    And a Heart, ravenous, trails in the wood
    For the meal have he must,—Red Riding-Hood!


    IF I KNEW WHAT POETS KNOW



    If I knew what poets know,
        Would I write a rhyme
    Of the buds that never blow
        In the summer-time?
    Would I sing of golden seeds
    Springing up in ironweeds?
    And of rain-drops turned to snow,
    If I knew what poets know?

    Did I know what poets do,
        Would I sing a song
    Sadder than the pigeon's coo
        When the days are long?
    Where I found a heart in pain,
    I would make it glad again;
    And the false should be the true,
    Did I know what poets do.

    If I knew what poets know,
        I would find a theme
    Sweeter than the placid flow
        Of the fairest dream:
    I would sing of love that lives
    On the errors it forgives;
    And the world would better grow
    If I knew what poets know.


    AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE



    An old sweetheart of mine!—Is this her presence here with me,
    Or but a vain creation of a lover's memory?
    A fair, illusive vision that would vanish into air
    Dared I even touch the silence with the whisper of a prayer?

    Nay, let me then believe in all the blended false and true—
    The semblance of the OLD love and the substance of the NEW,—
    The THEN of changeless sunny days—the NOW of shower and shine—
    But Love forever smiling—as that old sweetheart of mine.

    This ever-restful sense of HOME, though shouts ring in the
    hall.—
    The easy chair—the old book-shelves and prints along the wall;
    The rare HABANAS in their box, or gaunt church-warden-stem
    That often wags, above the jar, derisively at them.

    As one who cons at evening o'er an album, all alone,
    And muses on the faces of the friends that he has known,
    So I turn the leaves of Fancy, till, in shadowy design,
    I find the smiling features of an old sweetheart of mine.

    The lamplight seems to glimmer with a flicker of surprise,
    As I turn it low—to rest me of the dazzle in my eyes,
    And light my pipe in silence, save a sigh that seems to yoke
    Its fate with my tobacco and to vanish with the smoke.

    'Tis a FRAGRANT retrospection,—for the loving thoughts that
    start
    Into being are like perfume from the blossom of the heart;
    And to dream the old dreams over is a luxury divine—
    When my truant fancies wander with that old sweetheart of mine.

    Though I hear beneath my study, like a fluttering of wings,
    The voices of my children and the mother as she sings—
    I feel no twinge of conscience to deny me any theme
    When Care has cast her anchor in the harbor of a dream—

    In fact, to speak in earnest, I believe it adds a charm
    To spice the good a trifle with a little dust of harm,—
    For I find an extra flavor in Memory's mellow wine
    That makes me drink the deeper to that old sweetheart of mine.

    O Childhood-days enchanted! O the magic of the Spring!—
    With all green boughs to blossom white, and all bluebirds to
    sing!
    When all the air, to toss and quaff, made life a jubilee
    And changed the children's song and laugh to shrieks of ecstasy.

    With eyes half closed in clouds that ooze from lips that taste,
    as well,
    The peppermint and cinnamon, I hear the old School bell,
    And from "Recess" romp in again from "Black-man's" broken line,
    To smile, behind my "lesson," at that old sweetheart of mine.

    A face of lily-beauty, with a form of airy grace,
    Floats out of my tobacco as the Genii from the vase;
    And I thrill beneath the glances of a pair of azure eyes
    As glowing as the summer and as tender as the skies.

    I can see the pink sunbonnet and the little checkered dress
    She wore when first I kissed her and she answered the caress
    With the written declaration that, "as surely as the vine
    Grew 'round the stump," she loved me—that old sweetheart of
    mine.

    Again I made her presents, in a really helpless way,—
    The big "Rhode Island Greening"—I was hungry, too, that day!—
    But I follow her from Spelling, with her hand behind her—so—
    And I slip the apple in it—and the Teacher doesn't know!

    I give my TREASURES to her—all,—my pencil—blue-and-red;—
    And, if little girls played marbles, MINE should all be HERS,
    instead!
    But SHE gave me her PHOTOGRAPH, and printed "Ever Thine"
    Across the back—in blue-and-red—that old sweet-heart of mine!

    And again I feel the pressure of her slender little hand,
    As we used to talk together of the future we had planned,—
    When I should be a poet, and with nothing else to do
    But write the tender verses that she set the music to . . .

    When we should live together in a cozy little cot
    Hid in a nest of roses, with a fairy garden-spot,
    Where the vines were ever fruited, and the weather ever fine,
    And the birds were ever singing for that old sweetheart of mine.

    When I should be her lover forever and a day,
    And she my faithful sweetheart till the golden hair was gray;
    And we should be so happy that when either's lips were dumb
    They would not smile in Heaven till the other's kiss had come.

    But, ah! my dream is broken by a step upon the stair,
    And the door is softly opened, and—my wife is standing there:
    Yet with eagerness and rapture all my visions I resign,—
    To greet the LIVING presence of that old sweetheart of mine.


    SQUIRE HAWKINS'S STORY



    I hain't no hand at tellin' tales,
    Er spinnin' yarns, as the sailors say;
    Someway o' 'nother, language fails
    To slide fer me in the oily way
    That LAWYERS has; and I wisht it would,
    Fer I've got somepin' that I call good;
    But bein' only a country squire,
    I've learned to listen and admire,
    Ruther preferrin' to be addressed
    Than talk myse'f—but I'll do my best:—

    Old Jeff Thompson—well, I'll say,
    Was the clos'test man I ever saw!—
    Rich as cream, but the porest pay,
    And the meanest man to work fer—La!
    I've knowed that man to work one "hand"—
    Fer little er nothin', you understand—
    From four o'clock in the morning light
    Tel eight and nine o'clock at night,
    And then find fault with his appetite!
    He'd drive all over the neighberhood
    To miss the place where a toll-gate stood,
    And slip in town, by some old road
    That no two men in the county knowed,
    With a jag o' wood, and a sack o' wheat,
    That wouldn't burn and you couldn't eat!
    And the trades he'd make, 'll I jest de-clare,
    Was enough to make a preacher swear!
    And then he'd hitch, and hang about
    Tel the lights in the toll-gate was blowed out,
    And then the turnpike he'd turn in
    And sneak his way back home ag'in!

    Some folks hint, and I make no doubt,
    That that's what wore his old wife out—
    Toilin' away from day to day
    And year to year, through heat and cold,
    Uncomplainin'—the same old way
    The martyrs died in the days of old;
    And a-clingin', too, as the martyrs done,
    To one fixed faith, and her ONLY one,—
    Little Patience, the sweetest child
    That ever wept unrickonciled,
    Er felt the pain and the ache and sting
    That only a mother's death can bring.

    Patience Thompson!—I think that name
    Must 'a' come from a power above,
    Fer it seemed to fit her jest the same
    As a GAITER would, er a fine kid glove!
    And to see that girl, with all the care
    Of the household on her—I de-clare
    It was OUDACIOUS, the work she'd do,
    And the thousand plans that she'd putt through;

    And sing like a medder-lark all day long,
    And drowned her cares in the joys o' song;
    And LAUGH sometimes tel the farmer's "hand,"
    Away fur off in the fields, would stand
    A-listenin', with the plow half drawn,
    Tel the coaxin' echoes called him on;
    And the furries seemed, in his dreamy eyes,
    Like foot-paths a-leadin' to Paradise,
    As off through the hazy atmosphere
    The call fer dinner reached his ear.

    Now LOVE'S as cunnin'a little thing
    As a hummin'-bird upon the wing,
    And as liable to poke his nose
    Jest where folks would least suppose,—
    And more'n likely build his nest
    Right in the heart you'd leave unguessed,
    And live and thrive at your expense—
    At least, that's MY experience.
    And old Jeff Thompson often thought,
    In his se'fish way, that the quiet John
    Was a stiddy chap, as a farm-hand OUGHT
    To always be,—fer the airliest dawn
    Found John busy—and "EASY," too,
    Whenever his wages would fall due!—
    To sum him up with a final touch,
    He EAT so little and WORKED so much,
    That old Jeff laughed to hisse'f and said,
    "He makes ME money and airns his bread!—

    But John, fer all of his quietude,
    Would sometimes drap a word er so
    That none but PATIENCE understood,
    And none but her was MEANT to know!—
    Maybe at meal-times John would say,
    As the sugar-bowl come down his way,
    "Thanky, no; MY coffee's sweet
    Enough fer ME!" with sich conceit,
    SHE'D know at once, without no doubt,
    HE meant because she poured it out;
    And smile and blush, and all sich stuff,
    And ast ef it was "STRONG enough?"
    And git the answer, neat and trim,
    "It COULDN'T be too 'strong' fer HIM!"

    And so things went fer 'bout a year,
    Tel John, at last, found pluck to go
    And pour his tale in the old man's ear—
    And ef it had been HOT LEAD, I know
    It couldn't 'a' raised a louder fuss,
    Ner 'a' riled the old man's temper wuss!
    He jest LIT in, and cussed and swore,
    And lunged and rared, and ripped and tore,
    And told John jest to leave his door,
    And not to darken it no more!
    But Patience cried, with eyes all wet,
    "Remember, John, and don't ferget,
    WHATEVER comes, I love you yet!"
    But the old man thought, in his se'fish way,
    "I'll see her married rich some day;
    And THAT," thinks he, "is money fer ME—
    And my will's LAW, as it ought to be!"

    So when, in the course of a month er so,
    A WIDOWER, with a farm er two,
    Comes to Jeff's, w'y, the folks, you know,
    Had to TALK—as the folks'll do:
    It was the talk of the neighberhood—
    PATIENCE and JOHN, and THEIR affairs;—
    And this old chap with a few gray hairs
    Had "cut John out," it was understood.
    And some folks reckoned "Patience, too,
    Knowed what SHE was a-goin' to do—
    It was LIKE her—la! indeed!—
    All she loved was DOLLARS and CENTS—
    Like old JEFF—and they saw no need
    Fer JOHN to pine at HER negligence!"

    But others said, in a KINDER way,
    They missed the songs she used to sing—
    They missed the smiles that used to play
    Over her face, and the laughin' ring
    Of her glad voice—that EVERYthing
    Of her OLD se'f seemed dead and gone,
    And this was the ghost that they gazed on!

    Tel finally it was noised about
    There was a WEDDIN' soon to be
    Down at Jeff's; and the "cat was out"
    Shore enough!—'Ll the JEE-MUN-NEE!
    It RILED me when John told me so,—
    Fer _I_ WAS A FRIEND O' JOHN'S, you know;
    And his trimblin' voice jest broke in two—
    As a feller's voice'll sometimes do.—
    And I says, says I, "Ef I know my biz—
    And I think I know what JESTICE is,—
    I've read SOME law—and I'd advise
    A man like you to wipe his eyes
    And square his jaws and start AGIN,
    FER JESTICE IS A-GOIN' TO WIN!"
    And it wasn't long tel his eyes had cleared
    As blue as the skies, and the sun appeared
    In the shape of a good old-fashioned smile
    That I hadn't seen fer a long, long while.

    So we talked on fer a' hour er more,
    And sunned ourselves in the open door,—
    Tel a hoss-and-buggy down the road
    Come a-drivin' up, that I guess John KNOWED,—
    Fer he winked and says, "I'll dessappear—
    THEY'D smell a mice ef they saw ME here!"
    And he thumbed his nose at the old gray mare,
    And hid hisse'f in the house somewhere.

    Well.—The rig drove up: and I raised my head
    As old Jeff hollered to me and said
    That "him and his old friend there had come
    To see ef the squire was at home."
    . . . I told 'em "I was; and I AIMED to be
    At every chance of a weddin'-fee!"
    And then I laughed—and they laughed, too,—
    Fer that was the object they had in view.
    "Would I be on hands at eight that night?"
    They ast; and 's-I, "You're mighty right,
    I'LL be on hand!" And then I BU'ST
    Out a-laughin' my very wu'st,—
    And so did they, as they wheeled away
    And drove to'rds town in a cloud o' dust.
    Then I shet the door, and me and John
    Laughed and LAUGHED, and jest LAUGHED on,
    Tel Mother drapped her specs, and BY
    JEEWHILLIKERS! I thought she'd DIE!—
    And she couldn't 'a' told, I'll bet my hat,
    What on earth she was laughin' at!

    But all o' the fun o' the tale hain't done!—
    Fer a drizzlin' rain had jest begun,
    And a-havin' 'bout four mile' to ride,
    I jest concluded I'd better light
    Out fer Jeff's and save my hide,—
    Fer IT WAS A-GOIN' TO STORM, THAT NIGHT!
    So we went down to the barn, and John
    Saddled my beast, and I got on;
    And he told me somepin' to not ferget,
    And when I left, he was LAUGHIN' yet.

    And, 'proachin' on to my journey's end,
    The great big draps o' the rain come down,
    And the thunder growled in a way to lend
    An awful look to the lowerin' frown
    The dull sky wore; and the lightnin' glanced
    Tel my old mare jest MORE'N pranced,
    And tossed her head, and bugged her eyes
    To about four times their natchurl size,
    As the big black lips of the clouds 'ud drap
    Out some oath of a thunderclap,
    And threaten on in an undertone
    That chilled a feller clean to the bone!

    But I struck shelter soon enough
    To save myse'f. And the house was jammed
    With the women-folks, and the weddin'stuff:—
    A great, long table, fairly CRAMMED
    With big pound-cakes—and chops and steaks—
    And roasts and stews—and stumick-aches
    Of every fashion, form, and size,
    From twisters up to punkin-pies!
    And candies, oranges, and figs,
    And reezins,—all the "whilligigs"
    And "jim-cracks" that the law allows
    On sich occasions!—Bobs and bows
    Of gigglin' girls, with corkscrew curls,
    And fancy ribbons, reds and blues,
    And "beau-ketchers" and "curliques"
    To beat the world! And seven o'clock
    Brought old Jeff;-and brought—THE GROOM,—
    With a sideboard-collar on, and stock
    That choked him so, he hadn't room
    To SWALLER in, er even sneeze,
    Er clear his th'oat with any case
    Er comfort—and a good square cough
    Would saw his Adam's apple off!

    But as fer PATIENCE—MY! Oomh-OOMH!—
    I never saw her look so sweet!—
    Her face was cream and roses, too;
    And then them eyes o' heavenly blue
    Jest made an angel all complete!
    And when she split 'em up in smiles
    And splintered 'em around the room,
    And danced acrost and met the groom,
    And LAUGHED OUT LOUD—It kind o' spiles
    My language when I come to that—
    Fer, as she laid away his hat,
    Thinks I, "THE PAPERS HID INSIDE
    OF THAT SAID HAT MUST MAKE A BRIDE
    A HAPPY ONE FER ALL HER LIFE,
    Er else a WRECKED AND WRETCHED WIFE!"
    And, someway, then, I thought of JOHN,—
    Then looked towards PATIENCE. . . . She was GONE!—
    The door stood open, and the rain
    Was dashin' in; and sharp and plain
    Above the storm we heerd a cry—
    A ringin', laughin', loud "Good-by!"
    That died away, as fleet and fast
    A hoss's hoofs went splashin' past!
    And that was all. 'Twas done that quick! . . .
    You've heerd o' fellers "lookin' sick"?
    I wisht you'd seen THE GROOM jest then—
    I wisht you'd seen them two old men,
    With starin' eyes that fairly GLARED
    At one another, and the scared
    And empty faces of the crowd,—
    I wisht you could 'a' been allowed
    To jest look on and see it all,—
    And heerd the girls and women bawl
    And wring their hands; and heerd old Jeff
    A-cussin' as he swung hisse'f
    Upon his hoss, who champed his bit
    As though old Nick had holt of it:
    And cheek by jowl the two old wrecks
    Rode off as though they'd break their necks.

    And as we all stood starin' out
    Into the night, I felt the brush
    Of some one's hand, and turned about,
    And heerd a voice that whispered, "HUSH!—
    THEY'RE WAITIN' IN THE KITCHEN, AND
    YOU'RE WANTED. DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND?"
    Well, ef my MEMORY serves me now,
    I think I winked.—Well, anyhow,
    I left the crowd a-gawkin' there,
    And jest slipped off around to where
    The back door opened, and went in,
    And turned and shet the door ag'in,
    And maybe LOCKED it—couldn't swear,—
    A woman's arms around me makes
    Me liable to make mistakes.—
    I read a marriage license nex',
    But as I didn't have my specs
    I jest INFERRED it was all right,
    And tied the knot so mortal-tight
    That Patience and my old friend John
    Was safe enough from that time on!

    Well, now, I might go on and tell
    How all the joke at last leaked out,
    And how the youngsters raised the yell
    And rode the happy groom about
    Upon their shoulders; how the bride
    Was kissed a hunderd times beside
    The one _I_ give her,—tel she cried
    And laughed untel she like to died!
    I might go on and tell you all
    About the supper—and the BALL.—
    You'd ought to see me twist my heel
    Through jest one old Furginny reel
    Afore you die! er tromp the strings
    Of some old fiddle tel she sings
    Some old cowtillion, don't you know,
    That putts the devil in yer toe!

    We kep' the dancin' up tel FOUR
    O'clock, I reckon—maybe more.—
    We hardly heerd the thunders roar,
    ER THOUGHT about the STORM that blowed—
    AND THEM TWO FELLERS ON THE ROAD!
    Tel all at onc't we heerd the door
    Bu'st open, and a voice that SWORE,—
    And old Jeff Thompson tuck the floor.
    He shuck hisse'f and looked around
    Like some old dog about half-drowned—
    HIS HAT, I reckon, WEIGHED TEN POUND
    To say the least, and I'll say, SHORE,
    HIS OVERCOAT WEIGHED FIFTY more—
    THE WETTEST MAN YOU EVER SAW,
    TO HAVE SO DRY A SON-IN-LAW!

    He sized it all; and Patience laid
    Her hand in John's, and looked afraid,
    And waited. And a stiller set
    O' folks, I KNOW, you never met
    In any court room, where with dread
    They wait to hear a verdick read.

    The old man turned his eyes on me:
    "And have you married 'em?" says he.
    I nodded "Yes." "Well, that'll do,"
    He says, "and now we're th'ough with YOU,—
    YOU jest clear out, and I decide
    And promise to be satisfied!"
    He hadn't nothin' more to say.
    I saw, of course, how matters lay,
    And left. But as I rode away
    I heerd the roosters crow fer day.


    A COUNTRY PATHWAY



    I come upon it suddenly, alone—
        A little pathway winding in the weeds
    That fringe the roadside; and with dreams my own,
        I wander as it leads.

    Full wistfully along the slender way,
        Through summer tan of freckled shade and shine,
    I take the path that leads me as it may—
        Its every choice is mine.

    A chipmunk, or a sudden-whirring quail,
        Is startled by my step as on I fare—
    A garter-snake across the dusty trail
        Glances and—is not there.

    Above the arching jimson-weeds flare twos
        And twos of sallow-yellow butterflies,
    Like blooms of lorn primroses blowing loose
        When autumn winds arise.

    The trail dips—dwindles—broadens then, and lifts
        Itself astride a cross-road dubiously,
    And, from the fennel marge beyond it, drifts
        Still onward, beckoning me.

    And though it needs must lure me mile on mile
        Out of the public highway, still I go,
    My thoughts, far in advance in Indian file,
        Allure me even so.

    Why, I am as a long-lost boy that went
        At dusk to bring the cattle to the bars,
    And was not found again, though Heaven lent
        His mother all the stars

    With which to seek him through that awful night
        O years of nights as vain!—Stars never rise
    But well might miss their glitter in the light
        Of tears in mother-eyes!

    So—on, with quickened breaths, I follow still—
        My avant-courier must be obeyed!
    Thus am I led, and thus the path, at will,
        Invites me to invade

    A meadow's precincts, where my daring guide
        Clambers the steps of an old-fashioned stile,
    And stumbles down again, the other side,
        To gambol there a while.

    In pranks of hide-and-seek, as on ahead
        I see it running, while the clover-stalks
    Shake rosy fists at me, as though they said—
        "You dog our country walks

    "And mutilate us with your walking-stick!—
        We will not suffer tamely what you do,
    And warn you at your peril,—for we'll sick
        Our bumblebees on you!"

    But I smile back, in airy nonchalance,—
        The more determined on my wayward quest,
    As some bright memory a moment dawns
        A morning in my breast—

    Sending a thrill that hurries me along
        In faulty similes of childish skips,
    Enthused with lithe contortions of a song
        Performing on my lips.

    In wild meanderings o'er pasture wealth—
        Erratic wanderings through dead'ning lands,
    Where sly old brambles, plucking me by stealth,
        Put berries in my hands:

    Or the path climbs a boulder—wades a slough—
        Or, rollicking through buttercups and flags,
    Goes gaily dancing o'er a deep bayou
        On old tree-trunks and snags:

    Or, at the creek, leads o'er a limpid pool
        Upon a bridge the stream itself has made,
    With some Spring-freshet for the mighty tool
        That its foundation laid.

    I pause a moment here to bend and muse,
        With dreamy eyes, on my reflection, where
    A boat-backed bug drifts on a helpless cruise,
        Or wildly oars the air,

    As, dimly seen, the pirate of the brook—
        The pike, whose jaunty hulk denotes his speed—
    Swings pivoting about, with wary look
        Of low and cunning greed.

    Till, filled with other thought, I turn again
        To where the pathway enters in a realm
    Of lordly woodland, under sovereign reign
        Of towering oak and elm.

    A puritanic quiet here reviles
        The almost whispered warble from the hedge,
    And takes a locust's rasping voice and files
        The silence to an edge.

    In such a solitude my somber way
        Strays like a misanthrope within a gloom
    Of his own shadows—till the perfect day
        Bursts into sudden bloom,

    And crowns a long, declining stretch of space,
        Where King Corn's armies lie with flags unfurled,
    And where the valley's dint in Nature's face
        Dimples a smiling world.

    And lo! through mists that may not be dispelled,
        I see an old farm homestead, as in dreams,
    Where, like a gem in costly setting held,
        The old log cabin gleams.

        . . . . . . .

    O darling Pathway! lead me bravely on
        Adown your valley-way, and run before
    Among the roses crowding up the lawn
        And thronging at the door,—

    And carry up the echo there that shall
        Arouse the drowsy dog, that he may bay
    The household out to greet the prodigal
        That wanders home to-day.


    THE OLD GUITAR



    Neglected now is the old guitar
        And moldering into decay;
    Fretted with many a rift and scar
        That the dull dust hides away,
    While the spider spins a silver star
        In its silent lips to-day.

    The keys hold only nerveless strings—
        The sinews of brave old airs
    Are pulseless now; and the scarf that clings
        So closely here declares
    A sad regret in its ravelings
        And the faded hue it wears.

    But the old guitar, with a lenient grace,
        Has cherished a smile for me;
    And its features hint of a fairer face
        That comes with a memory
    Of a flower-and-perfume-haunted place
        And a moonlit balcony.

    Music sweeter than words confess,
        Or the minstrel's powers invent,
    Thrilled here once at the light caress
        Of the fairy hands that lent
    This excuse for the kiss I press
        On the dear old instrument.

    The rose of pearl with the jeweled stem
        Still blooms; and the tiny sets
    In the circle all are here; the gem
        In the keys, and the silver frets;
    But the dainty fingers that danced o'er them—
        Alas for the heart's regrets!—

    Alas for the loosened strings to-day,
        And the wounds of rift and scar
    On a worn old heart, with its roundelay
        Enthralled with a stronger bar
    That Fate weaves on, through a dull decay
        Like that of the old guitar!


    "FRIDAY AFTERNOON"



    TO WILLIAM MORRIS PIERSON

    [1868-1870]

    Of the wealth of facts and fancies
        That our memories may recall,
    The old school-day romances
        Are the dearest, after all!—.
    When some sweet thought revises
        The half-forgotten tune
    That opened "Exercises"
        On "Friday Afternoon."

    We seem to hear the clicking
        Of the pencil and the pen,
    And the solemn, ceaseless ticking
        Of the timepiece ticking then;
    And we note the watchful master,
        As he waves the warning rod,
    With our own heart beating faster
        Than the boy's who threw the wad.

    Some little hand uplifted,
        And the creaking of a shoe:—
    A problem left unsifted
        For the teacher's hand to do:
    The murmured hum of learning—
        And the flutter of a book;
    The smell of something burning,
        And the school's inquiring look.

    The bashful boy in blushes;
        And the girl, with glancing eyes,
    Who hides her smiles, and hushes
        The laugh about to rise,—
    Then, with a quick invention,
        Assumes a serious face,
    To meet the words, "Attention!
        Every scholar in his place!"

    The opening song, page 20.—
        Ah! dear old "Golden Wreath,"
    You willed your sweets in plenty;
        And some who look beneath
    The leaves of Time will linger,
        And loving tears will start,
    As Fancy trails her finger
        O'er the index of the heart.

    "Good News from Home"—We hear it
        Welling tremulous, yet clear
    And holy as the spirit
        Of the song we used to hear—
    "Good news for me" (A throbbing
        And an aching melody)—
    "Has come across the"—(sobbing,
        Yea, and salty) "dark blue sea!"

    Or the paean "Scotland's burning!"
        With its mighty surge and swell
    Of chorus, still returning
        To its universal yell—
    Till we're almost glad to drop to
        Something sad and full of pain—
    And "Skip verse three," and stop, too,
        Ere our hearts are broke again.

    Then "the big girls'" compositions,
        With their doubt, and hope, and glow
    Of heart and face,—conditions
        Of "the big boys"—even so,—
    When themes of "Spring," and "Summer"
        And of "Fall," and "Winter-time"
    Droop our heads and hold us dumber
        Than the sleigh-bell's fancied chime.

    Elocutionary science—
        (Still in changeless infancy!)—
    With its "Cataline's Defiance,"
        And "The Banner of the Free":
    Or, lured from Grandma's attic,
        A ramshackle "rocker" there,
    Adds a skreek of the dramatic
        To the poet's "Old Arm-Chair."

    Or the "Speech of Logan" shifts us
        From the pathos, to the fire;
    And Tell (with Gessler) lifts us
        Many noble notches higher.—
    Till a youngster, far from sunny,
        With sad eyes of watery blue,
    Winds up with something "funny,"
        Like "Cock-a-doodle-do!"

    Then a dialogue—selected
        For its realistic worth:—
    The Cruel Boy detected
        With a turtle turned to earth
    Back downward; and, in pleading,
        The Good Boy—strangely gay
    At such a sad proceeding—
        Says, "Turn him over, pray!"

    So the exercises taper
        Through gradations of delight
    To the reading of "The Paper,"
        Which is entertaining—quite!
    For it goes ahead and mentions
        "If a certain Mr. O.
    Has serious intentions
        That he ought to tell her so."

    It also "Asks permission
        To intimate to 'John'
    The dubious condition
        Of the ground he's standing on";
    And, dropping the suggestion
        To "mind what he's about,"
    It stuns him with the question:
        "Does his mother know he's out?"

    And among the contributions
        To this "Academic Press"
    Are "Versified Effusions"
        By—"Our lady editress"—
    Which fact is proudly stated
        By the CHIEF of the concern,—
    "Though the verse communicated
        Bears the pen-name 'Fanny Fern.' "

        . . . . . .
    When all has been recited,
        And the teacher's bell is heard,
    And visitors, invited,
        Have dropped a kindly word,
    A hush of holy feeling
        Falls down upon us there,
    As though the day were kneeling,
        With the twilight for the prayer.

        . . . . . .
    Midst the wealth of facts and fancies
        That our memories may recall,
    Thus the old school-day romances
        Are the dearest, after all!—
    When some sweet thought revises
        The half-forgotten tune
    That opened "Exercises,"
        On "Friday Afternoon."


    "JOHNSON'S BOY"



    The world is turned ag'in' me,
        And people says, "They guess
    That nothin' else is in me
        But pure maliciousness!"
    I git the blame for doin'
        What other chaps destroy,
    And I'm a-goin' to ruin
        Because I'm "Johnson's boy."

    THAT ain't my name—I'd ruther
        They'd call me IKE or PAT—
    But they've forgot the other—
        And so have _I_, for that!
    I reckon it's as handy,
        When Nibsy breaks his toy,
    Or some one steals his candy,
        To say 'twas "JOHNSON'S BOY!"

    You can't git any water
        At the pump, and find the spout
    So durn chuck-full o' mortar
        That you have to bore it out;
    You tackle any scholar
        In Wisdom's wise employ,
    And I'll bet you half a dollar
        He'll say it's "Johnson's boy!"

    Folks don't know how I suffer
        In my uncomplainin' way—
    They think I'm gittin' tougher
        And tougher every day.
    Last Sunday night, when Flinder
        Was a-shoutin' out for joy,
    And some one shook the winder,
        He prayed for "Johnson's boy."

    I'm tired of bein' follered
        By farmers every day,
    And then o' bein' collared
        For coaxin' hounds away;
    Hounds always plays me double—
        It's a trick they all enjoy—
    To git me into trouble,
        Because I'm "Johnson's boy."

    But if I git to Heaven,
        I hope the Lord'll see
    SOME boy has been perfect,
        And lay it on to me;
    I'll swell the song sonorous,
        And clap my wings for joy,
    And sail off on the chorus—
        "Hurrah for 'Johnson's boy!'"


    HER BEAUTIFUL HANDS



    Your hands—they are strangely fair!
    O Fair—for the jewels that sparkle there,—
    Fair—for the witchery of the spell
    That ivory keys alone can tell;
    But when their delicate touches rest
    Here in my own do I love them best,
    As I clasp with eager, acquisitive spans
    My glorious treasure of beautiful hands!

    Marvelous—wonderful—beautiful hands!
    They can coax roses to bloom in the strands
    Of your brown tresses; and ribbons will twine,
    Under mysterious touches of thine,
    Into such knots as entangle the soul
    And fetter the heart under such a control
    As only the strength of my love understands—
    My passionate love for your beautiful hands.

    As I remember the first fair touch
    Of those beautiful hands that I love so much,
    I seem to thrill as I then was thrilled,
    Kissing the glove that I found unfilled—
    When I met your gaze, and the queenly bow,
    As you said to me, laughingly, "Keep it now!" . . .
    And dazed and alone in a dream I stand,
    Kissing this ghost of your beautiful hand.

    When first I loved, in the long ago,
    And held your hand as I told you so—
    Pressed and caressed it and gave it a kiss
    And said "I could die for a hand like this!"
    Little I dreamed love's fullness yet
    Had to ripen when eyes were wet
    And prayers were vain in their wild demands
    For one warm touch of your beautiful hands.

    . . . . . . . . .
    Beautiful Hands!—O Beautiful Hands!
    Could you reach out of the alien lands
    Where you are lingering, and give me, to-night,
    Only a touch—were it ever so light—
    My heart were soothed, and my weary brain
    Would lull itself into rest again;
    For there is no solace the world commands
    Like the caress of your beautiful hands.


    NATURAL PERVERSITIES



    I am not prone to moralize
        In scientific doubt
    On certain facts that Nature tries
        To puzzle us about,—
    For I am no philosopher
        Of wise elucidation,
    But speak of things as they occur,
        From simple observation.

    I notice LITTLE things—to wit:—
        I never missed a train
    Because I didn't RUN for it;
        I never knew it rain
    That my umbrella wasn't lent,—
        Or, when in my possession,
    The sun but wore, to all intent,
        A jocular expression.

    I never knew a creditor
        To dun me for a debt
    But I was "cramped" or "bu'sted"; or
        I never knew one yet,
    When I had plenty in my purse,
        To make the least invasion,—
    As I, accordingly perverse,
        Have courted no occasion.

    Nor do I claim to comprehend
        What Nature has in view
    In giving us the very friend
        To trust we oughtn't to.—
    But so it is: The trusty gun
        Disastrously exploded
    Is always sure to be the one
        We didn't think was loaded.

    Our moaning is another's mirth,—
        And what is worse by half,
    We say the funniest thing on earth
        And never raise a laugh:
    'Mid friends that love us over well,
        And sparkling jests and liquor,
    Our hearts somehow are liable
        To melt in tears the quicker.

    We reach the wrong when most we seek
        The right; in like effect,
    We stay the strong and not the weak—
        Do most when we neglect.—
    Neglected genius—truth be said—
        As wild and quick as tinder,
    The more you seek to help ahead
        The more you seem to hinder.

    I've known the least the greatest, too—
        And, on the selfsame plan,
    The biggest fool I ever knew
        Was quite a little man:
    We find we ought, and then we won't—
        We prove a thing, then doubt it,—
    Know EVERYTHING but when we don't
        Know ANYTHING about it.


    THE SILENT VICTORS



    MAY 30, 1878,

    Dying for victory, cheer on cheer
    Thundered on his eager ear.
                —CHARLES L. HOLSTEIN.

    I

    Deep, tender, firm and true, the Nation's heart
        Throbs for her gallant heroes passed away,
    Who in grim Battle's drama played their part,
        And slumber here to-day.—

    Warm hearts that beat their lives out at the shrine
        Of Freedom, while our country held its breath
    As brave battalions wheeled themselves in line
        And marched upon their death:

    When Freedom's Flag, its natal wounds scarce healed,
        Was torn from peaceful winds and flung again
    To shudder in the storm of battle-field—
        The elements of men,—

    When every star that glittered was a mark
        For Treason's ball, and every rippling bar
    Of red and white was sullied with the dark
        And purple stain of war:

    When angry guns, like famished beasts of prey,
        Were howling o'er their gory feast of lives,
    And sending dismal echoes far away
        To mothers, maids, and wives:—

    The mother, kneeling in the empty night,
        With pleading hands uplifted for the son
    Who, even as she prayed, had fought the fight—
        The victory had won:

    The wife, with trembling hand that wrote to say
        The babe was waiting for the sire's caress—
    The letter meeting that upon the way,—
        The babe was fatherless:

    The maiden, with her lips, in fancy, pressed
        Against the brow once dewy with her breath,
    Now lying numb, unknown, and uncaressed
        Save by the dews of death.

    II

    What meed of tribute can the poet pay
        The Soldier, but to trail the ivy-vine
    Of idle rhyme above his grave to-day
        In epitaph design?—

    Or wreathe with laurel-words the icy brows
        That ache no longer with a dream of fame,
    But, pillowed lowly in the narrow house,
        Renowned beyond the name.

    The dewy tear-drops of the night may fall,
        And tender morning with her shining hand
    May brush them from the grasses green and tall
        That undulate the land.—

    Yet song of Peace nor din of toil and thrift,
        Nor chanted honors, with the flowers we heap,
    Can yield us hope the Hero's head to lift
        Out of its dreamless sleep:

    The dear old Flag, whose faintest flutter flies
        A stirring echo through each patriot breast,
    Can never coax to life the folded eyes
        That saw its wrongs redressed—

    That watched it waver when the fight was hot,
        And blazed with newer courage to its aid,
    Regardless of the shower of shell and shot
        Through which the charge was made;—

    And when, at last, they saw it plume its wings,
        Like some proud bird in stormy element,
    And soar untrammeled on its wanderings,
        They closed in death, content.

    III

    O Mother, you who miss the smiling face
        Of that dear boy who vanished from your sight,
    And left you weeping o'er the vacant place
        He used to fill at night,—

    Who left you dazed, bewildered, on a day
        That echoed wild huzzas, and roar of guns
    That drowned the farewell words you tried to say
        To incoherent ones;—

    Be glad and proud you had the life to give—
        Be comforted through all the years to come,—
    Your country has a longer life to live,
        Your son a better home.

    O Widow, weeping o'er the orphaned child,
        Who only lifts his questioning eyes to send
    A keener pang to grief unreconciled,—
        Teach him to comprehend

    He had a father brave enough to stand
        Before the fire of Treason's blazing gun,
    That, dying, he might will the rich old land
        Of Freedom to his son.

    And, Maiden, living on through lonely years
        In fealty to love's enduring ties,—
    With strong faith gleaming through the tender tears
        That gather in your eyes,

    Look up! and own, in gratefulness of prayer,
        Submission to the will of Heaven's High Host:—
    I see your Angel-soldier pacing there,
        Expectant at his post.—

    I see the rank and file of armies vast,
        That muster under one supreme control;
    I hear the trumpet sound the signal-blast—
        The calling of the roll—

    The grand divisions falling into line
        And forming, under voice of One alone
    Who gives command, and joins with tongue divine
        The hymn that shakes the Throne.

    IV

    And thus, in tribute to the forms that rest
        In their last camping-ground, we strew the bloom
    And fragrance of the flowers they loved the best,
        In silence o'er the tomb.

    With reverent hands we twine the Hero's wreath
        And clasp it tenderly on stake or stone
    That stands the sentinel for each beneath
        Whose glory is our own.

    While in the violet that greets the sun,
        We see the azure eye of some lost boy;
    And in the rose the ruddy cheek of one
        We kissed in childish joy,—

    Recalling, haply, when he marched away,
        He laughed his loudest though his eyes were wet.—
    The kiss he gave his mother's brow that day
        Is there and burning yet:

    And through the storm of grief around her tossed,
        One ray of saddest comfort she may see,—
    Four hundred thousand sons like hers were lost
        To weeping Liberty.

        . . . . . . . .
    But draw aside the drapery of gloom,
        And let the sunshine chase the clouds away
    And gild with brighter glory every tomb
        We decorate to-day:

    And in the holy silence reigning round,
        While prayers of perfume bless the atmosphere,
    Where loyal souls of love and faith are found,
        Thank God that Peace is here!

    And let each angry impulse that may start,
        Be smothered out of every loyal breast;
    And, rocked within the cradle of the heart,
        Let every sorrow rest.


    SCRAPS

    There's a habit I have nurtured,
        From the sentimental time
    When my life was like a story,
        And my heart a happy rhyme,—
    Of clipping from the paper,
        Or magazine, perhaps,
    The idle songs of dreamers,
        Which I treasure as my scraps.

    They hide among my letters,
        And they find a cozy nest
    In the bosom of my wrapper,
        And the pockets of my vest;
    They clamber in my fingers
        Till my dreams of wealth relapse
    In fairer dreams than Fortune's
        Though I find them only scraps.

    Sometimes I find, in tatters
        Like a beggar, form as fair
    As ever gave to Heaven
        The treasure of a prayer;
    And words all dim and faded,
        And obliterate in part,
    Grow into fadeless meanings
        That are printed on the heart.

    Sometimes a childish jingle
        Flings an echo, sweet and clear,
    And thrills me as I listen
        To the laughs I used to hear;
    And I catch the gleam of faces,
        And the glimmer of glad eyes
    That peep at me expectant
        O'er the walls of Paradise.

    O syllables of measure!
        Though you wheel yourselves in line,
    And await the further order
        Of this eager voice of mine;
    You are powerless to follow
        O'er the field my fancy maps,
    So I lead you back to silence
        Feeling you are only scraps.


    AUGUST

    A day of torpor in the sullen heat
        Of Summer's passion: In the sluggish stream
    The panting cattle lave their lazy feet,
        With drowsy eyes, and dream.

    Long since the winds have died, and in the sky
        There lives no cloud to hint of Nature's grief;
    The sun glares ever like an evil eye,
        And withers flower and leaf.

    Upon the gleaming harvest-field remote
        The thresher lies deserted, like some old
    Dismantled galleon that hangs afloat
        Upon a sea of gold.

    The yearning cry of some bewildered bird
        Above an empty nest, and truant boys
    Along the river's shady margin heard—
        A harmony of noise—

    A melody of wrangling voices blent
        With liquid laughter, and with rippling calls
    Of piping lips and thrilling echoes sent
        To mimic waterfalls.

    And through the hazy veil the atmosphere
        Has draped about the gleaming face of Day,
    The sifted glances of the sun appear
        In splinterings of spray.

    The dusty highway, like a cloud of dawn,
        Trails o'er the hillside, and the passer-by,
    A tired ghost in misty shroud, toils on
        His journey to the sky.

    And down across the valley's drooping sweep,
        Withdrawn to farthest limit of the glade,
    The forest stands in silence, drinking deep
        Its purple wine of shade.

    The gossamer floats up on phantom wing;
        The sailor-vision voyages the skies
    And carries into chaos everything
        That freights the weary eyes:

    Till, throbbing on and on, the pulse of heat
        Increases—reaches—passes fever's height,
    And Day sinks into slumber, cool and sweet,
        Within the arms of Night.


    DEAD IN SIGHT OF FAME



        DIED—Early morning of September 5, 1876, and
    in the gleaming dawn of "name and fame,"
    Hamilton J. Dunbar.

    Dead! Dead! Dead!
        We thought him ours alone;
    And were so proud to see him tread
    The rounds of fame, and lift his head
        Where sunlight ever shone;
    But now our aching eyes are dim,
    And look through tears in vain for him.

    Name! Name! Name!
        It was his diadem;
    Nor ever tarnish-taint of shame
    Could dim its luster—like a flame
        Reflected in a gem,
    He wears it blazing on his brow
    Within the courts of Heaven now.

    Tears! Tears! Tears!
        Like dews upon the leaf
    That bursts at last—from out the years
    The blossom of a trust appears
        That blooms above the grief;
    And mother, brother, wife and child
    Will see it and be reconciled.


    IN THE DARK

    O In the depths of midnight
        What fancies haunt the brain!
    When even the sigh of the sleeper
        Sounds like a sob of pain.

    A sense of awe and of wonder
        I may never well define,—
    For the thoughts that come in the shadows
        Never come in the shine.

    The old clock down in the parlor
        Like a sleepless mourner grieves,
    And the seconds drip in the silence
        As the rain drips from the eaves.

    And I think of the hands that signal
        The hours there in the gloom,
    And wonder what angel watchers
        Wait in the darkened room.

    And I think of the smiling faces
        That used to watch and wait,
    Till the click of the clock was answered
        By the click of the opening gate.—

    They are not there now in the evening—
        Morning or noon—not there;
    Yet I know that they keep their vigil,
        And wait for me Somewhere.


    THE IRON HORSE



    No song is mine of Arab steed—
        My courser is of nobler blood,
    And cleaner limb and fleeter speed,
        And greater strength and hardihood
    Than ever cantered wild and free
    Across the plains of Araby.

    Go search the level desert land
    From Sana on to Samarcand—
    Wherever Persian prince has been,
    Or Dervish, Sheik, or Bedouin,
    And I defy you there to point
        Me out a steed the half so fine—
    From tip of ear to pastern-joint—
        As this old iron horse of mine.

    You do not know what beauty is—
        You do not know what gentleness
        His answer is to my caress!—
    Why, look upon this gait of his,—
    A touch upon his iron rein—
        He moves with such a stately grace
    The sunlight on his burnished mane
        Is barely shaken in its place;
        And at a touch he changes pace,
    And, gliding backward, stops again.

    And talk of mettle—Ah! my friend,
        Such passion smolders in his breast
    That when awakened it will send
        A thrill of rapture wilder than
        E'er palpitated heart of man
        When flaming at its mightiest.
    And there's a fierceness in his ire—
        A maddened majesty that leaps
    Along his veins in blood of fire,
        Until the path his vision sweeps
    Spins out behind him like a thread
        Unraveled from the reel of time,
        As, wheeling on his course sublime,
    The earth revolves beneath his tread.

    Then stretch away, my gallant steed!
        Thy mission is a noble one:
        Thou bear'st the father to the son,
    And sweet relief to bitter need;
    Thou bear'st the stranger to his friends;
        Thou bear'st the pilgrim to the shrine,
    And back again the prayer he sends
        That God will prosper me and mine,—
    The star that on thy forehead gleams
    Has blossomed in our brightest dreams.

    Then speed thee on thy glorious race!
    The mother waits thy ringing pace;
    The father leans an anxious ear
    The thunder of thy hooves to hear;
    The lover listens, far away,
    To catch thy keen exultant neigh;
    And, where thy breathings roll and rise,
    The husband strains his eager eyes,
    And laugh of wife and baby-glee
    Ring out to greet and welcome thee.
    Then stretch away! and when at last
        The master's hand shall gently check
    Thy mighty speed, and hold thee fast,
        The world will pat thee on the neck.


    DEAD LEAVES



        DAWN

    As though a gipsy maiden with dim look,
        Sat crooning by the roadside of the year,
        So, Autumn, in thy strangeness, thou art here
    To read dark fortunes for us from the book
    Of fate; thou flingest in the crinkled brook
        The trembling maple's gold, and frosty-clear
        Thy mocking laughter thrills the atmosphere,
    And drifting on its current calls the rook
    To other lands. As one who wades, alone,
        Deep in the dusk, and hears the minor talk
    Of distant melody, and finds the tone,
        In some wierd way compelling him to stalk
    The paths of childhood over,—so I moan,
        And like a troubled sleeper, groping, walk.

        DUSK

    The frightened herds of clouds across the sky
        Trample the sunshine down, and chase the day
        Into the dusky forest-lands of gray
    And somber twilight. Far, and faint, and high
    The wild goose trails his harrow, with a cry
        Sad as the wail of some poor castaway
        Who sees a vessel drifting far astray
    Of his last hope, and lays him down to die.
    The children, riotous from school, grow bold
        And quarrel with the wind, whose angry gust
    Plucks off the summer hat, and flaps the fold
        Of many a crimson cloak, and twirls the dust
    In spiral shapes grotesque, and dims the gold
        Of gleaming tresses with the blur of rust.

         NIGHT

    Funereal Darkness, drear and desolate,
        Muffles the world. The moaning of the wind
        Is piteous with sobs of saddest kind;
    And laughter is a phantom at the gate
    Of memory. The long-neglected grate
        Within sprouts into flame and lights the mind
        With hopes and wishes long ago refined
    To ashes,—long departed friends await
        Our words of welcome: and our lips are dumb
    And powerless to greet the ones that press
        Old kisses there. The baby beats its drum,
    And fancy marches to the dear caress
        Of mother-arms, and all the gleeful hum
    Of home intrudes upon our loneliness.


    OVER THE EYES OF GLADNESS



    "The voice of One hath spoken,
        And the bended reed is bruised—
    The golden bowl is broken,
        And the silver cord is loosed."

    Over the eyes of gladness
        The lids of sorrow fall,
    And the light of mirth is darkened
        Under the funeral pall.

    The hearts that throbbed with rapture
        In dreams of the future years,
    Are wakened from their slumbers,
        And their visions drowned in tears.

        . . . . . . .
    Two buds on the bough in the morning—
        Twin buds in the smiling sun,
    But the frost of death has fallen
        And blighted the bloom of one.

    One leaf of life still folded
        Has fallen from the stem,
    Leaving the symbol teaching
        There still are two of them,—

    For though—through Time's gradations,
        The LIVING bud may burst,—
    The WITHERED one is gathered,
        And blooms in Heaven first.


    ONLY A DREAM



    Only a dream!
                Her head is bent
    Over the keys of the instrument,
    While her trembling fingers go astray
    In the foolish tune she tries to play.
    He smiles in his heart, though his deep, sad eyes
    Never change to a glad surprise
    As he finds the answer he seeks confessed
    In glowing features, and heaving breast.

    Only a dream!
                Though the fete is grand,
    And a hundred hearts at her command,
    She takes no part, for her soul is sick
    Of the Coquette's art and the Serpent's trick,—
    She someway feels she would like to fling
    Her sins away as a robe, and spring
    Up like a lily pure and white,
    And bloom alone for HIM to-night.

    Only a dream
                That the fancy weaves.
    The lids unfold like the rose's leaves,
    And the upraised eyes are moist and mild
    As the prayerful eyes of a drowsy child.
    Does she remember the spell they once
    Wrought in the past a few short months?
    Haply not—yet her lover's eyes
    Never change to the glad surprise.

    Only a dream!
                He winds her form
    Close in the coil of his curving arm,
    And whirls her away in a gust of sound
    As wild and sweet as the poets found
    In the paradise where the silken tent
    Of the Persian blooms in the Orient,—
    While ever the chords of the music seem
    Whispering sadly,—"Only a dream!"


    OUR LITTLE GIRL



    Her heart knew naught of sorrow,
        Nor the vaguest taint of sin—
    'Twas an ever-blooming blossom
        Of the purity within:
    And her hands knew only touches
        Of the mother's gentle care,
    And the kisses and caresses
        Through the interludes of prayer.

    Her baby-feet had journeyed
        Such a little distance here,
    They could have found no briers
        In the path to interfere;
    The little cross she carried
        Could not weary her, we know,
    For it lay as lightly on her
        As a shadow on the snow.

    And yet the way before us—
        O how empty now and drear!—
    How ev'n the dews of roses
        Seem as dripping tears for her!
    And the song-birds all seem crying,
        As the winds cry and the rain,
    All sobbingly,—"We want—we want
        Our little girl again!"


    THE FUNNY LITTLE FELLOW



    'Twas a Funny Little Fellow
        Of the very purest type,
    For he had a heart as mellow
        As an apple over ripe;
    And the brightest little twinkle
        When a funny thing occurred,
    And the lightest little tinkle
        Of a laugh you ever heard!

    His smile was like the glitter
        Of the sun in tropic lands,
    And his talk a sweeter twitter
        Than the swallow understands;
    Hear him sing—and tell a story—
        Snap a joke—ignite a pun,—
    'Twas a capture—rapture—glory,
        An explosion—all in one!

    Though he hadn't any money—
        That condiment which tends
    To make a fellow "honey"
        For the palate of his friends;—
    Sweet simples he compounded—
        Sovereign antidotes for sin
    Or taint,—a faith unbounded
        That his friends were genuine.

    He wasn't honored, maybe—
        For his songs of praise were slim,—
    Yet I never knew a baby
        That wouldn't crow for him;
    I never knew a mother
        But urged a kindly claim
    Upon him as a brother,
        At the mention of his name.

    The sick have ceased their sighing,
        And have even found the grace
    Of a smile when they were dying
        As they looked upon his face;
    And I've seen his eyes of laughter
        Melt in tears that only ran
    As though, swift-dancing after,
        Came the Funny Little Man.

    He laughed away the sorrow
        And he laughed away the gloom
    We are all so prone to borrow
        From the darkness of the tomb;
    And he laughed across the ocean
        Of a happy life, and passed,
    With a laugh of glad emotion,
        Into Paradise at last.

    And I think the Angels knew him,
        And had gathered to await
    His coming, and run to him
        Through the widely opened Gate,
    With their faces gleaming sunny
        For his laughter-loving sake,
    And thinking, "What a funny
        Little Angel he will make!"


    SONG OF THE NEW YEAR



    I heard the bells at midnight
        Ring in the dawning year;
    And above the clanging chorus
        Of the song, I seemed to hear
    A choir of mystic voices
        Flinging echoes, ringing clear,
    From a band of angels winging
        Through the haunted atmosphere:
            "Ring out the shame and sorrow,
                And the misery and sin,
            That the dawning of the morrow
                May in peace be ushered in."

    And I thought of all the trials
        The departed years had cost,
    And the blooming hopes and pleasures
        That are withered now and lost;
    And with joy I drank the music
        Stealing o'er the feeling there
    As the spirit song came pealing
        On the silence everywhere:
            "Ring out the shame and sorrow,
                And the misery and sin,
            That the dawning of the morrow
                May in peace be ushered in."

    And I listened as a lover
        To an utterance that flows
    In syllables like dewdrops
        From the red lips of a rose,
    Till the anthem, fainter growing,
        Climbing higher, chiming on
    Up the rounds of happy rhyming,
        Slowly vanished in the dawn:
            "Ring out the shame and sorrow,
                And the misery and sin,
            That the dawning of the morrow
                May in peace be ushered in."

    Then I raised my eyes to Heaven,
        And with trembling lips I pled
    For a blessing for the living
        And a pardon for the dead;
    And like a ghost of music
        Slowly whispered—lowly sung—
    Came the echo pure and holy
        In the happy angel tongue:
            "Ring out the shame and sorrow,
                And the misery and sin,
            And the dawn of every morrow
                Will in peace be ushered in."


    A LETTER TO A FRIEND



    The past is like a story
        I have listened to in dreams
    That vanished in the glory
        Of the Morning's early gleams;
    And—at my shadow glancing—
        I feel a loss of strength,
    As the Day of Life advancing
        Leaves it shorn of half its length.

    But it's all in vain to worry
        At the rapid race of Time—
    And he flies in such a flurry
        When I trip him with a rhyme,
    I'll bother him no longer
        Than to thank you for the thought
    That "my fame is growing stronger
        As you really think it ought."

    And though I fall below it,
        I might know as much of mirth
    To live and die a poet
        Of unacknowledged worth;
    For Fame is but a vagrant—
        Though a loyal one and brave,
    And his laurels ne'er so fragrant
        As when scattered o'er the grave.


    LINES FOR AN ALBUM



    I would not trace the hackneyed phrase
    Of shallow words and empty praise,
    And prate of "peace" till one might think
    My foolish pen was drunk with ink.
    Nor will I here the wish express
    Of "lasting love and happiness,"
    And "cloudless skies"—for after all
    "Into each life some rain must fall."
    —No. Keep the empty page below,
    In my remembrance, white as snow—
    Nor sigh to know the secret prayer
    My spirit hand has written there.


    TO ANNIE



    When the lids of dusk are falling
        O'er the dreamy eyes of day,
    And the whippoorwills are calling,
        And the lesson laid away,—
    May Mem'ry soft and tender
        As the prelude of the night,
    Bend over you and render
        As tranquil a delight.


    FAME



    I

    Once, in a dream, I saw a man
        With haggard face and tangled hair,
    And eyes that nursed as wild a care
        As gaunt Starvation ever can;
    And in his hand he held a wand
        Whose magic touch gave life and thought
        Unto a form his fancy wrought
    And robed with coloring so grand,
        It seemed the reflex of some child
        Of Heaven, fair and undefiled—
        A face of purity and love—
        To woo him into worlds above:
    And as I gazed with dazzled eyes,
        A gleaming smile lit up his lips
        As his bright soul from its eclipse
    Went flashing into Paradise.
    Then tardy Fame came through the door
    And found a picture—nothing more.

    II

    And once I saw a man, alone,
        In abject poverty, with hand
    Uplifted o'er a block of stone
        That took a shape at his command
    And smiled upon him, fair and good—
    A perfect work of womanhood,
    Save that the eyes might never weep,
    Nor weary hands be crossed in sleep,
    Nor hair that fell from crown to wrist,
    Be brushed away, caressed and kissed.
    And as in awe I gazed on her,
        I saw the sculptor's chisel fall—
            I saw him sink, without a moan,
            Sink lifeless at the feet of stone,
    And lie there like a worshiper.
        Fame crossed the threshold of the hall,
        And found a statue—that was all.

    III

    And once I saw a man who drew
        A gloom about him like a cloak,
    And wandered aimlessly. The few
        Who spoke of him at all, but spoke
    Disparagingly of a mind
    The Fates had faultily designed:
    Too indolent for modern times—
        Too fanciful, and full of whims—
    For, talking to himself in rhymes,
        And scrawling never-heard-of hymns,
    The idle life to which he clung
    Was worthless as the songs he sung!
    I saw him, in my vision, filled
        With rapture o'er a spray of bloom
        The wind threw in his lonely room;
    And of the sweet perfume it spilled
    He drank to drunkenness, and flung
    His long hair back, and laughed and sung
    And clapped his hands as children do
    At fairy tales they listen to,
    While from his flying quill there dripped
    Such music on his manuscript
    That he who listens to the words
    May close his eyes and dream the birds
    Are twittering on every hand
    A language he can understand.
    He journeyed on through life, unknown,
    Without one friend to call his own;
    He tired. No kindly hand to press
    The cooling touch of tenderness
    Upon his burning brow, nor lift
    To his parched lips God's freest gift—
    No sympathetic sob or sigh
    Of trembling lips—no sorrowing eye
    Looked out through tears to see him die.
    And Fame her greenest laurels brought
    To crown a head that heeded not.

    And this is Fame! A thing, indeed,
    That only comes when least the need:
    The wisest minds of every age
    The book of life from page to page
    Have searched in vain; each lesson conned
    Will promise it the page beyond—
    Until the last, when dusk of night
    Falls over it, and reason's light
    Is smothered by that unknown friend
    Who signs his nom de plume, The End


    AN EMPTY NEST



    I find an old deserted nest,
        Half-hidden in the underbrush:
    A withered leaf, in phantom jest,
        Has nestled in it like a thrush
    With weary, palpitating breast.

    I muse as one in sad surprise
        Who seeks his childhood's home once more,
    And finds it in a strange disguise
        Of vacant rooms and naked floor,
    With sudden tear-drops in his eyes.

    An empty nest! It used to bear
        A happy burden, when the breeze
    Of summer rocked it, and a pair
        Of merry tattlers told the trees
    What treasures they had hidden there.

    But Fancy, flitting through the gleams
        Of youth's sunshiny atmosphere,
    Has fallen in the past, and seems,
        Like this poor leaflet nestled here,—
    A phantom guest of empty dreams.


    MY FATHER'S HALLS



    My father's halls, so rich and rare,
    Are desolate and bleak and bare;
    My father's heart and halls are one,
    Since I, their life and light, am gone.

    O, valiant knight, with hand of steel
    And heart of gold, hear my appeal:
    Release me from the spoiler's charms,
    And bear me to my father's arms.


    THE HARP OF THE MINSTREL



    The harp of the minstrel has never a tone
        As sad as the song in his bosom to-night,
    For the magical touch of his fingers alone
        Can not waken the echoes that breathe it aright;
    But oh! as the smile of the moon may impart
        A sorrow to one in an alien clime,
    Let the light of the melody fall on the heart,
        And cadence his grief into musical rhyme.

    The faces have faded, the eyes have grown dim
        That once were his passionate love and his pride;
    And alas! all the smiles that once blossomed for him
        Have fallen away as the flowers have died.
    The hands that entwined him the laureate's wreath
        And crowned him with fame in the long, long ago,
    Like the laurels are withered and folded beneath
        The grass and the stubble—the frost and the snow.

    Then sigh, if thou wilt, as the whispering strings
        Strive ever in vain for the utterance clear,
    And think of the sorrowful spirit that sings,
        And jewel the song with the gem of a tear.
    For the harp of the minstrel has never a tone
        As sad as the song in his bosom tonight,
    And the magical touch of his fingers alone
        Can not waken the echoes that breathe it aright.


    HONEY DRIPPING FROM THE COMB



    How slight a thing may set one's fancy drifting
        Upon the dead sea of the Past!—A view—
    Sometimes an odor—or a rooster lifting
            A far-off "OOH! OOH-OOH!"

    And suddenly we find ourselves astray
        In some wood's-pasture of the Long Ago—
    Or idly dream again upon a day
            Of rest we used to know.

    I bit an apple but a moment since—
        A wilted apple that the worm had spurned,—
    Yet hidden in the taste were happy hints
            Of good old days returned.—

    And so my heart, like some enraptured lute,
        Tinkles a tune so tender and complete,
    God's blessing must be resting on the fruit—
            So bitter, yet so sweet!


    JOHN WALSH



    A strange life—strangely passed!
        We may not read the soul
        When God has folded up the scroll
            In death at last.
    We may not—dare not say of one
    Whose task of life as well was done
    As he could do it,—"This is lost,
    And prayers may never pay the cost."

    Who listens to the song
        That sings within the breast,
        Should ever hear the good expressed
            Above the wrong.
    And he who leans an eager ear
    To catch the discord, he will hear
    The echoes of his own weak heart
    Beat out the most discordant part.

    Whose tender heart could build
        Affection's bower above
        A heart where baby nests of love
            Were ever filled,—
    With upward growth may reach and twine
    About the children, grown divine,
    That once were his a time so brief
    His very joy was more than grief.

    O Sorrow—"Peace, be still!"
        God reads the riddle right;
        And we who grope in constant night
            But serve His will;
    And when sometime the doubt is gone,
    And darkness blossoms into dawn,—
    "God keeps the good," we then will say:
    " 'Tis but the dross He throws away."


    ORLIE WILDE

    A goddess, with a siren's grace,—
    A sun-haired girl on a craggy place
    Above a bay where fish-boats lay
    Drifting about like birds of prey.

    Wrought was she of a painter's dream,—
    Wise only as are artists wise,
    My artist-friend, Rolf Herschkelhiem,
    With deep sad eyes of oversize,
    And face of melancholy guise.

    I pressed him that he tell to me
    This masterpiece's history.
    He turned—REturned—and thus beguiled
    Me with the tale of Orlie Wilde:—

    "We artists live ideally:
    We breed our firmest facts of air;
    We make our own reality—
    We dream a thing and it is so.
    The fairest scenes we ever see
    Are mirages of memory;
    The sweetest thoughts we ever know
    We plagiarize from Long Ago:
    And as the girl on canvas there
    Is marvelously rare and fair,
    'Tis only inasmuch as she
    Is dumb and may not speak to me!"
    He tapped me with his mahlstick—then
    The picture,—and went on again:

    "Orlie Wilde, the fisher's child—
    I see her yet, as fair and mild
    As ever nursling summer day
    Dreamed on the bosom of the bay:
    For I was twenty then, and went
    Alone and long-haired—all content
    With promises of sounding name
    And fantasies of future fame,
    And thoughts that now my mind discards
    As editor a fledgling bard's.

    "At evening once I chanced to go,
    With pencil and portfolio,
    Adown the street of silver sand
    That winds beneath this craggy land,
    To make a sketch of some old scurf
    Of driftage, nosing through the surf
    A splintered mast, with knarl and strand
    Of rigging-rope and tattered threads
    Of flag and streamer and of sail
    That fluttered idly in the gale
    Or whipped themselves to sadder shreds.
    The while I wrought, half listlessly,
    On my dismantled subject, came
    A sea-bird, settling on the same
    With plaintive moan, as though that he
    Had lost his mate upon the sea;
    And—with my melancholy trend—
    It brought dim dreams half understood—
    It wrought upon my morbid mood,—
    I thought of my own voyagings
    That had no end—that have no end.—
    And, like the sea-bird, I made moan
    That I was loveless and alone.
    And when at last with weary wings
    It went upon its wanderings,
    With upturned face I watched its flight
    Until this picture met my sight:
    A goddess, with a siren's grace,—
    A sun-haired girl on a craggy place
    Above a bay where fish-boats lay
    Drifting about like birds of prey.

    "In airy poise she, gazing, stood
    A machless form of womanhood,
    That brought a thought that if for me
    Such eyes had sought across the sea,
    I could have swum the widest tide
    That ever mariner defied,
    And, at the shore, could on have gone
    To that high crag she stood upon,
    To there entreat and say, 'My Sweet,
    Behold thy servant at thy feet.'
    And to my soul I said: 'Above,
    There stands the idol of thy love!'

    "In this rapt, awed, ecstatic state
    I gazed—till lo! I was aware
    A fisherman had joined her there—
    A weary man, with halting gait,
    Who toiled beneath a basket's weight:
    Her father, as I guessed, for she
    Had run to meet him gleefully
    And ta'en his burden to herself,
    That perched upon her shoulder's shelf
    So lightly that she, tripping, neared
    A jutting crag and disappeared;
    But she left the echo of a song
    That thrills me yet, and will as long
    As I have being! . . .


                . . . "Evenings came
    And went,—but each the same—the same:
    She watched above, and even so
    I stood there watching from below;
    Till, grown so bold at last, I sung,—
    (What matter now the theme thereof!)—
    It brought an answer from her tongue—
    Faint as the murmur of a dove,
    Yet all the more the song of love. . . .

    "I turned and looked upon the bay,
    With palm to forehead—eyes a-blur
    In the sea's smile—meant but for her!—
    I saw the fish-boats far away
    In misty distance, lightly drawn
    In chalk-dots on the horizon—
    Looked back at her, long, wistfully;—
    And, pushing off an empty skiff,
    I beckoned her to quit the cliff
    And yield me her rare company
    Upon a little pleasure-cruise.—
    She stood, as loathful to refuse,
    To muse for full a moment's time,—
    Then answered back in pantomime
    'She feared some danger from the sea
    Were she discovered thus with me.'
    I motioned then to ask her if
    I might not join her on the cliff
    And back again, with graceful wave
    Of lifted arm, she anwer gave
    'She feared some danger from the sea.'

    "Impatient, piqued, impetuous, I
    Sprang in the boat, and flung 'Good-by'
    From pouted mouth with angry hand,
    And madly pulled away from land
    With lusty stroke, despite that she
    Held out her hands entreatingly:
    And when far out, with covert eye
    I shoreward glanced, I saw her fly
    In reckless haste adown the crag,
    Her hair a-flutter like a flag
    Of gold that danced across the strand
    In little mists of silver sand.
    All curious I, pausing, tried
    To fancy what it all implied,—
    When suddenly I found my feet
    Were wet; and, underneath the seat
    On which I sat, I heard the sound
    Of gurgling waters, and I found
    The boat aleak alarmingly. . . .
    I turned and looked upon the sea,
    Whose every wave seemed mocking me;
    I saw the fishers' sails once more—
    In dimmer distance than before;
    I saw the sea-bird wheeling by,
    With foolish wish that _I_ could fly:
    I thought of firm earth, home and friends—
    I thought of everything that tends
    To drive a man to frenzy and
    To wholly lose his own command;
    I thought of all my waywardness—
    Thought of a mother's deep distress;
    Of youthful follies yet unpurged—
    Sins, as the seas, about me surged—
    Thought of the printer's ready pen
    To-morrow drowning me again;—
    A million things without a name—
    I thought of everything but—Fame. . . .

    "A memory yet is in my mind,
    So keenly clear and sharp-defined,
    I picture every phase and line
    Of life and death, and neither mine,—
    While some fair seraph, golden-haired,
    Bends over me,—with white arms bared,
    That strongly plait themselves about
    My drowning weight and lift me out—
    With joy too great for words to state
    Or tongue to dare articulate!

    "And this seraphic ocean-child
    And heroine was Orlie Wilde:
    And thus it was I came to hear
    Her voice's music in my ear—
    Ay, thus it was Fate paved the way
    That I walk desolate to-day!" . . .

    The artist paused and bowed his face
    Within his palms a little space,
    While reverently on his form
    I bent my gaze and marked a storm
    That shook his frame as wrathfully
    As some typhoon of agony,
    And fraught with sobs—the more profound
    For that peculiar laughing sound
    We hear when strong men weep. . . . I leant
    With warmest sympathy—I bent
    To stroke with soothing hand his brow,
    He murmuring—"Tis over now!—

    And shall I tie the silken thread
    Of my frail romance?" "Yes," I said.—
    He faintly smiled; and then, with brow
    In kneading palm, as one in dread—
    His tasseled cap pushed from his head
    " 'Her voice's music,' I repeat,"
    He said,—" 'twas sweet—O passing sweet!—
    Though she herself, in uttering
    Its melody, proved not the thing
    Of loveliness my dreams made meet
    For me—there, yearning, at her feet—
    Prone at her feet—a worshiper,—
    For lo! she spake a tongue," moaned he,
    "Unknown to me;—unknown to me
    As mine to her—as mine to her."


    THAT OTHER MAUD MULLER



    Maud Muller worked at making hay,
    And cleared her forty cents a day.

    Her clothes were coarse, but her health was fine,
    And so she worked in the sweet sunshine

    Singing as glad as a bird in May
    "Barbara Allen" the livelong day.

    She often glanced at the far-off town,
    And wondered if eggs were up or down.

    And the sweet song died of a strange disease,
    Leaving a phantom taste of cheese,

    And an appetite and a nameless ache
    For soda-water and ginger cake.

    The judge rode slowly into view—
    Stopped his horse in the shade and threw

    His fine-cut out, while the blushing Maud
    Marveled much at the kind he "chawed."

    "He was dry as a fish," he said with a wink,
    "And kind o' thought that a good square drink

    Would brace him up." So the cup was filled
    With the crystal wine that old spring spilled;

    And she gave it him with a sun-browned hand.
    "Thanks," said the judge in accents bland;

    "A thousand thanks! for a sweeter draught,
    From a fairer hand"—but there he laughed.

    And the sweet girl stood in the sun that day,
    And raked the judge instead of the hay.


    A MAN OF MANY PARTS



    It was a man of many parts,
        Who in his coffer mind
    Had stored the Classics and the Arts
        And Sciences combined;
    The purest gems of poesy
        Came flashing from his pen—
    The wholesome truths of History
        He gave his fellow men.

    He knew the stars from "Dog" to Mars;
        And he could tell you, too,
    Their distances—as though the cars
        Had often checked him through—
    And time 'twould take to reach the sun,
        Or by the "Milky Way,"
    Drop in upon the moon, or run
        The homeward trip, or stay.

    With Logic at his fingers' ends,
        Theology in mind,
    He often entertained his friends
        Until they died resigned;
    And with inquiring mind intent
        Upon Alchemic arts
    A dynamite experiment—
        . . . . . . .
        A man of many parts!


    THE FROG



    Who am I but the Frog—the Frog!
        My realm is the dark bayou,
    And my throne is the muddy and moss-grown log
        That the poison-vine clings to—
    And the blacksnakes slide in the slimy tide
        Where the ghost of the moon looks blue.

    What am I but a King—a King!—
        For the royal robes I wear—
    A scepter, too, and a signet-ring,
        As vassals and serfs declare:
    And a voice, god wot, that is equaled not
        In the wide world anywhere!

    I can talk to the Night—the Night!—
        Under her big black wing
    She tells me the tale of the world outright,
        And the secret of everything;
    For she knows you all, from the time you crawl,
        To the doom that death will bring.

    The Storm swoops down, and he blows—and blows,—
        While I drum on his swollen cheek,
    And croak in his angered eye that glows
        With the lurid lightning's streak;
    While the rushes drown in the watery frown
        That his bursting passions leak.

    And I can see through the sky—the sky—
        As clear as a piece of glass;
    And I can tell you the how and why
        Of the things that come to pass—
    And whether the dead are there instead,
        Or under the graveyard grass.

    To your Sovereign lord all hail—all hail!—
        To your Prince on his throne so grim!
    Let the moon swing low, and the high stars trail
        Their heads in the dust to him;
    And the wide world sing: Long live the King,
        And grace to his royal whim!


    DEAD SELVES



    How many of my selves are dead?
        The ghosts of many haunt me: Lo,
    The baby in the tiny bed
    With rockers on, is blanketed
        And sleeping in the long ago;
    And so I ask, with shaking head,
    How many of my selves are dead?

    A little face with drowsy eyes
        And lisping lips comes mistily
    From out the faded past, and tries
    The prayers a mother breathed with sighs
        Of anxious care in teaching me;
    But face and form and prayers have fled—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    The little naked feet that slipped
        In truant paths, and led the way
    Through dead'ning pasture-lands, and tripped
    O'er tangled poison-vines, and dipped
        In streams forbidden—where are they?
    In vain I listen for their tread—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    The awkward boy the teacher caught
        Inditing letters filled with love,
    Who was compelled, for all he fought,
    To read aloud each tender thought
        Of "Sugar Lump" and "Turtle Dove."
    I wonder where he hides his head—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    The earnest features of a youth
        With manly fringe on lip and chin,
    With eager tongue to tell the truth,
    To offer love and life, forsooth,
        So brave was he to woo and win;
    A prouder man was never wed—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    The great, strong hands so all-inclined
        To welcome toil, or smooth the care
    From mother-brows, or quick to find
    A leisure-scrap of any kind,
        To toss the baby in the air,
    Or clap at babbling things it said—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    The pact of brawn and scheming brain—
        Conspiring in the plots of wealth,
    Still delving, till the lengthened chain,
    Unwindlassed in the mines of gain,
        Recoils with dregs of ruined health
    And pain and poverty instead—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    The faltering step, the faded hair—
        Head, heart and soul, all echoing
    With maundering fancies that declare
    That life and love were never there,
        Nor ever joy in anything,
    Nor wounded heart that ever bled—
    How many of my selves are dead?

    So many of my selves are dead,
        That, bending here above the brink
    Of my last grave, with dizzy head,
    I find my spirit comforted,
        For all the idle things I think:
    It can but be a peaceful bed,
    Since all my other selves are dead.


    A DREAM OF LONG AGO



    Lying listless in the mosses
    Underneath a tree that tosses
    Flakes of sunshine, and embosses
        Its green shadow with the snow—
    Drowsy-eyed, I sink in slumber
    Born of fancies without number—
    Tangled fancies that encumber
        Me with dreams of long ago.

    Ripples of the river singing;
    And the water-lilies swinging
    Bells of Parian, and ringing
        Peals of perfume faint and fine,
    While old forms and fairy faces
    Leap from out their hiding-places
    In the past, with glad embraces
        Fraught with kisses sweet as wine.

    Willows dip their slender fingers
    O'er the little fisher's stringers,
    While he baits his hook and lingers
        Till the shadows gather dim;
    And afar off comes a calling
    Like the sounds of water falling,
    With the lazy echoes drawling
        Messages of haste to him.

    Little naked feet that tinkle
    Through the stubble-fields, and twinkle
    Down the winding road, and sprinkle
        Little mists of dusty rain,
    While in pasture-lands the cattle
    Cease their grazing with a rattle
    Of the bells whose clappers tattle
        To their masters down the lane.

    Trees that hold their tempting treasures
    O'er the orchard's hedge embrasures,
    Furnish their forbidden pleasures
        As in Eden lands of old;
    And the coming of the master
    Indicates a like disaster
    To the frightened heart that faster
        Beats pulsations manifold.

    Puckered lips whose pipings tingle
    In staccato notes that mingle
    Musically with the jingle-
        Haunted winds that lightly fan
    Mellow twilights, crimson-tinted
    By the sun, and picture-printed
    Like a book that sweetly hinted
        Of the Nights Arabian.

    Porticoes with columns plaited
    And entwined with vines and freighted
    With a bloom all radiated
        With the light of moon and star;
    Where some tender voice is winging
    In sad flights of song, and singing
    To the dancing fingers flinging
        Dripping from the sweet guitar.

    Would my dreams were never taken
    From me: that with faith unshaken
    I might sleep and never waken
        On a weary world of woe!
    Links of love would never sever
    As I dreamed them, never, never!
    I would glide along forever
        Through the dreams of long ago.


    CRAQUEODOOM

    The Crankadox leaned o'er the edge of the moon
        And wistfully gazed on the sea
    Where the Gryxabodill madly whistled a tune
        To the air of "Ti-fol-de-ding-dee."
    The quavering shriek of the Fly-up-the-creek
        Was fitfully wafted afar
    To the Queen of the Wunks as she powdered her cheek
        With the pulverized rays of a star.

    The Gool closed his ear on the voice of the Grig,
        And his heart it grew heavy as lead
    As he marked the Baldekin adjusting his wing
        On the opposite side of his head,
    And the air it grew chill as the Gryxabodill
        Raised his dank, dripping fins to the skies,
    And plead with the Plunk for the use of her bill
        To pick the tears out of his eyes.

    The ghost of the Zhack flitted by in a trance,
        And the Squidjum hid under a tub
    As he heard the loud hooves of the Hooken advance
        With a rub-a-dub—dub-a-dub—dub!
    And the Crankadox cried, as he lay down and died,
        "My fate there is none to bewail,"
    While the Queen of the Wunks drifted over the tide
        With a long piece of crape to her tail.


    JUNE

    Queenly month of indolent repose!
        I drink thy breath in sips of rare perfume,
        As in thy downy lap of clover-bloom
    I nestle like a drowsy child and doze
    The lazy hours away. The zephyr throws
        The shifting shuttle of the Summer's loom
        And weaves a damask-work of gleam and gloom
    Before thy listless feet. The lily blows
    A bugle-call of fragrance o'er the glade;
        And, wheeling into ranks, with plume and spear,
    Thy harvest-armies gather on parade;
        While, faint and far away, yet pure and clear,
    A voice calls out of alien lands of shade:—
        All hail the Peerless Goddess of the Year!


    WASH LOWRY'S REMINISCENCE



    And you're the poet of this concern?
        I've seed your name in print
    A dozen times, but I'll be dern
        I'd 'a' never 'a' took the hint
    O' the size you are—fer I'd pictured you
        A kind of a tallish man—
    Dark-complected and sallor too,
        And on the consumpted plan.

    'Stid o' that you're little and small,
        With a milk-and-water face—
    'Thout no snap in your eyes at all,
        Er nothin' to suit the case!
    Kind o'look like a—I don't know—
        One o' these fair-ground chaps
    That runs a thingamajig to blow,
        Er a candy-stand perhaps.

    'Ll I've allus thought that poetry
        Was a sort of a—some disease—
    Fer I knowed a poet once, and he
        Was techy and hard to please,
    And moody-like, and kindo' sad
        And didn't seem to mix
    With other folks—like his health was bad,
        Er his liver out o' fix.

    Used to teach fer a livelihood—
        There's folks in Pipe Crick yit
    Remembers him—and he was good
        At cipherin' I'll admit—
    And posted up in G'ography
        But when it comes to tact,
    And gittin' along with the school, you see,
        He fizzled, and that's a fact!

    Boarded with us fer fourteen months
        And in all that time I'll say
    We never catched him a-sleepin' once
        Er idle a single day.
    But shucks! It made him worse and worse
        A-writin' rhymes and stuff,
    And the school committee used to furse
        'At the school warn't good enough.

    He warn't as strict as he ought to been,
        And never was known to whip,
    Or even to keep a scholard in
        At work at his penmanship;
    'Stid o' that he'd learn 'em notes,
        And have 'em every day,
    Spilin' hymns and a-splittin' th'oats
        With his "Do-sol-fa-me-ra!"

    Tel finally it was jest agreed
        We'd have to let him go,
    And we all felt bad—we did indeed,
        When we come to tell him so;
    Fer I remember, he turned so white,
        And smiled so sad, somehow,
    I someway felt it wasn't right,
        And I'm shore it wasn't now!

    He hadn't no complaints at all—
        He bid the school adieu,
    And all o' the scholards great and small
        Was mighty sorry too!
    And when he closed that afternoon
        They sung some lines that he
    Had writ a purpose, to some old tune
        That suited the case, you see.

    And then he lingered and delayed
        And wouldn't go away—
    And shet himself in his room and stayed
        A-writin' from day to day;
    And kep' a-gittin' stranger still,
        And thinner all the time,
    You know, as any feller will
        On nothin' else but rhyme.

    He didn't seem adzactly right,
        Er like he was crossed in love,
    He'd work away night after night,
        And walk the floor above;
    We'd hear him read and talk, and sing
        So lonesome-like and low,
    My woman's cried like ever'thing—
        'Way in the night, you know.

    And when at last he tuck to bed
        He'd have his ink and pen;
    "So's he could coat the muse" he said,
        "He'd die contented then";
    And jest before he past away
        He read with dyin' gaze
    The epitaph that stands to-day
        To show you where he lays.

    And ever sence then I've allus thought
        That poetry's some disease,
    And them like you that's got it ought
        To watch their q's and p's ;
    And leave the sweets of rhyme, to sup
        On the wholesome draughts of toil,
    And git your health recruited up
        By plowin' in rougher soil.


    THE ANCIENT PRINTERMAN



    "O Printerman of sallow face,
        And look of absent guile,
    Is it the 'copy' on your 'case'
        That causes you to smile?
    Or is it some old treasure scrap
        You cull from Memory's file?

    "I fain would guess its mystery—
        For often I can trace
    A fellow dreamer's history
        Whene'er it haunts the face;
    Your fancy's running riot
        In a retrospective race!

    "Ah, Printerman, you're straying
        Afar from 'stick' and type—
    Your heart has 'gone a-maying,'
        And you taste old kisses, ripe
    Again on lips that pucker
        At your old asthmatic pipe!

    "You are dreaming of old pleasures
        That have faded from your view;
    And the music-burdened measures
        Of the laughs you listen to
    Are now but angel-echoes—
        O, have I spoken true?"

    The ancient Printer hinted
        With a motion full of grace
    To where the words were printed
        On a card above his "case,"—
    "I am deaf and dumb!" I left him
        With a smile upon his face.


    PRIOR TO MISS BELLE'S APPEARANCE



    What makes you come HERE fer, Mister,
        So much to our house?—SAY?
    Come to see our big sister!—
    An' Charley he says 'at you kissed her
        An' he ketched you, th'uther day!—
    Didn' you, Charley?—But we p'omised Belle
    An' crossed our heart to never to tell—
    'Cause SHE gived us some o' them-er
    Chawk'lut-drops 'at you bringed to her!

    Charley he's my little b'uther—
        An' we has a-mostest fun,
    Don't we, Charley?—Our Muther,
    Whenever we whips one anuther,
        Tries to whip US—an' we RUN—
    Don't we, Charley?—An' nen, bime-by,
    Nen she gives us cake—an' pie—
    Don't she, Charley?—when we come in
    An' pomise never to do it ag'in!

    HE'S named Charley.—I'm WILLIE—
        An' I'm got the purtiest name!
    But Uncle Bob HE calls me "Billy"—
    Don't he, Charley?—'N' our filly
        We named "Billy," the same
    Ist like me! An' our Ma said
    'At "Bob puts foolishnuss into our head!"—
    Didn' she, Charley?—An' SHE don't know
    Much about BOYS!—'Cause Bob said so!

    Baby's a funniest feller!
        Nain't no hair on his head—
    IS they, Charley?—It's meller
    Wite up there! An' ef Belle er
        Us ask wuz WE that way, Ma said,—
    "Yes; an' yer PA'S head wuz soft as that,
    An' it's that way yet!"—An' Pa grabs his hat
    An' says, "Yes, childern, she's right about Pa—
    'Cause that's the reason he married yer Ma!"

    An' our Ma says 'at "Belle couldn'
        Ketch nothin' at all but ist 'BOWS!"—
    An' PA says 'at "you're soft as puddun!"—
    An' UNCLE BOB says "you're a good-un—
        'Cause he can tell by yer nose!"-
    Didn' he, Charley?—An' when Belle'll play
    In the poller on th' pianer, some day,
    Bob makes up funny songs about you,
    Till she gits mad-like he wants her to!

    Our sister FANNY she's 'LEVEN
        Years old! 'At's mucher 'an _I_—
    Ain't it, Charley? . . . I'm seven!—
    But our sister Fanny's in HEAVEN!
        Nere's where you go ef you die!—
    Don't you, Charley?—Nen you has WINGS—
    IST LIKE FANNY!—an' PURTIEST THINGS!—
    Don't you, Charley?—An' nen you can FLY—
    Ist fly-an' EVER'thing! . . . I Wisht I'D die!


    WHEN MOTHER COMBED MY HAIR



    When Memory, with gentle hand,
    Has led me to that foreign land
    Of childhood days, I long to be
    Again the boy on bended knee,
    With head a-bow, and drowsy smile
    Hid in a mother's lap the while,
    With tender touch and kindly care,
    She bends above and combs my hair.

    Ere threats of Time, or ghosts of cares
    Had paled it to the hue it wears,
    Its tangled threads of amber light
    Fell o'er a forehead, fair and white,
    That only knew the light caress
    Of loving hands, or sudden press
    Of kisses that were sifted there
    The times when mother combed my hair.

    But its last gleams of gold have slipped
    Away; and Sorrow's manuscript
    Is fashioned of the snowy brow—
    So lined and underscored now
    That you, to see it, scarce would guess
    It e'er had felt the fond caress
    Of loving lips, or known the care
    Of those dear hands that combed my hair.

    . . . . . . . .

    I am so tired! Let me be
    A moment at my mother's knee;
    One moment—that I may forget
    The trials waiting for me yet:
    One moment free from every pain—
    O! Mother! Comb my hair again!
    And I will, oh, so humbly bow,
    For I've a wife that combs it now.



    A WRANGDILLION



    Dexery-tethery! down in the dike,
        Under the ooze and the slime,
    Nestles the wraith of a reticent Gryke,
        Blubbering bubbles of rhyme:
    Though the reeds touch him and tickle his teeth—
        Though the Graigroll and the Cheest
    Pluck at the leaves of his laureate-wreath,
        Nothing affects him the least.

    He sinks to the dregs in the dead o' the night,
        And he shuffles the shadows about
    As he gathers the stars in a nest of delight
        And sets there and hatches them out:
    The Zhederrill peers from his watery mine
        In scorn with the Will-o'-the-wisp,
    As he twinkles his eyes in a whisper of shine
        That ends in a luminous lisp.

    The Morning is born like a baby of gold,
        And it lies in a spasm of pink,
    And rallies the Cheest for the horrible cold
        He has dragged to the willowy brink,
    The Gryke blots his tears with a scrap of his grief,
        And growls at the wary Graigroll
    As he twunkers a tune on a Tiljicum leaf
        And hums like a telegraph pole.


    GEORGE MULLEN'S CONFESSION



    For the sake of guilty conscience, and the heart that ticks the time
    Of the clockworks of my nature, I desire to say that I'm
    A weak and sinful creature, as regards my daily walk
    The last five years and better. It ain't worth while to talk—

    I've been too mean to tell it! I've been so hard, you see,
    And full of pride, and—onry—now there's the word for me—
    Just onry—and to show you, I'll give my history
    With vital points in question, and I think you'll all agree.

    I was always stiff and stubborn since I could recollect,
    And had an awful temper, and never would reflect;
    And always into trouble—I remember once at school
    The teacher tried to flog me, and I reversed that rule.

    O I was bad I tell you! And it's a funny move
    That a fellow wild as I was could ever fall in love;
    And it's a funny notion that an animal like me,
    Under a girl's weak fingers was as tame as tame could be!

    But it's so, and sets me thinking of the easy way she had
    Of cooling down my temper—though I'd be fighting mad.
    "My Lion Queen" I called her—when a spell of mine occurred
    She'd come in a den of feelings and quell them with a word.

    I'll tell you how she loved me—and what her people thought:
    When I asked to marry Annie they said "they reckoned not—
    That I cut too many didoes and monkey-shines to suit
    Their idea of a son-in-law, and I could go, to boot!"

    I tell you that thing riled me! Why, I felt my face turn white,
    And my teeth shut like a steel trap, and the fingers of my right
    Hand pained me with their pressure—all the rest's a mystery
    Till I heard my Annie saying—"I'm going, too, you see."

    We were coming through the gateway, and she wavered for a spell
    When she heard her mother crying and her raving father yell
    That she wa'n't no child of his'n—like an actor in a play
    We saw at Independence, coming through the other day.

    Well! that's the way we started. And for days and weeks and
    months
    And even years we journeyed on, regretting never once
    Of starting out together upon the path of life—
    Akind o' sort o' husband, but a mighty loving wife,—

    And the cutest little baby—little Grace—I see her now
    A-standin' on the pig-pen as her mother milked the cow—
    And I can hear her shouting—as I stood unloading straw,—
    "I'm ain't as big as papa, but I'm biggerest'n ma."

    Now folks that never married don't seem to understand
    That a little baby's language is the sweetest ever planned—
    Why, I tell you it's pure music, and I'll just go on to say
    That I sometimes have a notion that the angels talk that way!

    There's a chapter in this story I'd be happy to destroy;
    I could burn it up before you with a mighty sight of joy;
    But I'll go ahead and give it—not in detail, no, my friend,
    For it takes five years of reading before you find the end.

    My Annie's folks relented—at least, in some degree;
    They sent one time for Annie, but they didn't send for me.
    The old man wrote the message with a heart as hot and dry
    As a furnace—"Annie Mullen, come and see your mother die."

    I saw the slur intended—why I fancied I could see
    The old man shoot the insult like a poison dart at me;
    And in that heat of passion I swore an inward oath
    That if Annie pleased her father she could never please us both.

    I watched her—dark and sullen—as she hurried on her shawl;
    I watched her—calm and cruel, though I saw her tear-drops fall;
    I watched her—cold and heartless, though I heard her moaning,
    call
    For mercy from high Heaven—and I smiled throughout it all.

    Why even when she kissed me, and her tears were on my brow,
    As she murmured, "George, forgive me—I must go to mother now!"
    Such hate there was within me that I answered not at all,
    But calm, and cold and cruel, I smiled throughout it all.

    But a shadow in the doorway caught my eye, and then the face
    Full of innocence and sunshine of little baby Grace.
    And I snatched her up and kissed her, and I softened through and
    through
    For a minute when she told me "I must kiss her muvver too."

    I remember, at the starting, how I tried to freeze again
    As I watched them slowly driving down the little crooked lane—
    When Annie shouted something that ended in a cry,
    And how I tried to whistle and it fizzled in a sigh.

    I remember running after, with a glimmer in my sight—
    Pretending I'd discovered that the traces wasn't right;
    And the last that I remember, as they disappeared from view,
    Was little Grace a-calling, "I see papa! Howdy-do!"

    And left alone to ponder, I again took up my hate
    For the old man who would chuckle that I was desolate;
    And I mouthed my wrongs in mutters till my pride called up the
    pain
    His last insult had given me—until I smiled again

    Till the wild beast in my nature was raging in the den—
    With no one now to quell it, and I wrote a letter then
    Full of hissing things, and heated with so hot a heat of hate
    That my pen flashed out black lightning at a most terrific rate.

    I wrote that "she had wronged me when she went away from me—
    Though to see her dying mother 'twas her father's victory,
    And a woman that could waver when her husband's pride was rent
    Was no longer worthy of it." And I shut the house and went.

    To tell of my long exile would be of little good—
    Though I couldn't half-way tell it, and I wouldn't if I could!
    I could tell of California—of a wild and vicious life;
    Of trackless plains, and mountains, and the Indian's
    scalping-knife.

    I could tell of gloomy forests howling wild with threats of
    death;
    I could tell of fiery deserts that have scorched me with their
    breath;
    I could tell of wretched outcasts by the hundreds, great and
    small,
    And could claim the nasty honor of the greatest of them all.

    I could tell of toil and hardship; and of sickness and disease,
    And hollow-eyed starvation, but I tell you, friend, that these
    Are trifles in comparison with what a fellow feels
    With that bloodhound, Remorsefulness, forever at his heels.

    I remember—worn and weary of the long, long years of care,
    When the frost of time was making early harvest of my hair—
    I remember, wrecked and hopeless of a rest beneath the sky,
    My resolve to quit the country, and to seek the East, and die.

    I remember my long journey, like a dull, oppressive dream,
    Across the empty prairies till I caught the distant gleam
    Of a city in the beauty of its broad and shining stream
    On whose bosom, flocked together, float the mighty swans of
    steam.

    I remember drifting with them till I found myself again
    In the rush and roar and rattle of the engine and the train;
    And when from my surroundings something spoke of child and wife,
    It seemed the train was rumbling through a tunnel in my life.

    Then I remember something—like a sudden burst of light—
    That don't exactly tell it, but I couldn't tell it right—
    A something clinging to me with its arms around my neck—
    A little girl, for instance—or an angel, I expect—

    For she kissed me, cried and called me "her dear papa," and I
    felt
    My heart was pure virgin gold, and just about to melt—
    And so it did—it melted in a mist of gleaming rain
    When she took my hand and whispered, "My mama's on the train."

    There's some things I can dwell on, and get off pretty well,
    But the balance of this story I know I couldn't tell;
    So I ain't going to try it, for to tell the reason why—
    I'm so chicken-hearted lately I'd be certain 'most to cry.


    "TIRED OUT"



    "TIRED OUT!" Yet face and brow
    Do not look aweary now,
    And the eyelids lie like two
    Pure, white rose-leaves washed with dew.
    Was her life so hard a task?—
    Strange that we forget to ask
    What the lips now dumb for aye
    Could have told us yesterday!

    "Tired out!" A faded scrawl
    Pinned upon the ragged shawl—
    Nothing else to leave a clue
    Even of a friend or two,
    Who might come to fold the hands,
    Or smooth back the dripping strands
    Of her tresses, or to wet
    Them anew with fond regret.

    "Tired out!" We can but guess
    Of her little happiness—
    Long ago, in some fair land,
    When a lover held her hand
    In the dream that frees us all,
    Soon or later, from its thrall—
    Be it either false or true,
    We, at last, must tire, too.


    HARLIE



    Fold the little waxen hands
    Lightly. Let your warmest tears
    Speak regrets, but never fears,—
        Heaven understands!
    Let the sad heart, o'er the tomb,
    Lift again and burst in bloom
    Fragrant with a prayer as sweet
    As the lily at your feet.

    Bend and kiss the folded eyes—
    They are only feigning sleep
    While their truant glances peep
        Into Paradise.
    See, the face, though cold and white,
    Holds a hint of some delight
    E'en with Death, whose finger-tips
    Rest upon the frozen lips.

    When, within the years to come,
    Vanished echoes live once more—
    Pattering footsteps on the floor,
        And the sounds of home,—
    Let your arms in fancy fold
    Little Harlie as of old—
    As of old and as he waits
    At the City's golden gates.


    SAY SOMETHING TO ME



    Say something to me! I've waited so long—
        Waited and wondered in vain;
    Only a sentence would fall like a song
        Over this listening pain—
    Over a silence that glowers and frowns,—
        Even my pencil to-night
    Slips in the dews of my sorrow and wounds
        Each tender word that I write.

    Say something to me—if only to tell
        Me you remember the past;
    Let the sweet words, like the notes of a bell,
        Ring out my vigil at last.
    O it were better, far better than this
        Doubt and distrust in the breast,—
    For in the wine of a fanciful kiss
        I could taste Heaven, and—rest.

    Say something to me! I kneel and I plead,
        In my wild need, for a word;
    If my poor heart from this silence were freed,
        I could soar up like a bird
    In the glad morning, and twitter and sing,
        Carol and warble and cry
    Blithe as the lark as he cruises awing
        Over the deeps of the sky.


    LEONAINIE



    Leonainie—Angels named her;
        And they took the light
    Of the laughing stars and framed her
        In a smile of white;
            And they made her hair of gloomy
            Midnight, and her eyes of bloomy
            Moonshine, and they brought her to me
        In the solemn night.—

    In a solemn night of summer,
        When my heart of gloom
    Blossomed up to greet the comer
        Like a rose in bloom;
            All forebodings that distressed me
            I forgot as Joy caressed me—
            (LYING Joy! that caught and pressed me
        In the arms of doom!)

    Only spake the little lisper
        In the Angel-tongue;
    Yet I, listening, heard her whisper,—
        "Songs are only sung
            Here below that they may grieve you—
            Tales but told you to deceive you,—
            So must Leonainie leave you
        While her love is young."

    Then God smiled and it was morning.
        Matchless and supreme
    Heaven's glory seemed adorning
        Earth with its esteem:
            Every heart but mine seemed gifted
            With the voice of prayer, and lifted
            Where my Leonainie drifted
        From me like a dream.


    A TEST OF LOVE



    "Now who shall say he loves me not."

    He wooed her first in an atmosphere
        Of tender and low-breathed sighs;
    But the pang of her laugh went cutting clear
        To the soul of the enterprise;
    "You beg so pert for the kiss you seek
        It reminds me, John," she said,
    "Of a poodle pet that jumps to 'speak'
        For a crumb or a crust of bread."

    And flashing up, with the blush that flushed
        His face like a tableau-light,
    Came a bitter threat that his white lips hushed
        To a chill, hoarse-voiced "Good night!"
    And again her laugh, like a knell that tolled,
        And a wide-eyed mock surprise,—
    "Why, John," she said, "you have taken cold
        In the chill air of your sighs!"

    And then he turned, and with teeth tight clenched,
        He told her he hated her,—
    That his love for her from his heart he wrenched
        Like a corpse from a sepulcher.
    And then she called him "a ghoul all red
        With the quintessence of crimes"—
    "But I know you love me now," she said,
        And kissed him a hundred times.


    FATHER WILLIAM



    A NEW VERSION BY LEE O. HARRIS AND JAMES
    WHITCOMB RILEY

    "You are old, Father William, and though one would think
        All the veins in your body were dry,
    Yet the end of your nose is red as a pink;
        I beg your indulgence, but why?"

    "You see," Father William replied, "in my youth—
        'Tis a thing I must ever regret—
    It worried me so to keep up with the truth
        That my nose has a flush on it yet."

    "You are old," said the youth, "and I grieve to detect
        A feverish gleam in your eye;
    Yet I'm willing to give you full time to reflect.
        Now, pray, can you answer me why?"

    "Alas," said the sage, "I was tempted to choose
        Me a wife in my earlier years,
    And the grief, when I think that she didn't refuse,
        Has reddened my eyelids with tears."

    "You are old, Father William," the young man said,
        "And you never touch wine, you declare,
    Yet you sleep with your feet at the head of the bed;
        Now answer me that if you dare."

    "In my youth," said the sage, "I was told it was true,
        That the world turned around in the night;
    I cherished the lesson, my boy, and I knew
        That at morning my feet would be right."

    "You are old," said the youth, "and it grieved me to note,
        As you recently fell through the door,
    That 'full as a goose' had been chalked on your coat;
        Now answer me that I implore."

    "My boy," said the sage, "I have answered you fair,
        While you stuck to the point in dispute,
    But this is a personal matter, and there
        Is my answer—the toe of my boot."


    WHAT THE WIND SAID



    'I muse to-day, in a listless way,
        In the gleam of a summer land;
    I close my eyes as a lover may
        At the touch of his sweetheart's hand,
    And I hear these things in the whisperings
        Of the zephyrs round me fanned':—

    I am the Wind, and I rule mankind,
        And I hold a sovereign reign
    Over the lands, as God designed,
        And the waters they contain:
    Lo! the bound of the wide world round
        Falleth in my domain!

    I was born on a stormy morn
        In a kingdom walled with snow,
    Whose crystal cities laugh to scorn
        The proudest the world can show;
    And the daylight's glare is frozen there
        In the breath of the blasts that blow.

    Life to me was a jubilee
        From the first of my youthful days:
    Clinking my icy toys with glee—
        Playing my childish plays;
    Filling my hands with the silver sands
        To scatter a thousand ways:

    Chasing the flakes that the Polar shakes
        From his shaggy coat of white,
    Or hunting the trace of the track he makes
        And sweeping it from sight,
    As he turned to glare from the slippery stair
        Of the iceberg's farthest height.

    Till I grew so strong that I strayed ere long
        From my home of ice and chill;
    With an eager heart and a merry song
        I traveled the snows until
    I heard the thaws in the ice-crag's jaws
        Crunched with a hungry will;

    And the angry crash of the waves that dash
        Themselves on the jagged shore
    Where the splintered masts of the ice-wrecks flash,
        And the frightened breakers roar
    In wild unrest on the ocean's breast
        For a thousand leagues or more.

    And the grand old sea invited me
        With a million beckoning hands,
    And I spread my wings for a flight as free
        As ever a sailor plans
    When his thoughts are wild and his heart beguiled
        With the dreams of foreign lands.

    I passed a ship on its homeward trip,
        With a weary and toil-worn crew;
    And I kissed their flag with a welcome lip,
        And so glad a gale I blew
    That the sailors quaffed their grog and laughed
        At the work I made them do.

    I drifted by where sea-groves lie
        Like brides in the fond caress
    Of the warm sunshine and the tender sky—
        Where the ocean, passionless
    And tranquil, lies like a child whose eyes
        Are blurred with drowsiness.

    I drank the air and the perfume there,
        And bathed in a fountain's spray;
    And I smoothed the wings and the plumage rare
        Of a bird for his roundelay,
    And fluttered a rag from a signal-crag
        For a wretched castaway.

    With a sea-gull resting on my breast,
        I launched on a madder flight:
    And I lashed the waves to a wild unrest,
        And howled with a fierce delight
    Till the daylight slept; and I wailed and wept
        Like a fretful babe all night.

    For I heard the boom of a gun strike doom;
        And the gleam of a blood-red star
    Glared at me through the mirk and gloom
        From the lighthouse tower afar;
    And I held my breath at the shriek of death
        That came from the harbor bar.

    For I am the Wind, and I rule mankind,
        And I hold a sovereign reign
    Over the lands, as God designed,
        And the waters they contain:
    Lo! the bound of the wide world round
        Falleth in my domain!

    I journeyed on, when the night was gone,
        O'er a coast of oak and pine;
    And I followed a path that a stream had drawn
        Through a land of vale and vine,
    And here and there was a village fair
        In a nest of shade and shine.

    I passed o'er lakes where the sunshine shakes
        And shivers his golden lance
    On the glittering shield of the wave that breaks
        Where the fish-boats dip and dance,
    And the trader sails where the mist unveils
        The glory of old romance.

    I joyed to stand where the jeweled hand
        Of the maiden-morning lies
    On the tawny brow of the mountain-land.
        Where the eagle shrieks and cries,
    And holds his throne to himself alone
        From the light of human eyes.

    Adown deep glades where the forest shades
        Are dim as the dusk of day—
    Where only the foot of the wild beast wades,
        Or the Indian dares to stray,
    As the blacksnakes glide through the reeds and hide
        In the swamp-depths grim and gray.

    And I turned and fled from the place of dread
        To the far-off haunts of men.
    "In the city's heart is rest," I said,—
        But I found it not, and when
    I saw but care and vice reign there
        I was filled with wrath again:

    And I blew a spark in the midnight dark
        Till it flashed to an angry flame
    And scarred the sky with a lurid mark
        As red as the blush of shame:
    And a hint of hell was the dying yell
        That up from the ruins came.

    The bells went wild, and the black smoke piled
        Its pillars against the night,
    Till I gathered them, like flocks defiled,
        And scattered them left and right,
    While the holocaust's red tresses tossed
        As a maddened Fury's might.

    "Ye overthrown!" did I jeer and groan—
        "Ho! who is your master?—say!—
    Ye shapes that writhe in the slag and moan
        Your slow-charred souls away—
    Ye worse than worst of things accurst—
        Ye dead leaves of a day!"

    I am the Wind, and I rule mankind,
        And I hold a sovereign reign
    Over the lands, as God designed,
        And the waters they contain:
    Lo! the bound of the wide world round
        Falleth in my domain!

        . . . . . . .

    'I wake, as one from a dream half done,
        And gaze with a dazzled eye
    On an autumn leaf like a scrap of sun
        That the wind goes whirling by,
    While afar I hear, with a chill of fear,
        The winter storm-king sigh.'


    MORTON



    The warm pulse of the nation has grown chill;
        The muffled heart of Freedom, like a knell,
    Throbs solemnly for one whose earthly will
        Wrought every mission well.

    Whose glowing reason towered above the sea
        Of dark disaster like a beacon light,
    And led the Ship of State, unscathed and free,
        Out of the gulfs of night.

    When Treason, rabid-mouthed, and fanged with steel,
        Lay growling o'er the bones of fallen braves,
    And when beneath the tyrant's iron heel
        Were ground the hearts of slaves,

    And War, with all his train of horrors, leapt
        Across the fortress-walls of Liberty
    With havoc e'en the marble goddess wept
        With tears of blood to see.

    Throughout it all his brave and kingly mind
        Kept loyal vigil o'er the patriot's vow,
    And yet the flag he lifted to the wind
        Is drooping o'er him now.

    And Peace—all pallid from the battle-field
        When first again it hovered o'er the land
    And found his voice above it like a shield,
        Had nestled in his hand.

        . . . . . . . .

    O throne of State and gilded Senate halls—
        Though thousands throng your aisles and galleries—
    How empty are ye! and what silence falls
        On your hilarities!

    And yet, though great the loss to us appears,
        The consolation sweetens all our pain—
    Though hushed the voice, through all the coming years
        Its echoes will remain.


    AN AUTUMNAL EXTRAVAGANZA



    With a sweeter voice than birds
        Dare to twitter in their sleep,
    Pipe for me a tune of words,
        Till my dancing fancies leap
    Into freedom vaster far
    Than the realms of Reason are!
    Sing for me with wilder fire
        Than the lover ever sung,
    From the time he twanged the lyre
        When the world was baby-young.

    O my maiden Autumn, you—
    You have filled me through and through
    With a passion so intense,
    All of earthly eloquence
        Fails, and falls, and swoons away
    In your presence. Like as one
    Who essays to look the sun
        Fairly in the face, I say,
    Though my eyes you dazzle blind
    Greater dazzled is my mind.
    So, my Autumn, let me kneel
        At your feet and worship you!
    Be my sweetheart; let me feel
    Your caress; and tell me too
    Why your smiles bewilder me—
    Glancing into laughter, then
    Trancing into calm again,
    Till your meaning drowning lies
    In the dim depths of your eyes.
    Let me see the things you see
    Down the depths of mystery!
    Blow aside the hazy veil
        From the daylight of your face
    With the fragrance-ladened gale
        Of your spicy breath and chase
        Every dimple to its place.
    Lift your gipsy finger-tips
    To the roses of your lips,
    And fling down to me a bud—
        But an unblown kiss—but one—
    It shall blossom in my blood,
        Even after life is done—
    When I dare to touch the brow
    Your rare hair is veiling now—
    When the rich, red-golden strands
    Of the treasure in my hands
    Shall be all of worldly worth
    Heaven lifted from the earth,
    Like a banner to have set
    On its highest minaret.


    THE ROSE



    It tossed its head at the wooing breeze;
        And the sun, like a bashful swain,
    Beamed on it through the waving trees
        With a passion all in vain,—
    For my rose laughed in a crimson glee,
    And hid in the leaves in wait for me.

    The honey-bee came there to sing
        His love through the languid hours,
    And vaunt of his hives, as a proud old king
        Might boast of his palace-towers:
    But my rose bowed in a mockery,
    And hid in the leaves in wait for me.

    The humming-bird, like a courtier gay,
        Dipped down with a dalliant song,
    And twanged his wings through the roundelay
        Of love the whole day long:
    Yet my rose turned from his minstrelsy
    And hid in the leaves in wait for me.

    The firefly came in the twilight dim
        My red, red rose to woo—
    Till quenched was the flame of love in him,
        And the light of his lantern too,
    As my rose wept with dewdrops three
    And hid in the leaves in wait for me.

    And I said: I will cull my own sweet rose—
        Some day I will claim as mine
    The priceless worth of the flower that knows
        No change, but a bloom divine—
    The bloom of a fadeless constancy
    That hides in the leaves in wait for me!

    But time passed by in a strange disguise,
        And I marked it not, but lay
    In a lazy dream, with drowsy eyes,
        Till the summer slipped away,
    And a chill wind sang in a minor key:
    "Where is the rose that waits for thee?"

        . . . . . . . .

    I dream to-day, o'er a purple stain
        Of bloom on a withered stalk,
    Pelted down by the autumn rain
        In the dust of the garden-walk,
    That an Angel-rose in the world to be
    Will hide in the leaves in wait for me.


    THE MERMAN



    I

    Who would be
        A merman gay,
        Singing alone,
        Sitting alone,
    With a mermaid's knee,
        For instance—hey—
            For a throne?

    II

    I would be a merman gay;
        I would sit and sing the whole day long;
    I would fill my lungs with the strongest brine,
        And squirt it up in a spray of song,
    And soak my head in my liquid voice;
        I'd curl my tail in curves divine,
    And let each curve in a kink rejoice.
        I'd tackle the mermaids under the sea,
    And yank 'em around till they yanked me,
            Sportively, sportively;
    And then we would wiggle away, away,
    To the pea-green groves on the coast of day,
            Chasing each other sportively.

    III

    There would be neither moon nor star;
    But the waves would twang like a wet guitar
    Low thunder and thrum in the darkness grum—
            Neither moon nor star;
    We would shriek aloud in the dismal dales—
    Shriek at each other and squawk and squeal,
            "All night!" rakishly, rakishly;
    They would pelt me with oysters and wiggletails,
    Laughing and clapping their hands at me,
            "All night!" prankishly, prankishly;
    But I would toss them back in mine,
    Lobsters and turtles of quaint design;
    Then leaping out in an abrupt way,
    I'd snatch them bald in my devilish glee,
    And skip away when they snatched at me,
            Fiendishly, fiendishly.
    O, what a jolly life I'd lead,
    Ah, what a "bang-up" life indeed!
    Soft are the mermaids under the sea—
    We would live merrily, merrily.


    THE RAINY MORNING



    The dawn of the day was dreary,
        And the lowering clouds o'erhead
    Wept in a silent sorrow
        Where the sweet sunshine lay dead;
    And a wind came out of the eastward
        Like an endless sigh of pain,
    And the leaves fell down in the pathway
        And writhed in the falling rain.

    I had tried in a brave endeavor
        To chord my harp with the sun,
    But the strings would slacken ever,
        And the task was a weary one:
    And so, like a child impatient
        And sick of a discontent,
    I bowed in a shower of tear-drops
        And mourned with the instrument.

    And lo! as I bowed, the splendor
        Of the sun bent over me,
    With a touch as warm and tender
        As a father's hand might be:
    And, even as I felt its presence,
        My clouded soul grew bright,
    And the tears, like the rain of morning,
        Melted in mists of light.


    WE ARE NOT ALWAYS GLAD WHEN WE SMILE



    We are not always glad when we smile:
        Though we wear a fair face and are gay,
            And the world we deceive
            May not ever believe
        We could laugh in a happier way.—
    Yet, down in the deeps of the soul,
        Ofttimes, with our faces aglow,
            There's an ache and a moan
            That we know of alone,
        And as only the hopeless may know.

    We are not always glad when we smile,—
        For the heart, in a tempest of pain,
            May live in the guise
            Of a smile in the eyes
        As a rainbow may live in the rain;
    And the stormiest night of our woe
        May hang out a radiant star
            Whose light in the sky
            Of despair is a lie
        As black as the thunder-clouds are.

    We are not always glad when we smile!—
        But the conscience is quick to record,
            All the sorrow and sin
            We are hiding within
        Is plain in the sight of the Lord:
    And ever, O ever, till pride
        And evasion shall cease to defile
            The sacred recess
            Of the soul, we confess
        We are not always glad when we smile.


    A SUMMER SUNRISE



    AFTER LEE O. HARRIS

    The master-hand whose pencils trace
        This wondrous landscape of the morn,
    Is but the sun, whose glowing face
    Reflects the rapture and the grace
        Of inspiration Heaven-born.

    And yet with vision-dazzled eyes,
        I see the lotus-lands of old,
    Where odorous breezes fall and rise,
    And mountains, peering in the skies,
        Stand ankle-deep in lakes of gold.

    And, spangled with the shine and shade,
        I see the rivers raveled out
    In strands of silver, slowly fade
    In threads of light along the glade
        Where truant roses hide and pout.

    The tamarind on gleaming sands
        Droops drowsily beneath the heat;
    And bowed as though aweary, stands
    The stately palm, with lazy hands
        That fold their shadows round his feet.

    And mistily, as through a veil,
        I catch the glances of a sea
    Of sapphire, dimpled with a gale
    Toward Colch's blowing, where the sail
        Of Jason's Argo beckons me.

    And gazing on and farther yet,
        I see the isles enchanted, bright
    With fretted spire and parapet,
    And gilded mosque and minaret,
        That glitter in the crimson light.

    But as I gaze, the city's walls
        Are keenly smitten with a gleam
    Of pallid splendor, that appalls
    The fancy as the ruin falls
        In ashen embers of a dream.

    Yet over all the waking earth
        The tears of night are brushed away,
    And eyes are lit with love and mirth,
    And benisons of richest worth
        Go up to bless the new-born day.


    DAS KRIST KINDEL



    I had fed the fire and stirred it, till the sparkles in delight
    Snapped their saucy little fingers at the chill December night;
    And in dressing-gown and slippers, I had tilted back "my
    throne"—
    The old split-bottomed rocker—and was musing all alone.

    I could hear the hungry Winter prowling round the outer door,
    And the tread of muffled footsteps on the white piazza floor;
    But the sounds came to me only as the murmur of a stream
    That mingled with the current of a lazy-flowing dream.

    Like a fragrant incense rising, curled the smoke of my cigar,
    With the lamplight gleaming through it like a mist-enfolded
    star;—
    And as I gazed, the vapor like a curtain rolled away,
    With a sound of bells that tinkled, and the clatter of a sleigh.

    And in a vision, painted like a picture in the air,
    I saw the elfish figure of a man with frosty hair—
    A quaint old man that chuckled with a laugh as he appeared,
    And with ruddy cheeks like embers in the ashes of his beard.

    He poised himself grotesquely, in an attitude of mirth,
    On a damask-covered hassock that was sitting on the hearth;
    And at a magic signal of his stubby little thumb,
    I saw the fireplace changing to a bright proscenium.

    And looking there, I marveled as I saw a mimic stage
    Alive with little actors of a very tender age;
    And some so very tiny that they tottered as they walked,
    And lisped and purled and gurgled like the brooklets, when they
    talked.

    And their faces were like lilies, and their eyes like purest dew,
    And their tresses like the shadows that the shine is woven
    through;
    And they each had little burdens, and a little tale to tell
    Of fairy lore, and giants, and delights delectable.

    And they mixed and intermingled, weaving melody with joy,
    Till the magic circle clustered round a blooming baby-boy;
    And they threw aside their treasures in an ecstacy of glee,
    And bent, with dazzled faces and with parted lips, to see.

    'Twas a wondrous little fellow, with a dainty double-chin,
    And chubby cheeks, and dimples for the smiles to blossom in;
    And he looked as ripe and rosy, on his bed of straw and reeds,
    As a mellow little pippin that had tumbled in the weeds.

    And I saw the happy mother, and a group surrounding her
    That knelt with costly presents of frankincense and myrrh;
    And I thrilled with awe and wonder, as a murmur on the air
    Came drifting o'er the hearing in a melody of prayer:—

    'By the splendor in the heavens, and the hush upon the sea,
    And the majesty of silence reigning over Galilee,—
    We feel Thy kingly presence, and we humbly bow the knee
    And lift our hearts and voices in gratefulness to Thee.

    Thy messenger has spoken, and our doubts have fled and gone
    As the dark and spectral shadows of the night before the dawn;
    And, in the kindly shelter of the light around us drawn,
    We would nestle down forever in the breast we lean upon.

    You have given us a shepherd—You have given us a guide,
    And the light of Heaven grew dimmer when You sent him from Your
    side,—
    But he comes to lead Thy children where the gates will open wide
    To welcome his returning when his works are glorified.

    By the splendor in the heavens, and the hush upon the sea,
    And the majesty of silence reigning over Galilee,—
    We feel Thy kingly presence, and we humbly bow the knee
    And lift our hearts and voices in gratefulness to Thee.'

    Then the vision, slowly failing, with the words of the refrain,
    Fell swooning in the moonlight through the frosty window-pane;
    And I heard the clock proclaiming, like an eager sentinel
    Who brings the world good tidings,—"It is Christmas—all is
    well!"


    AN OLD YEAR'S ADDRESS



    "I have twankled the strings of the twinkering rain;
        I have burnished the meteor's mail;
            I have bridled the wind
            When he whinnied and whined
        With a bunch of stars tied to his tail;
    But my sky-rocket hopes, hanging over the past,
    Must fuzzle and fazzle and fizzle at last!"

    I had waded far out in a drizzling dream,
        And my fancies had spattered my eyes
            With a vision of dread,
            With a number ten head,
        And a form of diminutive size—
    That wavered and wagged in a singular way
    As he wound himself up and proceeded to say,—

    "I have trimmed all my corns with the blade of the moon;
        I have picked every tooth with a star:
            And I thrill to recall
            That I went through it all
        Like a tune through a tickled guitar.
    I have ripped up the rainbow and raveled the ends
    When the sun and myself were particular friends."

    And pausing again, and producing a sponge
        And wiping the tears from his eyes,
            He sank in a chair
            With a technical air
        That he struggled in vain to disguise,—
    For a sigh that he breathed, as I over him leant,
    Was haunted and hot with a peppermint scent.

    "Alas!" he continued in quavering tones
        As a pang rippled over his face,
            "The life was too fast
            For the pleasure to last
        In my very unfortunate case;
    And I'm going"—he said as he turned to adjust
    A fuse in his bosom,—"I'm going to—BUST!"

    I shrieked and awoke with the sullen che-boom
        Of a five-pounder filling my ears;
            And a roseate bloom
            Of a light in the room
        I saw through the mist of my tears,—
    But my guest of the night never saw the display,
    He had fuzzled and fazzled and fizzled away!


    A NEW YEAR'S PLAINT



    In words like weeds, I'll wrap me o'er,
        Like coarsest clothes against the cold;
        But that large grief which these enfold
    Is given in outline and no more.
                             —TENNYSON.

    The bells that lift their yawning throats
        And lolling tongues with wrangling cries
    Flung up in harsh, discordant notes,
        As though in anger, at the skies,—
    Are filled with echoings replete,
        With purest tinkles of delight—
    So I would have a something sweet
        Ring in the song I sing to-night.

    As when a blotch of ugly guise
        On some poor artist's naked floor
    Becomes a picture in his eyes,
        And he forgets that he is poor,—
    So I look out upon the night,
        That ushers in the dawning year,
    And in a vacant blur of light
        I see these fantasies appear.

    I see a home whose windows gleam
        Like facets of a mighty gem
    That some poor king's distorted dream
        Has fastened in his diadem.
    And I behold a throng that reels
        In revelry of dance and mirth,
    With hearts of love beneath their heels,
        And in their bosoms hearts of earth.

    O Luxury, as false and grand
        As in the mystic tales of old,
    When genii answered man's command,
        And built of nothing halls of gold!
    O Banquet, bright with pallid jets,
        And tropic blooms, and vases caught
    In palms of naked statuettes,
        Ye can not color as ye ought!

    For, crouching in the storm without,
        I see the figure of a child,
    In little ragged roundabout,
        Who stares with eyes that never smiled—
    And he, in fancy can but taste
        The dainties of the kingly fare,
    And pick the crumbs that go to waste
        Where none have learned to kneel in prayer.

    Go, Pride, and throw your goblet down—
        The "merry greeting" best appears
    On loving lips that never drown
        Its worth but in the wine of tears;
    Go, close your coffers like your hearts,
        And shut your hearts against the poor,
    Go, strut through all your pretty parts
        But take the "Welcome" from your door.


    LUTHER BENSON



    AFTER READING HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY

    POOR victim of that vulture curse
    That hovers o'er the universe,
    With ready talons quick to strike
    In every human heart alike,
    And cruel beak to stab and tear
    In virtue's vitals everywhere,—
    You need no sympathy of mine
    To aid you, for a strength divine
    Encircles you, and lifts you clear
    Above this earthly atmosphere.

    And yet I can but call you poor,
    As, looking through the open door
    Of your sad life, I only see
    A broad landscape of misery,
    And catch through mists of pitying tears
    The ruins of your younger years,
    I see a father's shielding arm
    Thrown round you in a wild alarm—
    Struck down, and powerless to free
    Or aid you in your agony.

    I see a happy home grow dark
    And desolate—the latest spark
    Of hope is passing in eclipse—
    The prayer upon a mother's lips
    Has fallen with her latest breath
    In ashes on the lips of death—
    I see a penitent who reels,
    And writhes, and clasps his hands, and kneels,
    And moans for mercy for the sake
    Of that fond heart he dared to break.

    And lo! as when in Galilee
    A voice above the troubled sea
    Commanded "Peace; be still!" the flood
    That rolled in tempest-waves of blood
    Within you, fell in calm so sweet
    It ripples round the Saviour's feet;
    And all your noble nature thrilled
    With brightest hope and faith, and filled
    Your thirsty soul with joy and peace
    And praise to Him who gave release.


    "DREAM"



    Because her eyes were far too deep
    And holy for a laugh to leap
    Across the brink where sorrow tried
    To drown within the amber tide;
    Because the looks, whose ripples kissed
    The trembling lids through tender mist,
    Were dazzled with a radiant gleam—
    Because of this I called her "Dream."

    Because the roses growing wild
    About her features when she smiled
    Were ever dewed with tears that fell
    With tenderness ineffable;
    Because her lips might spill a kiss
    That, dripping in a world like this,
    Would tincture death's myrrh-bitter stream
    To sweetness—so I called her "Dream."

    Because I could not understand
    The magic touches of a hand
    That seemed, beneath her strange control,
    To smooth the plumage of the soul
    And calm it, till, with folded wings,
    It half forgot its flutterings,
    And, nestled in her palm, did seem
    To trill a song that called her "Dream."

    Because I saw her, in a sleep
    As dark and desolate and deep
    And fleeting as the taunting night
    That flings a vision of delight
    To some lorn martyr as he lies
    In slumber ere the day he dies—
    Because she vanished like a gleam
    Of glory, do I call her "Dream."


    WHEN EVENING SHADOWS FALL



    When evening shadows fall,
        She hangs her cares away
    Like empty garments on the wall
        That hides her from the day;
    And while old memories throng,
        And vanished voices call,
    She lifts her grateful heart in song
        When evening shadows fall.

    Her weary hands forget
        The burdens of the day.
    The weight of sorrow and regret
        In music rolls away;
    And from the day's dull tomb,
        That holds her in its thrall,
    Her soul springs up in lily bloom
        When evening shadows fall.

    O weary heart and hand,
        Go bravely to the strife—
    No victory is half so grand
        As that which conquers life!
    One day shall yet be thine—
        The day that waits for all
    Whose prayerful eyes are things divine
        When evening shadows fall.


    YLLADMAR



    Her hair was, oh, so dense a blur
    Of darkness, midnight envied her;
    And stars grew dimmer in the skies
    To see the glory of her eyes;
    And all the summer rain of light
    That showered from the moon at night
    Fell o'er her features as the gloom
    Of twilight o'er a lily-bloom.

    The crimson fruitage of her lips
    Was ripe and lush with sweeter wine
    Than burgundy or muscadine
    Or vintage that the burgher sips
    In some old garden on the Rhine:
    And I to taste of it could well
    Believe my heart a crucible
    Of molten love—and I could feel
    The drunken soul within me reel
    And rock and stagger till it fell.

    And do you wonder that I bowed
    Before her splendor as a cloud
    Of storm the golden-sandaled sun
    Had set his conquering foot upon?
    And did she will it, I could lie
    In writhing rapture down and die
    A death so full of precious pain
    I'd waken up to die again.


    A FANTASY



    A fantasy that came to me
        As wild and wantonly designed
    As ever any dream might be
        Unraveled from a madman's mind,—
    A tangle-work of tissue, wrought
        By cunning of the spider-brain,
        And woven, in an hour of pain,
    To trap the giddy flies of thought.

    I stood beneath a summer moon
        All swollen to uncanny girth,
    And hanging, like the sun at noon,
        Above the center of the earth;
        But with a sad and sallow light,
        As it had sickened of the night
    And fallen in a pallid swoon.
    Around me I could hear the rush
        Of sullen winds, and feel the whir
    Of unseen wings apast me brush
        Like phantoms round a sepulcher;
    And, like a carpeting of plush,0
        A lawn unrolled beneath my feet,
        Bespangled o'er with flowers as sweet
        To look upon as those that nod
        Within the garden-fields of God,
        But odorless as those that blow
        In ashes in the shades below.

    And on my hearing fell a storm
        Of gusty music, sadder yet
        Than every whimper of regret
    That sobbing utterance could form,
        And patched with scraps of sound that seemed
        Torn out of tunes that demons dreamed,
        And pitched to such a piercing key,
        It stabbed the ear with agony;
        And when at last it lulled and died,
        I stood aghast and terrified.
    I shuddered and I shut my eyes,
        And still could see, and feel aware
        Some mystic presence waited there;
    And staring, with a dazed surprise,
        I saw a creature so divine
        That never subtle thought of mine
        May reproduce to inner sight
        So fair a vision of delight.

    A syllable of dew that drips
    From out a lily's laughing lips
    Could not be sweeter than the word
    I listened to, yet never heard.—
    For, oh, the woman hiding there
    Within the shadows of her hair,
    Spake to me in an undertone
    So delicate, my soul alone
    But understood it as a moan
    Of some weak melody of wind
    A heavenward breeze had left behind.

    A tracery of trees, grotesque
        Against the sky, behind her seen,
    Like shapeless shapes of arabesque
        Wrought in an Oriental screen;
    And tall, austere and statuesque
        She loomed before it—e'en as though
        The spirit-hand of Angelo
        Had chiseled her to life complete,
        With chips of moonshine round her feet.
    And I grew jealous of the dusk,
        To see it softly touch her face,
        As lover-like, with fond embrace,
    It folded round her like a husk:
    But when the glitter of her hand,
        Like wasted glory, beckoned me,
        My eyes grew blurred and dull and dim—
        My vision failed—I could not see—
    I could not stir—I could but stand,
        Till, quivering in every limb,
        I flung me prone, as though to swim
        The tide of grass whose waves of green
        Went rolling ocean-wide between
        My helpless shipwrecked heart and her
        Who claimed me for a worshiper.

    And writhing thus in my despair,
        I heard a weird, unearthly sound,
        That seemed to lift me from the ground
    And hold me floating in the air.
    I looked, and lo! I saw her bow
        Above a harp within her hands;
    A crown of blossoms bound her brow,
        And on her harp were twisted strands
    Of silken starlight, rippling o'er
    With music never heard before
    By mortal ears; and, at the strain,
    I felt my Spirit snap its chain
    And break away,—and I could see
    It as it turned and fled from me
    To greet its mistress, where she smiled
    To see the phantom dancing wild
    And wizard-like before the spell
    Her mystic fingers knew so well.


    A DREAM



    I dreamed I was a spider;
    A big, fat, hungry spider;
    A lusty, rusty spider
        With a dozen palsied limbs;
    With a dozen limbs that dangled
    Where three wretched flies were tangled
    And their buzzing wings were strangled
        In the middle of their hymns.

    And I mocked them like a demon—
    A demoniacal demon
    Who delights to be a demon
        For the sake of sin alone;
    And with fondly false embraces
    Did I weave my mystic laces
    Round their horror-stricken faces
        Till I muffled every groan.

    And I smiled to see them weeping,
    For to see an insect weeping,
    Sadly, sorrowfully weeping,
        Fattens every spider's mirth;
    And to note a fly's heart quaking,
    And with anguish ever aching
    Till you see it slowly breaking
        Is the sweetest thing on earth.

    I experienced a pleasure,
    Such a highly-flavored pleasure,
    Such intoxicating pleasure,
        That I drank of it like wine;
    And my mortal soul engages
    That no spider on the pages
    Of the history of ages
        Felt a rapture more divine.

    I careened around and capered—
    Madly, mystically capered—
    For three days and nights I capered
        Round my web in wild delight;
    Till with fierce ambition burning,
    And an inward thirst and yearning
    I hastened my returning
        With a fiendish appetite.

    And I found my victims dying,
    "Ha!" they whispered, "we are dying!"
    Faintly whispered, "we are dying,
        And our earthly course is run."
    And the scene was so impressing
    That I breathed a special blessing,
    As I killed them with caressing
        And devoured them one by one.


    DREAMER, SAY



    Dreamer, say, will you dream for me
        A wild sweet dream of a foreign land,
    Whose border sips of a foaming sea
        With lips of coral and silver sand;
    Where warm winds loll on the shady deeps,
        Or lave themselves in the tearful mist
    The great wild wave of the breaker weeps
        O'er crags of opal and amethyst?

    Dreamer, say, will you dream a dream
        Of tropic shades in the lands of shine,
    Where the lily leans o'er an amber stream
        That flows like a rill of wasted wine,—
    Where the palm-trees, lifting their shields of green,
        Parry the shafts of the Indian sun
    Whose splintering vengeance falls between
        The reeds below where the waters run?

    Dreamer, say, will you dream of love
        That lives in a land of sweet perfume,
    Where the stars drip down from the skies above
        In molten spatters of bud and bloom?
    Where never the weary eyes are wet,
        And never a sob in the balmy air,
    And only the laugh of the paroquet
        Breaks the sleep of the silence there?


    BRYANT



    The harp has fallen from the master's hand;
    Mute is the music, voiceless are the strings,
        Save such faint discord as the wild wind flings
    In sad aeolian murmurs through the land.
    The tide of melody, whose billows grand
        Flowed o'er the world in clearest utterings,
        Now, in receding current, sobs and sings
    That song we never wholly understand.
    * * O, eyes where glorious prophecies belong,
        And gracious reverence to humbly bow,
    And kingly spirit, proud, and pure, and strong;
        O, pallid minstrel with the laureled brow,
    And lips so long attuned to sacred song,
        How sweet must be the Heavenly anthem now!


    BABYHOOD



    Heigh-ho! Babyhood! Tell me where you linger!
        Let's toddle home again, for we have gone astray;
    Take this eager hand of mine and lead me by the finger
        Back to the lotus-lands of the far-away!

    Turn back the leaves of life.—Don't read the story.—
        Let's find the pictures, and fancy all the rest;
    We can fill the written pages with a brighter glory
        Than old Time, the story-teller, at his very best.

    Turn to the brook where the honeysuckle tipping
        O'er its vase of perfume spills it on the breeze,
    And the bee and humming-bird in ecstacy are sipping
        From the fairy flagons of the blooming locust-trees.

    Turn to the lane where we used to "teeter-totter,"
        Printing little foot-palms in the mellow mold—
    Laughing at the lazy cattle wading in the water
        Where the ripples dimple round the buttercups of gold;

    Where the dusky turtle lies basking on the gravel
        Of the sunny sand-bar in the middle tide,
    And the ghostly dragon-fly pauses in his travel
        To rest like a blossom where the water-lily died.

    Heigh-ho! Babyhood! Tell me where you linger!
        Let's toddle home again, for we have gone astray;
    Take this eager hand of mine and lead me by the finger
        Back to the lotus-lands of the far-away!


    LIBERTY



    NEW CASTLE, JULY 4, 1878

    For a hundred years the pulse of time
        Has throbbed for Liberty;
    For a hundred years the grand old clime
        Columbia has been free;
            For a hundred years our country's love,
            The Stars and Stripes, has waved above.

    Away far out on the gulf of years—
        Misty and faint and white
    Through the fogs of wrong—a sail appears,
        And the Mayflower heaves in sight,
            And drifts again, with its little flock
            Of a hundred souls, on Plymouth Rock.

    Do you see them there—as long, long since—
        Through the lens of History;
    Do you see them there as their chieftain prints
        In the snow his bended knee,
            And lifts his voice through the wintry blast
            In thanks for a peaceful home at last?

    Though the skies are dark and the coast is bleak,
        And the storm is wild and fierce,
    Its frozen flake on the upturned cheek
        Of the Pilgrim melts in tears,
            And the dawn that springs from the darkness there
            Is the morning light of an answered prayer.

    The morning light of the day of Peace
        That gladdens the aching eyes,
    And gives to the soul that sweet release
        That the present verifies,—
            Nor a snow so deep, nor a wind so chill
            To quench the flame of a freeman's will!

    II

    Days of toil when the bleeding hand
        Of the pioneer grew numb,
    When the untilled tracts of the barren land
        Where the weary ones had come
            Could offer nought from a fruitful soil
            To stay the strength of the stranger's toil.

    Days of pain, when the heart beat low,
        And the empty hours went by
    Pitiless, with the wail of woe
        And the moan of Hunger's cry—
            When the trembling hands upraised in prayer
            Had only the strength to hold them there.

    Days when the voice of hope had fled—
        Days when the eyes grown weak
    Were folded to, and the tears they shed
        Were frost on a frozen cheek—
            When the storm bent down from the skies and gave
            A shroud of snow for the Pilgrim's grave.

    Days at last when the smiling sun
        Glanced down from a summer sky,
    And a music rang where the rivers run,
        And the waves went laughing by;
            And the rose peeped over the mossy bank
            While the wild deer stood in the stream and drank.

    And the birds sang out so loud and good,
        In a symphony so clear
    And pure and sweet that the woodman stood
        With his ax upraised to hear,
            And to shape the words of the tongue unknown
            Into a language all his own—


         1

    'Sing! every bird, to-day!
        Sing for the sky so clear,
        And the gracious breath of the atmosphere
    Shall waft our cares away.
    Sing! sing! for the sunshine free;
    Sing through the land from sea to sea;
    Lift each voice in the highest key
            And sing for Liberty!'


         2

    'Sing for the arms that fling
        Their fetters in the dust
        And lift their hands in higher trust
    Unto the one Great King;
    Sing for the patriot heart and hand;
    Sing for the country they have planned;
    Sing that the world may understand
            This is Freedom's land!'


         3

    'Sing in the tones of prayer,
        Sing till the soaring soul
        Shall float above the world's control
    In freedom everywhere!
    Sing for the good that is to be,
    Sing for the eyes that are to see
    The land where man at last is free,
            O sing for liberty!'

    III

    A holy quiet reigned, save where the hand
    Of labor sent a murmur through the land,
    And happy voices in a harmony
    Taught every lisping breeze a melody.
    A nest of cabins, where the smoke upcurled
    A breathing incense to the other world.
    A land of languor from the sun of noon,
    That fainted slowly to the pallid moon,
    Till stars, thick-scattered in the garden-land
    Of Heaven by the great Jehovah's hand,
    Had blossomed into light to look upon
    The dusky warrior with his arrow drawn,
    As skulking from the covert of the night
    With serpent cunning and a fiend's delight,
    With murderous spirit, and a yell of hate
    The voice of Hell might tremble to translate:
    When the fond mother's tender lullaby
    Went quavering in shrieks all suddenly,
    And baby-lips were dabbled with the stain
    Of crimson at the bosom of the slain,
    And peaceful homes and fortunes ruined—lost
    In smoldering embers of the holocaust.
    Yet on and on, through years of gloom and strife,
    Our country struggled into stronger life;
    Till colonies, like footprints in the sand,
    Marked Freedom's pathway winding through the land—
    And not the footprints to be swept away
    Before the storm we hatched in Boston Bay,—
    But footprints where the path of war begun
    That led to Bunker Hill and Lexington,—
    For he who "dared to lead where others dared
    To follow" found the promise there declared
    Of Liberty, in blood of Freedom's host
    Baptized to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost!

    Oh, there were times when every patriot breast
    Was riotous with sentiments expressed
    In tones that swelled in volume till the sound
    Of lusty war itself was well-nigh drowned.
    Oh, those were times when happy eyes with tears
    Brimmed o'er as all the misty doubts and fears
    Were washed away, and Hope with gracious mien,
    Reigned from her throne again a sovereign queen.
    Until at last, upon a day like this
    When flowers were blushing at the summer's kiss,
    And when the sky was cloudless as the face
    Of some sweet infant in its angel grace,—
    There came a sound of music, thrown afloat
    Upon the balmy air—a clanging note
    Reiterated from the brazen throat
    Of Independence Bell: A sound so sweet,
    The clamoring throngs of people in the streets
    Were stilled as at the solemn voice of prayer,
    And heads were bowed, and lips were moving there
    That made no sound—until the spell had passed,
    And then, as when all sudden comes the blast
    Of some tornado, came the cheer on cheer
    Of every eager voice, while far and near
    The echoing bells upon the atmosphere
    Set glorious rumors floating, till the ear
    Of every listening patriot tingled clear,
    And thrilled with joy and jubilee to hear.

             I

    'Stir all your echoes up,
        O Independence Bell,
    And pour from your inverted cup
        The song we love so well.

    'Lift high your happy voice,
        And swing your iron tongue
    Till syllables of praise rejoice
        That never yet were sung.

    'Ring in the gleaming dawn
        Of Freedom—Toll the knell
    Of Tyranny, and then ring on,
        O Independence Bell.—

    'Ring on, and drown the moan,
        Above the patriot slain,
    Till sorrow's voice shall catch the tone
        And join the glad refrain.

    'Ring out the wounds of wrong
        And rankle in the breast;
    Your music like a slumber-song
        Will lull revenge to rest.

    'Ring out from Occident
        To Orient, and peal
    From continent to continent
        The mighty joy you feel.

    'Ring! Independence Bell!
        Ring on till worlds to be
    Shall listen to the tale you tell
        Of love and Liberty!'

    IV

    O Liberty—the dearest word
    A bleeding country ever heard,—
    We lay our hopes upon thy shrine
    And offer up our lives for thine.
    You gave us many happy years
    Of peace and plenty ere the tears
    A mourning country wept were dried
    Above the graves of those who died
    Upon thy threshold. And again
    When newer wars were bred, and men
    Went marching in the cannon's breath
    And died for thee and loved the death,
    While, high above them, gleaming bright,
    The dear old flag remained in sight,
    And lighted up their dying eyes
    With smiles that brightened paradise.
    O Liberty, it is thy power
    To gladden us in every hour
    Of gloom, and lead us by thy hand
    As little children through a land
    Of bud and blossom; while the days
    Are filled with sunshine, and thy praise
    Is warbled in the roundelays
    Of joyous birds, and in the song
    Of waters, murmuring along
    The paths of peace, whose flowery fringe
    Has roses finding deeper tinge
    Of crimson, looking on themselves
    Reflected—leaning from the shelves
    Of cliff and crag and mossy mound
    Of emerald splendor shadow-drowned.—
    We hail thy presence, as you come
    With bugle blast and rolling drum,
    And booming guns and shouts of glee
    Commingled in a symphony
    That thrills the worlds that throng to see
    The glory of thy pageantry.
    0And with thy praise, we breathe a prayer
    That God who leaves you in our care
    May favor us from this day on
    With thy dear presence—till the dawn
    Of Heaven, breaking on thy face,
    Lights up thy first abiding place.


    TOM VAN ARDEN



    Tom Van Arden, my old friend,
        Our warm fellowship is one
    Far too old to comprehend
        Where its bond was first begun:
            Mirage-like before my gaze
            Gleams a land of other days,
            Where two truant boys, astray,
            Dream their lazy lives away.

    There's a vision, in the guise
        Of Midsummer, where the Past
    Like a weary beggar lies
        In the shadow Time has cast;
            And as blends the bloom of trees
            With the drowsy hum of bees,
            Fragrant thoughts and murmurs blend,
            Tom Van Arden, my old friend.

    Tom Van Arden, my old friend,
        All the pleasures we have known
    Thrill me now as I extend
        This old hand and grasp your own—
            Feeling, in the rude caress,
            All affection's tenderness;
            Feeling, though the touch be rough,
            Our old souls are soft enough.

    So we'll make a mellow hour:
        Fill your pipe, and taste the wine—
    Warp your face, if it be sour,
        I can spare a smile from mine;
            If it sharpen up your wit,
            Let me feel the edge of it—
            I have eager ears to lend,
            Tom Van Arden, my old friend.

    Tom Van Arden, my old friend,
        Are we "lucky dogs," indeed?
    Are we all that we pretend
        In the jolly life we lead?—
            Bachelors, we must confess,
            Boast of "single blessedness"
            To the world, but not alone—
            Man's best sorrow is his own!

    And the saddest truth is this,—
        Life to us has never proved
    What we tasted in the kiss
        Of the women we have loved:
            Vainly we congratulate
            Our escape from such a fate
                As their lying lips could send,
            Tom Van Arden, my old friend!

    Tom Van Arden, my old friend,
        Hearts, like fruit upon the stem,
    Ripen sweetest, I contend,
        As the frost falls over them:
            Your regard for me to-day
            Makes November taste of May,
            And through every vein of rhyme
            Pours the blood of summer-time.

    When our souls are cramped with youth
        Happiness seems far away
    In the future, while, in truth,

        We look back on it to-day
            Through our tears, nor dare to boast,—
            "Better to have loved and lost!"
            Broken hearts are hard to mend,
            Tom Van Arden, my old friend.

    Tom Van Arden, my old friend,
        I grow prosy, and you tire;
    Fill the glasses while I bend
        To prod up the failing fire. . . .
            You are restless:—I presume
            There's a dampness in the room.—
            Much of warmth our nature begs,
            With rheumatics in our legs! . . .

    Humph! the legs we used to fling
        Limber-jointed in the dance,
    When we heard the fiddle ring
        Up the curtain of Romance,
            And in crowded public halls
            Played with hearts like jugglers' balls.—
            FEATS OF MOUNTEBANKS, DEPEND!—
            Tom Van Arden, my old friend.

    Tom Van Arden, my old friend,
        Pardon, then, this theme of mine:
    While the firelight leaps to lend
        Higher color to the wine,—
            I propose a health to those
            Who have HOMES, and home's repose,
            Wife- and child-love without end!
            . . . Tom Van Arden, my old friend.