A LOVE SONG

IF I should die to-nightAnd you should come to my cold corpse and say,Weeping and heartsick o'er my lifeless clay—If I should die to-night,And you should come in deepest grief and woe—And say: "Here's that ten dollars that I owe,"I might arise in my large white cravatAnd say, "What's that?"If I should die to-nightAnd you should come to my cold corpse and kneel,Clasping my bier to show the grief you feel,I say, if I should die to-nightAnd you should come to me, and there and thenJust even hint 'bout paying me that ten,I might arise the while,But I'd drop dead again.Ben King.

IF I should die to-nightAnd you should come to my cold corpse and say,Weeping and heartsick o'er my lifeless clay—If I should die to-night,And you should come in deepest grief and woe—And say: "Here's that ten dollars that I owe,"I might arise in my large white cravatAnd say, "What's that?"If I should die to-nightAnd you should come to my cold corpse and kneel,Clasping my bier to show the grief you feel,I say, if I should die to-nightAnd you should come to me, and there and thenJust even hint 'bout paying me that ten,I might arise the while,But I'd drop dead again.Ben King.

IF I should die to-nightAnd you should come to my cold corpse and say,Weeping and heartsick o'er my lifeless clay—If I should die to-night,And you should come in deepest grief and woe—And say: "Here's that ten dollars that I owe,"I might arise in my large white cravatAnd say, "What's that?"

IF I should die to-night

And you should come to my cold corpse and say,

Weeping and heartsick o'er my lifeless clay—

If I should die to-night,

And you should come in deepest grief and woe—

And say: "Here's that ten dollars that I owe,"

I might arise in my large white cravat

And say, "What's that?"

If I should die to-nightAnd you should come to my cold corpse and kneel,Clasping my bier to show the grief you feel,I say, if I should die to-nightAnd you should come to me, and there and thenJust even hint 'bout paying me that ten,I might arise the while,But I'd drop dead again.Ben King.

If I should die to-night

And you should come to my cold corpse and kneel,

Clasping my bier to show the grief you feel,

I say, if I should die to-night

And you should come to me, and there and then

Just even hint 'bout paying me that ten,

I might arise the while,

But I'd drop dead again.

Ben King.

(In the modern taste, 1733)

FLUTTERING spread thy purple pinions,Gentle Cupid, o'er my heart;I, a slave in thy dominions;Nature must give way to art.Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,Nightly nodding o'er your flocks,See my weary days consumingAll beneath yon flowery rocks.Thus the Cyprian goddess weepingMourn'd Adonis, darling youth;Him the boar, in silence creeping,Gored with unrelenting tooth.Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers,Fair Discretion, string the lyre;Soothe my ever-waking slumbers;Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,Arm'd in adamantine chains,Lead me to the crystal mirrorsWatering soft Elysian plains.Mourning cypress, verdant willow,Gilding my Aurelia's brows,Morpheus hovering o'er my pillow,Hear me pay my dying vows.Melancholy smooth Meander,Swiftly purling in a round,On thy margin lovers wander,With thy flowery chaplets crowned.Thus when Philomela droopingSoftly seeks her silent mate,See the bird of Juno stooping;Melody resigns to fate.Dean Swift.

FLUTTERING spread thy purple pinions,Gentle Cupid, o'er my heart;I, a slave in thy dominions;Nature must give way to art.Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,Nightly nodding o'er your flocks,See my weary days consumingAll beneath yon flowery rocks.Thus the Cyprian goddess weepingMourn'd Adonis, darling youth;Him the boar, in silence creeping,Gored with unrelenting tooth.Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers,Fair Discretion, string the lyre;Soothe my ever-waking slumbers;Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,Arm'd in adamantine chains,Lead me to the crystal mirrorsWatering soft Elysian plains.Mourning cypress, verdant willow,Gilding my Aurelia's brows,Morpheus hovering o'er my pillow,Hear me pay my dying vows.Melancholy smooth Meander,Swiftly purling in a round,On thy margin lovers wander,With thy flowery chaplets crowned.Thus when Philomela droopingSoftly seeks her silent mate,See the bird of Juno stooping;Melody resigns to fate.Dean Swift.

FLUTTERING spread thy purple pinions,Gentle Cupid, o'er my heart;I, a slave in thy dominions;Nature must give way to art.

FLUTTERING spread thy purple pinions,

Gentle Cupid, o'er my heart;

I, a slave in thy dominions;

Nature must give way to art.

Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,Nightly nodding o'er your flocks,See my weary days consumingAll beneath yon flowery rocks.

Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,

Nightly nodding o'er your flocks,

See my weary days consuming

All beneath yon flowery rocks.

Thus the Cyprian goddess weepingMourn'd Adonis, darling youth;Him the boar, in silence creeping,Gored with unrelenting tooth.

Thus the Cyprian goddess weeping

Mourn'd Adonis, darling youth;

Him the boar, in silence creeping,

Gored with unrelenting tooth.

Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers,Fair Discretion, string the lyre;Soothe my ever-waking slumbers;Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.

Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers,

Fair Discretion, string the lyre;

Soothe my ever-waking slumbers;

Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.

Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,Arm'd in adamantine chains,Lead me to the crystal mirrorsWatering soft Elysian plains.

Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,

Arm'd in adamantine chains,

Lead me to the crystal mirrors

Watering soft Elysian plains.

Mourning cypress, verdant willow,Gilding my Aurelia's brows,Morpheus hovering o'er my pillow,Hear me pay my dying vows.

Mourning cypress, verdant willow,

Gilding my Aurelia's brows,

Morpheus hovering o'er my pillow,

Hear me pay my dying vows.

Melancholy smooth Meander,Swiftly purling in a round,On thy margin lovers wander,With thy flowery chaplets crowned.

Melancholy smooth Meander,

Swiftly purling in a round,

On thy margin lovers wander,

With thy flowery chaplets crowned.

Thus when Philomela droopingSoftly seeks her silent mate,See the bird of Juno stooping;Melody resigns to fate.Dean Swift.

Thus when Philomela drooping

Softly seeks her silent mate,

See the bird of Juno stooping;

Melody resigns to fate.

Dean Swift.

WHEN that old joke was new,It was not hard to joke,And puns we now pooh-pooh,Great laughter would provoke.True wit was seldom heard,And humor shown by few,When reign'd King George the Third,And that old joke was new.It passed indeed for wit,Did this achievement rare,When down your friend would sit,To steal away his chair.You brought him to the floor,You bruised him black and blue,And this would cause a roar,When your old joke was new.W. M. Thackeray.

WHEN that old joke was new,It was not hard to joke,And puns we now pooh-pooh,Great laughter would provoke.True wit was seldom heard,And humor shown by few,When reign'd King George the Third,And that old joke was new.It passed indeed for wit,Did this achievement rare,When down your friend would sit,To steal away his chair.You brought him to the floor,You bruised him black and blue,And this would cause a roar,When your old joke was new.W. M. Thackeray.

WHEN that old joke was new,It was not hard to joke,And puns we now pooh-pooh,Great laughter would provoke.

WHEN that old joke was new,

It was not hard to joke,

And puns we now pooh-pooh,

Great laughter would provoke.

True wit was seldom heard,And humor shown by few,When reign'd King George the Third,And that old joke was new.

True wit was seldom heard,

And humor shown by few,

When reign'd King George the Third,

And that old joke was new.

It passed indeed for wit,Did this achievement rare,When down your friend would sit,To steal away his chair.

It passed indeed for wit,

Did this achievement rare,

When down your friend would sit,

To steal away his chair.

You brought him to the floor,You bruised him black and blue,And this would cause a roar,When your old joke was new.W. M. Thackeray.

You brought him to the floor,

You bruised him black and blue,

And this would cause a roar,

When your old joke was new.

W. M. Thackeray.

(Being suggestions of the various styles in which an old theme might have been treated by certain metrical composers)

The original theme as John Howard Payne wrote it:

MID pleasures and palaces though we may roam,Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home!A charm from the skies seems to hallow it there,Which, seek through the world, is not met with elsewhere.Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!There's no place like Home!An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain!Oh, give me my lowly thatched cottage again!The birds singing gaily that came at my call!Give me them! and the peace of mind, dearer than all.Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!There's no place like Home!

MID pleasures and palaces though we may roam,Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home!A charm from the skies seems to hallow it there,Which, seek through the world, is not met with elsewhere.Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!There's no place like Home!An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain!Oh, give me my lowly thatched cottage again!The birds singing gaily that came at my call!Give me them! and the peace of mind, dearer than all.Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!There's no place like Home!

MID pleasures and palaces though we may roam,Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home!A charm from the skies seems to hallow it there,Which, seek through the world, is not met with elsewhere.

MID pleasures and palaces though we may roam,

Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home!

A charm from the skies seems to hallow it there,

Which, seek through the world, is not met with elsewhere.

Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!There's no place like Home!

Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!

There's no place like Home!

An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain!Oh, give me my lowly thatched cottage again!The birds singing gaily that came at my call!Give me them! and the peace of mind, dearer than all.

An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain!

Oh, give me my lowly thatched cottage again!

The birds singing gaily that came at my call!

Give me them! and the peace of mind, dearer than all.

Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!There's no place like Home!

Home, home! Sweet, Sweet Home!

There's no place like Home!

(As Algernon Charles Swinburne might have wrapped it up in variations)

('Mid pleasures and palaces—)As sea-foam blown of the winds, as blossom of brine that is driftedHither and yon on the barren breast of the breeze,Though we wander on gusts of a god's breath, shaken and shifted,The salt of us stings and is sore for the sobbing seas.For home's sake hungry at heart, we sicken in pillared porchesOf bliss made sick for a life that is barren of bliss,For the place whereon is a light out of heaven that sears not nor scorches,Nor elsewhere than this.(An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain—)For here we know shall no gold thing glisten,No bright thing burn, and no sweet thing shine;Nor love lower never an ear to listenTo words that work in the heart like wine.What time we are set from our land apart,For pain of passion and hunger of heart,Though we walk with exiles fame faints to christen,Or sing at the Cytherean's shrine.(Variation: An exile from home—)Whether with him whose headOf gods is honored,With song made splendent in the sight of men—Whose heart most sweetly stout,From ravishing France cast out,Being firstly hers, was hers most wholly then—Or where on shining seas like wineThe dove's wings draw the drooping Erycine.(Give me my lowly thatched cottage—)For Joy finds Love grow bitter,And spreads his wings to quit her,At thought of birds that twitterBeneath the roof-tree's straw—Of birds that come for calling,No fear or fright appalling,When dews of dusk are falling,Or daylight's draperies draw.(Give me them, and the peace of mind—)Give me these things then back, though the givingBe at cost of earth's garner of gold;There is no life without these worth living,No treasure where these are not told.For the heart give the hope that it knows not,Give the balm for the burn of the breast—For the soul and the mind that repose not,Oh, give us a rest!

('Mid pleasures and palaces—)As sea-foam blown of the winds, as blossom of brine that is driftedHither and yon on the barren breast of the breeze,Though we wander on gusts of a god's breath, shaken and shifted,The salt of us stings and is sore for the sobbing seas.For home's sake hungry at heart, we sicken in pillared porchesOf bliss made sick for a life that is barren of bliss,For the place whereon is a light out of heaven that sears not nor scorches,Nor elsewhere than this.(An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain—)For here we know shall no gold thing glisten,No bright thing burn, and no sweet thing shine;Nor love lower never an ear to listenTo words that work in the heart like wine.What time we are set from our land apart,For pain of passion and hunger of heart,Though we walk with exiles fame faints to christen,Or sing at the Cytherean's shrine.(Variation: An exile from home—)Whether with him whose headOf gods is honored,With song made splendent in the sight of men—Whose heart most sweetly stout,From ravishing France cast out,Being firstly hers, was hers most wholly then—Or where on shining seas like wineThe dove's wings draw the drooping Erycine.(Give me my lowly thatched cottage—)For Joy finds Love grow bitter,And spreads his wings to quit her,At thought of birds that twitterBeneath the roof-tree's straw—Of birds that come for calling,No fear or fright appalling,When dews of dusk are falling,Or daylight's draperies draw.(Give me them, and the peace of mind—)Give me these things then back, though the givingBe at cost of earth's garner of gold;There is no life without these worth living,No treasure where these are not told.For the heart give the hope that it knows not,Give the balm for the burn of the breast—For the soul and the mind that repose not,Oh, give us a rest!

('Mid pleasures and palaces—)

('Mid pleasures and palaces—)

As sea-foam blown of the winds, as blossom of brine that is driftedHither and yon on the barren breast of the breeze,Though we wander on gusts of a god's breath, shaken and shifted,The salt of us stings and is sore for the sobbing seas.For home's sake hungry at heart, we sicken in pillared porchesOf bliss made sick for a life that is barren of bliss,For the place whereon is a light out of heaven that sears not nor scorches,Nor elsewhere than this.

As sea-foam blown of the winds, as blossom of brine that is drifted

Hither and yon on the barren breast of the breeze,

Though we wander on gusts of a god's breath, shaken and shifted,

The salt of us stings and is sore for the sobbing seas.

For home's sake hungry at heart, we sicken in pillared porches

Of bliss made sick for a life that is barren of bliss,

For the place whereon is a light out of heaven that sears not nor scorches,

Nor elsewhere than this.

(An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain—)

(An exile from home, splendor dazzles in vain—)

For here we know shall no gold thing glisten,No bright thing burn, and no sweet thing shine;Nor love lower never an ear to listenTo words that work in the heart like wine.What time we are set from our land apart,For pain of passion and hunger of heart,Though we walk with exiles fame faints to christen,Or sing at the Cytherean's shrine.

For here we know shall no gold thing glisten,

No bright thing burn, and no sweet thing shine;

Nor love lower never an ear to listen

To words that work in the heart like wine.

What time we are set from our land apart,

For pain of passion and hunger of heart,

Though we walk with exiles fame faints to christen,

Or sing at the Cytherean's shrine.

(Variation: An exile from home—)

(Variation: An exile from home—)

Whether with him whose headOf gods is honored,With song made splendent in the sight of men—Whose heart most sweetly stout,From ravishing France cast out,Being firstly hers, was hers most wholly then—Or where on shining seas like wineThe dove's wings draw the drooping Erycine.

Whether with him whose head

Of gods is honored,

With song made splendent in the sight of men—

Whose heart most sweetly stout,

From ravishing France cast out,

Being firstly hers, was hers most wholly then—

Or where on shining seas like wine

The dove's wings draw the drooping Erycine.

(Give me my lowly thatched cottage—)

(Give me my lowly thatched cottage—)

For Joy finds Love grow bitter,And spreads his wings to quit her,At thought of birds that twitterBeneath the roof-tree's straw—Of birds that come for calling,No fear or fright appalling,When dews of dusk are falling,Or daylight's draperies draw.

For Joy finds Love grow bitter,

And spreads his wings to quit her,

At thought of birds that twitter

Beneath the roof-tree's straw—

Of birds that come for calling,

No fear or fright appalling,

When dews of dusk are falling,

Or daylight's draperies draw.

(Give me them, and the peace of mind—)

(Give me them, and the peace of mind—)

Give me these things then back, though the givingBe at cost of earth's garner of gold;There is no life without these worth living,No treasure where these are not told.For the heart give the hope that it knows not,Give the balm for the burn of the breast—For the soul and the mind that repose not,Oh, give us a rest!

Give me these things then back, though the giving

Be at cost of earth's garner of gold;

There is no life without these worth living,

No treasure where these are not told.

For the heart give the hope that it knows not,

Give the balm for the burn of the breast—

For the soul and the mind that repose not,

Oh, give us a rest!

(As Mr. Francis Bret Harte might have woven it into a touching tale of a western gentleman in a red shirt)

Brown o' San Juan,Stranger, I'm Brown.Come up this mornin' from 'Frisco—Be'n a-saltin' my specie-stacks down.Be'n a-knockin' around,Fer a man from San Juan,Putty consid'able frequent—Jes' catch onter that streak o' the dawn!Right thar lies my home—Right thar in the red—I could slop over, stranger, in po'try—Would spread out old Shakspoke cold dead.Stranger, you freeze to this: there ain't no kinder gin-palace,Nor no variety-show lays over a man's own rancho.Maybe it hain't no style, but the Queen in the Tower o' London,Ain't got naathin' I'd swop for that house over thar on the hill-side.Thar is my ole gal, 'n' the kids, 'n' the rest o' my live-stock;Thar my Remington hangs, and thar there's a griddle-cake br'ilin'—For the two of us, pard—and thar, I allow, the heavensSmile more friendly-like than on any other locality.Stranger, nowhere else I don't take no satisfaction.Gimme my ranch, 'n' them friendly old Shanghai chickens—I brung the original pair f'm the States in eighteen-'n'-fifty—Gimme me them and the feelin' of solid domestic comfort.Yer parding, young man—But this landscape a kindEr flickers—I 'low 'twuz the po'try—I thought that my eyes hed gone blind.Take that pop from my belt!Hi, thar!—gimme yer han'—Or I'll kill myself—Lizzie—she's left me—Gone off with a purtier man!Thar, I'll quit—the ole galAn' the kids—run away!I be derned! Howsomever, come in, pard—The griddle-cake's thar, anyway.

Brown o' San Juan,Stranger, I'm Brown.Come up this mornin' from 'Frisco—Be'n a-saltin' my specie-stacks down.Be'n a-knockin' around,Fer a man from San Juan,Putty consid'able frequent—Jes' catch onter that streak o' the dawn!Right thar lies my home—Right thar in the red—I could slop over, stranger, in po'try—Would spread out old Shakspoke cold dead.Stranger, you freeze to this: there ain't no kinder gin-palace,Nor no variety-show lays over a man's own rancho.Maybe it hain't no style, but the Queen in the Tower o' London,Ain't got naathin' I'd swop for that house over thar on the hill-side.Thar is my ole gal, 'n' the kids, 'n' the rest o' my live-stock;Thar my Remington hangs, and thar there's a griddle-cake br'ilin'—For the two of us, pard—and thar, I allow, the heavensSmile more friendly-like than on any other locality.Stranger, nowhere else I don't take no satisfaction.Gimme my ranch, 'n' them friendly old Shanghai chickens—I brung the original pair f'm the States in eighteen-'n'-fifty—Gimme me them and the feelin' of solid domestic comfort.Yer parding, young man—But this landscape a kindEr flickers—I 'low 'twuz the po'try—I thought that my eyes hed gone blind.Take that pop from my belt!Hi, thar!—gimme yer han'—Or I'll kill myself—Lizzie—she's left me—Gone off with a purtier man!Thar, I'll quit—the ole galAn' the kids—run away!I be derned! Howsomever, come in, pard—The griddle-cake's thar, anyway.

Brown o' San Juan,Stranger, I'm Brown.Come up this mornin' from 'Frisco—Be'n a-saltin' my specie-stacks down.

Brown o' San Juan,

Stranger, I'm Brown.

Come up this mornin' from 'Frisco—

Be'n a-saltin' my specie-stacks down.

Be'n a-knockin' around,Fer a man from San Juan,Putty consid'able frequent—Jes' catch onter that streak o' the dawn!

Be'n a-knockin' around,

Fer a man from San Juan,

Putty consid'able frequent—

Jes' catch onter that streak o' the dawn!

Right thar lies my home—Right thar in the red—I could slop over, stranger, in po'try—Would spread out old Shakspoke cold dead.

Right thar lies my home—

Right thar in the red—

I could slop over, stranger, in po'try—

Would spread out old Shakspoke cold dead.

Stranger, you freeze to this: there ain't no kinder gin-palace,Nor no variety-show lays over a man's own rancho.Maybe it hain't no style, but the Queen in the Tower o' London,Ain't got naathin' I'd swop for that house over thar on the hill-side.

Stranger, you freeze to this: there ain't no kinder gin-palace,

Nor no variety-show lays over a man's own rancho.

Maybe it hain't no style, but the Queen in the Tower o' London,

Ain't got naathin' I'd swop for that house over thar on the hill-side.

Thar is my ole gal, 'n' the kids, 'n' the rest o' my live-stock;Thar my Remington hangs, and thar there's a griddle-cake br'ilin'—For the two of us, pard—and thar, I allow, the heavensSmile more friendly-like than on any other locality.

Thar is my ole gal, 'n' the kids, 'n' the rest o' my live-stock;

Thar my Remington hangs, and thar there's a griddle-cake br'ilin'—

For the two of us, pard—and thar, I allow, the heavens

Smile more friendly-like than on any other locality.

Stranger, nowhere else I don't take no satisfaction.Gimme my ranch, 'n' them friendly old Shanghai chickens—I brung the original pair f'm the States in eighteen-'n'-fifty—Gimme me them and the feelin' of solid domestic comfort.

Stranger, nowhere else I don't take no satisfaction.

Gimme my ranch, 'n' them friendly old Shanghai chickens—

I brung the original pair f'm the States in eighteen-'n'-fifty—

Gimme me them and the feelin' of solid domestic comfort.

Yer parding, young man—But this landscape a kindEr flickers—I 'low 'twuz the po'try—I thought that my eyes hed gone blind.

Yer parding, young man—

But this landscape a kind

Er flickers—I 'low 'twuz the po'try—

I thought that my eyes hed gone blind.

Take that pop from my belt!Hi, thar!—gimme yer han'—Or I'll kill myself—Lizzie—she's left me—Gone off with a purtier man!

Take that pop from my belt!

Hi, thar!—gimme yer han'—

Or I'll kill myself—Lizzie—she's left me—

Gone off with a purtier man!

Thar, I'll quit—the ole galAn' the kids—run away!I be derned! Howsomever, come in, pard—The griddle-cake's thar, anyway.

Thar, I'll quit—the ole gal

An' the kids—run away!

I be derned! Howsomever, come in, pard—

The griddle-cake's thar, anyway.

(As Austin Dobson might have translated it from Horace, if it had ever occurred to Horace to write it)

At home alone, O Nomades,Although Mæcenas' marble friezeStand not between you and the sky,Nor Persian luxury supplyIts rosy surfeit, find ye ease.Tempt not the far Ægean breeze;With home-made wine and books that please,To duns and bores the door deny,At home, alone.Strange joys may lure. Your deitiesSmile here alone. Oh, give me these:Low eaves, where birds familiar fly,And peace of mind, and, fluttering by,My Lydia's graceful draperies,At home, alone.

At home alone, O Nomades,Although Mæcenas' marble friezeStand not between you and the sky,Nor Persian luxury supplyIts rosy surfeit, find ye ease.Tempt not the far Ægean breeze;With home-made wine and books that please,To duns and bores the door deny,At home, alone.Strange joys may lure. Your deitiesSmile here alone. Oh, give me these:Low eaves, where birds familiar fly,And peace of mind, and, fluttering by,My Lydia's graceful draperies,At home, alone.

At home alone, O Nomades,Although Mæcenas' marble friezeStand not between you and the sky,Nor Persian luxury supplyIts rosy surfeit, find ye ease.

At home alone, O Nomades,

Although Mæcenas' marble frieze

Stand not between you and the sky,

Nor Persian luxury supply

Its rosy surfeit, find ye ease.

Tempt not the far Ægean breeze;With home-made wine and books that please,To duns and bores the door deny,At home, alone.

Tempt not the far Ægean breeze;

With home-made wine and books that please,

To duns and bores the door deny,

At home, alone.

Strange joys may lure. Your deitiesSmile here alone. Oh, give me these:Low eaves, where birds familiar fly,And peace of mind, and, fluttering by,My Lydia's graceful draperies,At home, alone.

Strange joys may lure. Your deities

Smile here alone. Oh, give me these:

Low eaves, where birds familiar fly,

And peace of mind, and, fluttering by,

My Lydia's graceful draperies,

At home, alone.

(As it might have been constructed in 1744, Oliver Goldsmith, at 19, writing the first stanza, and Alexander Pope, at 52, the second)

Home! at the word, what blissful visions rise,Lift us from earth, and draw toward the skies;'Mid mirag'd towers, or meretricious joys,Although we roam, one thought the mind employs:Or lowly hut, good friend, or loftiest dome,Earth knows no spot so holy as our Home.There, where affection warms the father's breast,There is the spot of heav'n most surely blest.Howe'er we search, though wandering with the windThrough frigid Zembla, or the heats of Ind,Not elsewhere may we seek, nor elsewhere know,The light of heaven upon our dark below.When from our dearest hope and haven reft,Delight nor dazzles, nor is luxury left,We long, obedient to our nature's law,To see again our hovel thatched with straw:See birds that know our avenaceous storeStoop to our hand, and thence repleted soar:But, of all hopes the wanderer's soul that share,His pristine peace of mind's his final prayer.

Home! at the word, what blissful visions rise,Lift us from earth, and draw toward the skies;'Mid mirag'd towers, or meretricious joys,Although we roam, one thought the mind employs:Or lowly hut, good friend, or loftiest dome,Earth knows no spot so holy as our Home.There, where affection warms the father's breast,There is the spot of heav'n most surely blest.Howe'er we search, though wandering with the windThrough frigid Zembla, or the heats of Ind,Not elsewhere may we seek, nor elsewhere know,The light of heaven upon our dark below.When from our dearest hope and haven reft,Delight nor dazzles, nor is luxury left,We long, obedient to our nature's law,To see again our hovel thatched with straw:See birds that know our avenaceous storeStoop to our hand, and thence repleted soar:But, of all hopes the wanderer's soul that share,His pristine peace of mind's his final prayer.

Home! at the word, what blissful visions rise,Lift us from earth, and draw toward the skies;'Mid mirag'd towers, or meretricious joys,Although we roam, one thought the mind employs:Or lowly hut, good friend, or loftiest dome,Earth knows no spot so holy as our Home.There, where affection warms the father's breast,There is the spot of heav'n most surely blest.Howe'er we search, though wandering with the windThrough frigid Zembla, or the heats of Ind,Not elsewhere may we seek, nor elsewhere know,The light of heaven upon our dark below.

Home! at the word, what blissful visions rise,

Lift us from earth, and draw toward the skies;

'Mid mirag'd towers, or meretricious joys,

Although we roam, one thought the mind employs:

Or lowly hut, good friend, or loftiest dome,

Earth knows no spot so holy as our Home.

There, where affection warms the father's breast,

There is the spot of heav'n most surely blest.

Howe'er we search, though wandering with the wind

Through frigid Zembla, or the heats of Ind,

Not elsewhere may we seek, nor elsewhere know,

The light of heaven upon our dark below.

When from our dearest hope and haven reft,Delight nor dazzles, nor is luxury left,We long, obedient to our nature's law,To see again our hovel thatched with straw:See birds that know our avenaceous storeStoop to our hand, and thence repleted soar:But, of all hopes the wanderer's soul that share,His pristine peace of mind's his final prayer.

When from our dearest hope and haven reft,

Delight nor dazzles, nor is luxury left,

We long, obedient to our nature's law,

To see again our hovel thatched with straw:

See birds that know our avenaceous store

Stoop to our hand, and thence repleted soar:

But, of all hopes the wanderer's soul that share,

His pristine peace of mind's his final prayer.

(As Walt Whitman might have written all around it)

You over there, young man with the guide-book, red-bound, covered flexibly with red linen,

Come here, I want to talk with you; I, Walt, the Manhattanese, citizen of these States, call you.

Yes, and the courier, too, smirking, smug-mouthed, with oil'd hair; a garlicky look about him generally; him, too, I take in, just as I would a coyote or a king, or a toad-stool, or a ham-sandwich, or anything, or anybody else in the world.

Where are you going?

You want to see Paris, to eat truffles, to have a good time; in Vienna, London, Florence, Monaco, to have a good time; you want to see Venice.

Come with me. I will give you a good time; I will give you all the Venice you want, and most of the Paris.

I, Walt, I call to you. I am all on deck! Come and loafe with me! Let me tote you around by your elbow and show you things.

You listen to my ophicleide!

Home!

Home, I celebrate. I elevate my fog-whistle, inspir'd by the thought of home.

Come in!—take a front seat; the jostle of the crowd not minding; there is room enough for all of you.

This is my exhibition—it is the greatest show on earth—there is no charge for admission.

All you have to pay me is to take in my romanza.

1. The brown-stone house; the father coming home worried from a bad day's business; the wife meets him in the marble pav'd vestibule; she throws her arms about him; she presses him close to her; she looks him full in the face with affectionate eyes; the frown from his brow disappearing.Darling, she says, Johnny has fallen down and cut his head; the cook is going away, and the boiler leaks.

2. The mechanic's dark little third-story room, seen in a flash from the Elevated Railway train; the sewing-machine in a corner; the small cook-stove; the whole family eating cabbage around a kerosene lamp; of the clatter and roar and groaning wail of the Elevated train unconscious; of the smell of the cabbage unconscious.Me, passant, in the train, of the cabbage not quite so unconscious.

3. The French Flat; the small rooms, all right-angles,unindividual; the narrow halls; the gaudy, cheap decorations everywhere.

The janitor and the cook exchanging compliments up and down the elevator-shaft; the refusal to send up more coal, the solid splash of the water upon his head, the language he sends up the shaft, the triumphant laughter of the cook, to her kitchen retiring.

4. The widow's small house in the suburbs of the city; the widow's boy coming home from his first day down town; he is flushed with happiness and pride; he is no longer a school-boy, he is earning money; he takes on the airs of a man and talks learnedly of business.

5. The room in the third-class boarding-house; the mean little hard-coal fire, the slovenly Irish servant-girl making it, the ashes on the hearth, the faded furniture, the private provender hid away in the closet, the dreary backyard out the window; the young girl at the glass, with her mouth full of hairpins, doing up her hair to go downstairs and flirt with the young fellows in the parlor.

6. The kitchen of the old farm-house; the young convict just returned from prison—it was his first offense, and the judges were lenient on him.

He is taking his first meal out of prison; he has been received back, kiss'd, encourag'd to start again; his lungs, his nostrils expand with the big breaths of free air; with shame, withwonderment, with a trembling joy, his heart too, expanding.

The old mother busies herself about the table; she has ready for him the dishes he us'd to like; the father sits with his back to them, reading the newspaper, the newspaper shaking and rustling much; the children hang wondering around the prodigal—they have been caution'd: Do not ask where our Jim has been; only say you are glad to see him.

The elder daughter is there, palefac'd, quiet; her young man went back on her four years ago; his folks would not let him marry a convict's sister. She sits by the window, sewing on the children's clothes, the clothes not only patching up; her hunger for children of her own invisibly patching up.

The brother looks up; he catches her eye, he fearful, apologetic; she smiles back at him, not reproachfully smiling, with loving pretence of hope smiling—it is too much for him; he buries his face in the folds of the mother's black gown.

7. The best room of the house, on the Sabbath only open'd; the smell of horse-hair furniture and mahogany varnish; the ornaments on the what-not in the corner; the wax fruit, dusty, sunken, sagged in, consumptive-looking, under a glass globe, the sealing-wax imitation of coral; the cigar boxes with shells plastered over, the perforated card-board motto.

The kitchen; the housewife sprinkling the clothesfor the fine ironing to-morrow—it is the Third-day night, and the plain things are ready iron'd, now in cupboards, in drawers stowed away.

The wife waiting for the husband—he is at the tavern, jovial, carousing; she, alone in the kitchen sprinkling clothes—the little red wood clock with peaked top, with pendulum wagging behind a pane of gayly painted glass, strikes twelve.

The sound of the husband's voice on the still night air—he is singing: "We won't go home until morning!"—the wife arising, toward the wood-shed hastily going, stealthily entering, the voice all the time coming nearer, inebriate, chantant.

The husband passing the door of the wood-shed; the club over his head, now with his head in contact; the sudden cessation of the song; the benediction of peace over the domestic foyer temporarily resting.

I sing the soothing influences of home.You, young man, thoughtlessly wandering, with courier, with guide-book wandering,You hearken to the melody of my steam-calliopeYawp!Henry Cuyler Bunner.

I sing the soothing influences of home.You, young man, thoughtlessly wandering, with courier, with guide-book wandering,You hearken to the melody of my steam-calliopeYawp!Henry Cuyler Bunner.

I sing the soothing influences of home.You, young man, thoughtlessly wandering, with courier, with guide-book wandering,You hearken to the melody of my steam-calliopeYawp!Henry Cuyler Bunner.

I sing the soothing influences of home.

You, young man, thoughtlessly wandering, with courier, with guide-book wandering,

You hearken to the melody of my steam-calliope

Yawp!

Henry Cuyler Bunner.

—Mary, Mary, quite contrary,How does your garden grow?

—Mary, Mary, quite contrary,How does your garden grow?

—Mary, Mary, quite contrary,How does your garden grow?

—Mary, Mary, quite contrary,

How does your garden grow?

WITHIN the garden's deepness filled of lightStood Mary, and upon her fair green gownFell glory of gold hair, a stern sweet frownWas on her forehead, slim cold hands and whiteMade ending of her long pale arms' delight.And questioning, I—"How does your garden grow?"Then she—"With bells that ring, and shells that singOf strange gray seas, with fair, strong hands that clingTogether, stand tall damozels a-row."Elizabeth Cavazza.

WITHIN the garden's deepness filled of lightStood Mary, and upon her fair green gownFell glory of gold hair, a stern sweet frownWas on her forehead, slim cold hands and whiteMade ending of her long pale arms' delight.And questioning, I—"How does your garden grow?"Then she—"With bells that ring, and shells that singOf strange gray seas, with fair, strong hands that clingTogether, stand tall damozels a-row."Elizabeth Cavazza.

WITHIN the garden's deepness filled of lightStood Mary, and upon her fair green gownFell glory of gold hair, a stern sweet frownWas on her forehead, slim cold hands and whiteMade ending of her long pale arms' delight.And questioning, I—"How does your garden grow?"Then she—"With bells that ring, and shells that singOf strange gray seas, with fair, strong hands that clingTogether, stand tall damozels a-row."Elizabeth Cavazza.

WITHIN the garden's deepness filled of light

Stood Mary, and upon her fair green gown

Fell glory of gold hair, a stern sweet frown

Was on her forehead, slim cold hands and white

Made ending of her long pale arms' delight.

And questioning, I—"How does your garden grow?"

Then she—"With bells that ring, and shells that sing

Of strange gray seas, with fair, strong hands that cling

Together, stand tall damozels a-row."

Elizabeth Cavazza.

—Three children sliding on the iceAll on a summer's day.

—Three children sliding on the iceAll on a summer's day.

—Three children sliding on the iceAll on a summer's day.

—Three children sliding on the ice

All on a summer's day.

FOUR are the names of the seasons—spring, summer, autumn, and winter.Summer is hot and winter is cold, while the others partake inGreater or less degree of cold and caloric commingled.Surely, I think, it is well to be good, and my mind is astonishedAt the exceeding sin of sinfulness, whereof the perilsShown in my verse are apparent. Three rosy children were slidingOver the ice in summer and—fate so decreeing, it happened—Fell through the ice and were drowned. Had these children in winter been slidingOn the bare earth, or had they, by the peaceful fireside sitting,Studied their catechism, it were strange—so the novel thought strikes me—Even in summer's heat had the ice broken suddenly underAvoirdupois of these babes, and diluted the well-springs of pleasure.

FOUR are the names of the seasons—spring, summer, autumn, and winter.Summer is hot and winter is cold, while the others partake inGreater or less degree of cold and caloric commingled.Surely, I think, it is well to be good, and my mind is astonishedAt the exceeding sin of sinfulness, whereof the perilsShown in my verse are apparent. Three rosy children were slidingOver the ice in summer and—fate so decreeing, it happened—Fell through the ice and were drowned. Had these children in winter been slidingOn the bare earth, or had they, by the peaceful fireside sitting,Studied their catechism, it were strange—so the novel thought strikes me—Even in summer's heat had the ice broken suddenly underAvoirdupois of these babes, and diluted the well-springs of pleasure.

FOUR are the names of the seasons—spring, summer, autumn, and winter.Summer is hot and winter is cold, while the others partake inGreater or less degree of cold and caloric commingled.Surely, I think, it is well to be good, and my mind is astonishedAt the exceeding sin of sinfulness, whereof the perilsShown in my verse are apparent. Three rosy children were slidingOver the ice in summer and—fate so decreeing, it happened—Fell through the ice and were drowned. Had these children in winter been slidingOn the bare earth, or had they, by the peaceful fireside sitting,Studied their catechism, it were strange—so the novel thought strikes me—Even in summer's heat had the ice broken suddenly underAvoirdupois of these babes, and diluted the well-springs of pleasure.

FOUR are the names of the seasons—spring, summer, autumn, and winter.

Summer is hot and winter is cold, while the others partake in

Greater or less degree of cold and caloric commingled.

Surely, I think, it is well to be good, and my mind is astonished

At the exceeding sin of sinfulness, whereof the perils

Shown in my verse are apparent. Three rosy children were sliding

Over the ice in summer and—fate so decreeing, it happened—

Fell through the ice and were drowned. Had these children in winter been sliding

On the bare earth, or had they, by the peaceful fireside sitting,

Studied their catechism, it were strange—so the novel thought strikes me—

Even in summer's heat had the ice broken suddenly under

Avoirdupois of these babes, and diluted the well-springs of pleasure.

—Jack and Jill went up a hillTo draw a pail of water.

—Jack and Jill went up a hillTo draw a pail of water.

—Jack and Jill went up a hillTo draw a pail of water.

—Jack and Jill went up a hill

To draw a pail of water.

WHAT moan is made of the mountain, what sob of the hillside,Why a lament of the south wind, and rainfall as tears?Brother and sister, once bodies and spirits together,Fell as fair ghosts down the sad swift slope of the years.Where is the fount on the mount where the thrill of waterSang as a siren its song to the steep beneath?Where are the feet of the son and the fair-eyed daughter,Feet drawn aside of Fate, and set in the pathway of Death!Ah cruel earth and hard, ah, pitiless laughterMade of the waters, when, shattered his golden crown,Fell the fair boy as a star, and his sister after,To the field of the dead, to its cold and the darkness unknown!Elizabeth Cavazza.

WHAT moan is made of the mountain, what sob of the hillside,Why a lament of the south wind, and rainfall as tears?Brother and sister, once bodies and spirits together,Fell as fair ghosts down the sad swift slope of the years.Where is the fount on the mount where the thrill of waterSang as a siren its song to the steep beneath?Where are the feet of the son and the fair-eyed daughter,Feet drawn aside of Fate, and set in the pathway of Death!Ah cruel earth and hard, ah, pitiless laughterMade of the waters, when, shattered his golden crown,Fell the fair boy as a star, and his sister after,To the field of the dead, to its cold and the darkness unknown!Elizabeth Cavazza.

WHAT moan is made of the mountain, what sob of the hillside,Why a lament of the south wind, and rainfall as tears?Brother and sister, once bodies and spirits together,Fell as fair ghosts down the sad swift slope of the years.

WHAT moan is made of the mountain, what sob of the hillside,

Why a lament of the south wind, and rainfall as tears?

Brother and sister, once bodies and spirits together,

Fell as fair ghosts down the sad swift slope of the years.

Where is the fount on the mount where the thrill of waterSang as a siren its song to the steep beneath?Where are the feet of the son and the fair-eyed daughter,Feet drawn aside of Fate, and set in the pathway of Death!

Where is the fount on the mount where the thrill of water

Sang as a siren its song to the steep beneath?

Where are the feet of the son and the fair-eyed daughter,

Feet drawn aside of Fate, and set in the pathway of Death!

Ah cruel earth and hard, ah, pitiless laughterMade of the waters, when, shattered his golden crown,Fell the fair boy as a star, and his sister after,To the field of the dead, to its cold and the darkness unknown!Elizabeth Cavazza.

Ah cruel earth and hard, ah, pitiless laughter

Made of the waters, when, shattered his golden crown,

Fell the fair boy as a star, and his sister after,

To the field of the dead, to its cold and the darkness unknown!

Elizabeth Cavazza.

(As Austin Dobson might have written it)

THEIR pail they must fillIn a crystalline springlet,Brave Jack and fair Jill.Their pail they must fillAt the top of the hill,Then she gives him a ringlet.Their pail they must fillIn a crystalline springlet.They stumbled and fell,And poor Jack broke his forehead,Oh, how he did yell!They stumbled and fell,And went down pell-mell—By Jove! it was horrid.They stumbled and fell,And poor Jack broke his forehead.

THEIR pail they must fillIn a crystalline springlet,Brave Jack and fair Jill.Their pail they must fillAt the top of the hill,Then she gives him a ringlet.Their pail they must fillIn a crystalline springlet.They stumbled and fell,And poor Jack broke his forehead,Oh, how he did yell!They stumbled and fell,And went down pell-mell—By Jove! it was horrid.They stumbled and fell,And poor Jack broke his forehead.

THEIR pail they must fillIn a crystalline springlet,Brave Jack and fair Jill.Their pail they must fillAt the top of the hill,Then she gives him a ringlet.Their pail they must fillIn a crystalline springlet.

THEIR pail they must fill

In a crystalline springlet,

Brave Jack and fair Jill.

Their pail they must fill

At the top of the hill,

Then she gives him a ringlet.

Their pail they must fill

In a crystalline springlet.

They stumbled and fell,And poor Jack broke his forehead,Oh, how he did yell!They stumbled and fell,And went down pell-mell—By Jove! it was horrid.They stumbled and fell,And poor Jack broke his forehead.

They stumbled and fell,

And poor Jack broke his forehead,

Oh, how he did yell!

They stumbled and fell,

And went down pell-mell—

By Jove! it was horrid.

They stumbled and fell,

And poor Jack broke his forehead.

(As Swinburne might have written it)

The shudd'ring sheet of rain athwart the trees!The crashing kiss of lightning on the seas!The moaning of the night wind on the wold,That erstwhile was a gentle, murm'ring breeze!On such a night as this went Jill and JackWith strong and sturdy strides through dampness blackTo find the hill's high top and water cold,Then toiling through the town to bear it back.The water drawn, they rest awhile. Sweet sipsOf nectar then for Jack from Jill's red lips,And then with arms entwined they homeward go;Till mid the mad mud's moistened mush Jack slips.Sweet Heaven, draw a veil on this sad plight,His crazéd cries and cranium cracked; the frightOf gentle Jill, her wretchedness and wo!Kind Phœbus, drive thy steeds and end this night!

The shudd'ring sheet of rain athwart the trees!The crashing kiss of lightning on the seas!The moaning of the night wind on the wold,That erstwhile was a gentle, murm'ring breeze!On such a night as this went Jill and JackWith strong and sturdy strides through dampness blackTo find the hill's high top and water cold,Then toiling through the town to bear it back.The water drawn, they rest awhile. Sweet sipsOf nectar then for Jack from Jill's red lips,And then with arms entwined they homeward go;Till mid the mad mud's moistened mush Jack slips.Sweet Heaven, draw a veil on this sad plight,His crazéd cries and cranium cracked; the frightOf gentle Jill, her wretchedness and wo!Kind Phœbus, drive thy steeds and end this night!

The shudd'ring sheet of rain athwart the trees!The crashing kiss of lightning on the seas!The moaning of the night wind on the wold,That erstwhile was a gentle, murm'ring breeze!

The shudd'ring sheet of rain athwart the trees!

The crashing kiss of lightning on the seas!

The moaning of the night wind on the wold,

That erstwhile was a gentle, murm'ring breeze!

On such a night as this went Jill and JackWith strong and sturdy strides through dampness blackTo find the hill's high top and water cold,Then toiling through the town to bear it back.

On such a night as this went Jill and Jack

With strong and sturdy strides through dampness black

To find the hill's high top and water cold,

Then toiling through the town to bear it back.

The water drawn, they rest awhile. Sweet sipsOf nectar then for Jack from Jill's red lips,And then with arms entwined they homeward go;Till mid the mad mud's moistened mush Jack slips.

The water drawn, they rest awhile. Sweet sips

Of nectar then for Jack from Jill's red lips,

And then with arms entwined they homeward go;

Till mid the mad mud's moistened mush Jack slips.

Sweet Heaven, draw a veil on this sad plight,His crazéd cries and cranium cracked; the frightOf gentle Jill, her wretchedness and wo!Kind Phœbus, drive thy steeds and end this night!

Sweet Heaven, draw a veil on this sad plight,

His crazéd cries and cranium cracked; the fright

Of gentle Jill, her wretchedness and wo!

Kind Phœbus, drive thy steeds and end this night!

(As Walt Whitman might have written it)

I celebrate the personality of Jack!I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.Each wart upon his hands I sing,Pæans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.Also Jill!Her I celebrate.I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue,Whoop her up!What's the matter with Jill?Oh, she's all right!Who's all right?Jill.Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling.I see them in the evening, when the sun empurples the horizon, and through the darkening forest aisles are heard the sounds of myriad creatures of the night.I see them climb the steep ascent in quest of water for their mother.Oh, speaking of her, I could celebrate the old lady if I had time.She is simply immense!But Jack and Jill are walking up the hill.(I didn't mean that rhyme.)I must watch them.I love to watch their walk,And wonder as I watch;He, stoop-shouldered, clumsy, hide-bound,Yet lusty,Bearing his share of the 1-lb bucket as though it were a paperweight.She, erect, standing, her head uplifting,Holding, but bearing not the bucket.They have reached the spring.They have filled the bucket.Have you heard the "Old Oaken Bucket"?I will sing it:—Of what countless patches is the bed-quilt of life composed!Here is a piece of lace. A babe is born.The father is happy, the mother is happy.Next black crêpe. A beldame "shuffles off this mortal coil."Now brocaded satin with orange blossoms,Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," an old shoe missile,A broken carriage window, the bride in the Bellevue sleeping.Here's a large piece of black cloth!"Have you any last words to say?""No.""Sheriff, do your work!"Thus it is: from "grave to gay, from lively to severe."I mourn the downfall of my Jack and Jill.I see them descending, obstacles not heeding.I see them pitching headlong, the water from the pail outpouring, a noise from leathern lungs out-belching.The shadows of the night descend on Jack, recumbent, bellowing, his pate with gore besmeared.I love his cowardice, because it is an attribute, just likeJob's patience or Solomon's wisdom, and I love attributes.Whoop!!!Charles Battell Loomis.

I celebrate the personality of Jack!I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.Each wart upon his hands I sing,Pæans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.Also Jill!Her I celebrate.I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue,Whoop her up!What's the matter with Jill?Oh, she's all right!Who's all right?Jill.Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling.I see them in the evening, when the sun empurples the horizon, and through the darkening forest aisles are heard the sounds of myriad creatures of the night.I see them climb the steep ascent in quest of water for their mother.Oh, speaking of her, I could celebrate the old lady if I had time.She is simply immense!But Jack and Jill are walking up the hill.(I didn't mean that rhyme.)I must watch them.I love to watch their walk,And wonder as I watch;He, stoop-shouldered, clumsy, hide-bound,Yet lusty,Bearing his share of the 1-lb bucket as though it were a paperweight.She, erect, standing, her head uplifting,Holding, but bearing not the bucket.They have reached the spring.They have filled the bucket.Have you heard the "Old Oaken Bucket"?I will sing it:—Of what countless patches is the bed-quilt of life composed!Here is a piece of lace. A babe is born.The father is happy, the mother is happy.Next black crêpe. A beldame "shuffles off this mortal coil."Now brocaded satin with orange blossoms,Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," an old shoe missile,A broken carriage window, the bride in the Bellevue sleeping.Here's a large piece of black cloth!"Have you any last words to say?""No.""Sheriff, do your work!"Thus it is: from "grave to gay, from lively to severe."I mourn the downfall of my Jack and Jill.I see them descending, obstacles not heeding.I see them pitching headlong, the water from the pail outpouring, a noise from leathern lungs out-belching.The shadows of the night descend on Jack, recumbent, bellowing, his pate with gore besmeared.I love his cowardice, because it is an attribute, just likeJob's patience or Solomon's wisdom, and I love attributes.Whoop!!!Charles Battell Loomis.

I celebrate the personality of Jack!I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.Each wart upon his hands I sing,Pæans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.Also Jill!Her I celebrate.I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue,Whoop her up!What's the matter with Jill?Oh, she's all right!Who's all right?Jill.Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling.I see them in the evening, when the sun empurples the horizon, and through the darkening forest aisles are heard the sounds of myriad creatures of the night.I see them climb the steep ascent in quest of water for their mother.Oh, speaking of her, I could celebrate the old lady if I had time.She is simply immense!

I celebrate the personality of Jack!

I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.

Each wart upon his hands I sing,

Pæans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.

Also Jill!

Her I celebrate.

I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue,

Whoop her up!

What's the matter with Jill?

Oh, she's all right!

Who's all right?

Jill.

Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;

So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling.

I see them in the evening, when the sun empurples the horizon, and through the darkening forest aisles are heard the sounds of myriad creatures of the night.

I see them climb the steep ascent in quest of water for their mother.

Oh, speaking of her, I could celebrate the old lady if I had time.

She is simply immense!

But Jack and Jill are walking up the hill.(I didn't mean that rhyme.)I must watch them.I love to watch their walk,And wonder as I watch;He, stoop-shouldered, clumsy, hide-bound,Yet lusty,Bearing his share of the 1-lb bucket as though it were a paperweight.She, erect, standing, her head uplifting,Holding, but bearing not the bucket.They have reached the spring.They have filled the bucket.Have you heard the "Old Oaken Bucket"?I will sing it:—

But Jack and Jill are walking up the hill.

(I didn't mean that rhyme.)

I must watch them.

I love to watch their walk,

And wonder as I watch;

He, stoop-shouldered, clumsy, hide-bound,

Yet lusty,

Bearing his share of the 1-lb bucket as though it were a paperweight.

She, erect, standing, her head uplifting,

Holding, but bearing not the bucket.

They have reached the spring.

They have filled the bucket.

Have you heard the "Old Oaken Bucket"?

I will sing it:—

Of what countless patches is the bed-quilt of life composed!Here is a piece of lace. A babe is born.The father is happy, the mother is happy.Next black crêpe. A beldame "shuffles off this mortal coil."Now brocaded satin with orange blossoms,Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," an old shoe missile,A broken carriage window, the bride in the Bellevue sleeping.Here's a large piece of black cloth!"Have you any last words to say?""No.""Sheriff, do your work!"Thus it is: from "grave to gay, from lively to severe."

Of what countless patches is the bed-quilt of life composed!

Here is a piece of lace. A babe is born.

The father is happy, the mother is happy.

Next black crêpe. A beldame "shuffles off this mortal coil."

Now brocaded satin with orange blossoms,

Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," an old shoe missile,

A broken carriage window, the bride in the Bellevue sleeping.

Here's a large piece of black cloth!

"Have you any last words to say?"

"No."

"Sheriff, do your work!"

Thus it is: from "grave to gay, from lively to severe."

I mourn the downfall of my Jack and Jill.I see them descending, obstacles not heeding.I see them pitching headlong, the water from the pail outpouring, a noise from leathern lungs out-belching.The shadows of the night descend on Jack, recumbent, bellowing, his pate with gore besmeared.I love his cowardice, because it is an attribute, just likeJob's patience or Solomon's wisdom, and I love attributes.Whoop!!!Charles Battell Loomis.

I mourn the downfall of my Jack and Jill.

I see them descending, obstacles not heeding.

I see them pitching headlong, the water from the pail outpouring, a noise from leathern lungs out-belching.

The shadows of the night descend on Jack, recumbent, bellowing, his pate with gore besmeared.

I love his cowardice, because it is an attribute, just like

Job's patience or Solomon's wisdom, and I love attributes.

Whoop!!!

Charles Battell Loomis.

By H—y W. L—ngf—w

BACK in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarchOver the sea-ribb'd land of the fleet-footed Norsemen,Once there went forth young Ursa to gaze at the heavens—Ursa—the noblest of all the kings and horsemen.Musing, he sat in his stirrups and viewed the horizon,Where the Aurora lapt stars in a North-polar manner,Wildly he stared,—for there in the heavens before himFluttered and flam'd the original Star Spangled Banner.

BACK in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarchOver the sea-ribb'd land of the fleet-footed Norsemen,Once there went forth young Ursa to gaze at the heavens—Ursa—the noblest of all the kings and horsemen.Musing, he sat in his stirrups and viewed the horizon,Where the Aurora lapt stars in a North-polar manner,Wildly he stared,—for there in the heavens before himFluttered and flam'd the original Star Spangled Banner.

BACK in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarchOver the sea-ribb'd land of the fleet-footed Norsemen,Once there went forth young Ursa to gaze at the heavens—Ursa—the noblest of all the kings and horsemen.

BACK in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarch

Over the sea-ribb'd land of the fleet-footed Norsemen,

Once there went forth young Ursa to gaze at the heavens—

Ursa—the noblest of all the kings and horsemen.

Musing, he sat in his stirrups and viewed the horizon,Where the Aurora lapt stars in a North-polar manner,Wildly he stared,—for there in the heavens before himFluttered and flam'd the original Star Spangled Banner.

Musing, he sat in his stirrups and viewed the horizon,

Where the Aurora lapt stars in a North-polar manner,

Wildly he stared,—for there in the heavens before him

Fluttered and flam'd the original Star Spangled Banner.

By J—hn Gr——nl——f Wh——t——r

My Native Land, thy Puritanic stockStill finds its roots firm-bound in Plymouth Rock,And all thy sons unite in one grand wish—To keep the virtues of Preservéd Fish.Preservéd Fish, the Deacon stern and trueTold our New England what her sons should do,And if they swerve from loyalty and right,Then the whole land is lost indeed in night.

My Native Land, thy Puritanic stockStill finds its roots firm-bound in Plymouth Rock,And all thy sons unite in one grand wish—To keep the virtues of Preservéd Fish.Preservéd Fish, the Deacon stern and trueTold our New England what her sons should do,And if they swerve from loyalty and right,Then the whole land is lost indeed in night.

My Native Land, thy Puritanic stockStill finds its roots firm-bound in Plymouth Rock,And all thy sons unite in one grand wish—To keep the virtues of Preservéd Fish.

My Native Land, thy Puritanic stock

Still finds its roots firm-bound in Plymouth Rock,

And all thy sons unite in one grand wish—

To keep the virtues of Preservéd Fish.

Preservéd Fish, the Deacon stern and trueTold our New England what her sons should do,And if they swerve from loyalty and right,Then the whole land is lost indeed in night.

Preservéd Fish, the Deacon stern and true

Told our New England what her sons should do,

And if they swerve from loyalty and right,

Then the whole land is lost indeed in night.

By Dr. Ol—v—r W—nd——l H—lmes

A diagnosis of our history provesOur native land a land its native loves;Its birth a deed obstetric without peer,Its growth a source of wonder far and near.To love it more, behold how foreign shoresSink into nothingness beside its stores;Hyde Park at best—though counted ultra-grand—The "Boston Common" of Victoria's land.

A diagnosis of our history provesOur native land a land its native loves;Its birth a deed obstetric without peer,Its growth a source of wonder far and near.To love it more, behold how foreign shoresSink into nothingness beside its stores;Hyde Park at best—though counted ultra-grand—The "Boston Common" of Victoria's land.

A diagnosis of our history provesOur native land a land its native loves;Its birth a deed obstetric without peer,Its growth a source of wonder far and near.

A diagnosis of our history proves

Our native land a land its native loves;

Its birth a deed obstetric without peer,

Its growth a source of wonder far and near.

To love it more, behold how foreign shoresSink into nothingness beside its stores;Hyde Park at best—though counted ultra-grand—The "Boston Common" of Victoria's land.

To love it more, behold how foreign shores

Sink into nothingness beside its stores;

Hyde Park at best—though counted ultra-grand—

The "Boston Common" of Victoria's land.

By Ralph W—ldo Em—r——n

Source immaterial of material naught,Focus of light infinitesimal,Sum of all things by sleepless Nature wrought,Of which the normal man is decimal.Refract, in Prism immortal, from thy starsTo the stars bent incipient on our flag,The beam translucent, neutrifying death,And raise to immortality the rag.

Source immaterial of material naught,Focus of light infinitesimal,Sum of all things by sleepless Nature wrought,Of which the normal man is decimal.Refract, in Prism immortal, from thy starsTo the stars bent incipient on our flag,The beam translucent, neutrifying death,And raise to immortality the rag.

Source immaterial of material naught,Focus of light infinitesimal,Sum of all things by sleepless Nature wrought,Of which the normal man is decimal.

Source immaterial of material naught,

Focus of light infinitesimal,

Sum of all things by sleepless Nature wrought,

Of which the normal man is decimal.

Refract, in Prism immortal, from thy starsTo the stars bent incipient on our flag,The beam translucent, neutrifying death,And raise to immortality the rag.

Refract, in Prism immortal, from thy stars

To the stars bent incipient on our flag,

The beam translucent, neutrifying death,

And raise to immortality the rag.

By W—ll——m C—ll—n B—y—nt

The sun sinks softly to his Ev'ning Post,The sun swells grandly to his morning crown;Yet not a star our Flag of Heav'n has lost,And not a sunset stripe with him goes down.So thrones may fall, and from the dust of those,New thrones may rise, to totter like the last;But still our Country's nobler planet glowsWhile the eternal stars of Heaven are fast.

The sun sinks softly to his Ev'ning Post,The sun swells grandly to his morning crown;Yet not a star our Flag of Heav'n has lost,And not a sunset stripe with him goes down.So thrones may fall, and from the dust of those,New thrones may rise, to totter like the last;But still our Country's nobler planet glowsWhile the eternal stars of Heaven are fast.

The sun sinks softly to his Ev'ning Post,The sun swells grandly to his morning crown;Yet not a star our Flag of Heav'n has lost,And not a sunset stripe with him goes down.

The sun sinks softly to his Ev'ning Post,

The sun swells grandly to his morning crown;

Yet not a star our Flag of Heav'n has lost,

And not a sunset stripe with him goes down.

So thrones may fall, and from the dust of those,New thrones may rise, to totter like the last;But still our Country's nobler planet glowsWhile the eternal stars of Heaven are fast.

So thrones may fall, and from the dust of those,

New thrones may rise, to totter like the last;

But still our Country's nobler planet glows

While the eternal stars of Heaven are fast.

By N. P. W-llis

One hue of our Flag is takenFrom the cheeks of my blushing Pet,And its stars beat time, and sparkleLike the studs on her chemisette.Its blue is the ocean shadowThat hides in her dreamy eyes,It conquers all men, like her,And still for a Union flies.

One hue of our Flag is takenFrom the cheeks of my blushing Pet,And its stars beat time, and sparkleLike the studs on her chemisette.Its blue is the ocean shadowThat hides in her dreamy eyes,It conquers all men, like her,And still for a Union flies.

One hue of our Flag is takenFrom the cheeks of my blushing Pet,And its stars beat time, and sparkleLike the studs on her chemisette.

One hue of our Flag is taken

From the cheeks of my blushing Pet,

And its stars beat time, and sparkle

Like the studs on her chemisette.

Its blue is the ocean shadowThat hides in her dreamy eyes,It conquers all men, like her,And still for a Union flies.

Its blue is the ocean shadow

That hides in her dreamy eyes,

It conquers all men, like her,

And still for a Union flies.

By Th-m-s B-il-y Ald—ch

The little brown squirrel hops in the corn,The cricket quaintly sings,The emerald pigeon nods his head,And the shad in the river springs,The dainty sunflower hangs its headOn the shore of the summer sea;And better far that I were dead,If Maud did not love me.I love the squirrel that hops in the corn,And the cricket that quaintly sings;And the emerald pigeon that nods his head,And the shad that gaily springs.I love the dainty sunflower too,And Maud with her snowy breast;I love them all; but I love—I love—I love my country best.Robert Henry Newell.("Orpheus C. Kerr.")

The little brown squirrel hops in the corn,The cricket quaintly sings,The emerald pigeon nods his head,And the shad in the river springs,The dainty sunflower hangs its headOn the shore of the summer sea;And better far that I were dead,If Maud did not love me.I love the squirrel that hops in the corn,And the cricket that quaintly sings;And the emerald pigeon that nods his head,And the shad that gaily springs.I love the dainty sunflower too,And Maud with her snowy breast;I love them all; but I love—I love—I love my country best.Robert Henry Newell.("Orpheus C. Kerr.")

The little brown squirrel hops in the corn,The cricket quaintly sings,The emerald pigeon nods his head,And the shad in the river springs,The dainty sunflower hangs its headOn the shore of the summer sea;And better far that I were dead,If Maud did not love me.

The little brown squirrel hops in the corn,

The cricket quaintly sings,

The emerald pigeon nods his head,

And the shad in the river springs,

The dainty sunflower hangs its head

On the shore of the summer sea;

And better far that I were dead,

If Maud did not love me.

I love the squirrel that hops in the corn,And the cricket that quaintly sings;And the emerald pigeon that nods his head,And the shad that gaily springs.I love the dainty sunflower too,And Maud with her snowy breast;I love them all; but I love—I love—I love my country best.Robert Henry Newell.("Orpheus C. Kerr.")

I love the squirrel that hops in the corn,

And the cricket that quaintly sings;

And the emerald pigeon that nods his head,

And the shad that gaily springs.

I love the dainty sunflower too,

And Maud with her snowy breast;

I love them all; but I love—I love—

I love my country best.

Robert Henry Newell.

("Orpheus C. Kerr.")

RIDE a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,To see a fine lady ride on a white horse;With rings on her fingers, and bells on her toes,She shall have music wherever she goes.

RIDE a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,To see a fine lady ride on a white horse;With rings on her fingers, and bells on her toes,She shall have music wherever she goes.

RIDE a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,To see a fine lady ride on a white horse;With rings on her fingers, and bells on her toes,She shall have music wherever she goes.

RIDE a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,

To see a fine lady ride on a white horse;

With rings on her fingers, and bells on her toes,

She shall have music wherever she goes.

(Variation I.—Edmund Spenser)

So on he pricked, and loe, he gan espy,A market and a crosse of glist'ning stone,And eke a merrie rablement thereby,That with the musik of the strong trombone,And shaumes, and trompets made most dyvillish mone.And in their midst he saw a lady sweet,That rode upon a milk white steed alone,In scarlet robe ycladd and wimple meet,Bedight with rings of gold, and bells about her feet.Whereat the knight empassioned was so deepe,His heart was perst with very agony.Certes (said he) I will not eat, ne sleepe,Till I have seen the royall maid more ny;Then will I holde her in fast fealtie,Whom then a carle adviséd, louting low,That little neede there was for him to die,Sithens in yon pavilion was the show,Where she did ride, and he for two-and-six mote go.

So on he pricked, and loe, he gan espy,A market and a crosse of glist'ning stone,And eke a merrie rablement thereby,That with the musik of the strong trombone,And shaumes, and trompets made most dyvillish mone.And in their midst he saw a lady sweet,That rode upon a milk white steed alone,In scarlet robe ycladd and wimple meet,Bedight with rings of gold, and bells about her feet.Whereat the knight empassioned was so deepe,His heart was perst with very agony.Certes (said he) I will not eat, ne sleepe,Till I have seen the royall maid more ny;Then will I holde her in fast fealtie,Whom then a carle adviséd, louting low,That little neede there was for him to die,Sithens in yon pavilion was the show,Where she did ride, and he for two-and-six mote go.

So on he pricked, and loe, he gan espy,A market and a crosse of glist'ning stone,And eke a merrie rablement thereby,That with the musik of the strong trombone,And shaumes, and trompets made most dyvillish mone.And in their midst he saw a lady sweet,That rode upon a milk white steed alone,In scarlet robe ycladd and wimple meet,Bedight with rings of gold, and bells about her feet.

So on he pricked, and loe, he gan espy,

A market and a crosse of glist'ning stone,

And eke a merrie rablement thereby,

That with the musik of the strong trombone,

And shaumes, and trompets made most dyvillish mone.

And in their midst he saw a lady sweet,

That rode upon a milk white steed alone,

In scarlet robe ycladd and wimple meet,

Bedight with rings of gold, and bells about her feet.

Whereat the knight empassioned was so deepe,His heart was perst with very agony.Certes (said he) I will not eat, ne sleepe,Till I have seen the royall maid more ny;Then will I holde her in fast fealtie,Whom then a carle adviséd, louting low,That little neede there was for him to die,Sithens in yon pavilion was the show,Where she did ride, and he for two-and-six mote go.

Whereat the knight empassioned was so deepe,

His heart was perst with very agony.

Certes (said he) I will not eat, ne sleepe,

Till I have seen the royall maid more ny;

Then will I holde her in fast fealtie,

Whom then a carle adviséd, louting low,

That little neede there was for him to die,

Sithens in yon pavilion was the show,

Where she did ride, and he for two-and-six mote go.

(Variation II.—Dr. Jonathan Swift)


Back to IndexNext