CHAPTER XVI.CHAPTER XVII.Tim Keyser's Nose.
- Tim Keyser lived in Wilmington;
- He had a monstrous nose,
- Which was a great deal redder than
- The very reddest rose,
- And was completely capable
- Of most terrific blows.

- He wandered down one Christmas day
- To skate upon the creek,
- And there, upon the smoothest ice,
- He slid around so quick
- That people were amazed to see
- Him do it up so slick.

- The exercise excited thirst;
- And so, to get a drink,
- He cut an opening in the ice
- And lay down on the brink.
- He said, "I'll dip my lips right in
- And suck it up, I think."

- And while his nose was thus immersed
- Six inches in the stream,
- A very hungry pickerel was
- Attracted by its gleam;
- And darting up, he gave a snap,
- And Keyser gave a scream.

- Tim Keyser then was well assured
- He had a splendid bite.
- To pull his victim up he jerked
- And tugged with all his might;
- But that disgusting pickerel had
- The better of the fight.

- And just as Mr. Keyser thought
- His nose was cut in two,
- The pickerel gave its tail a twist
- And pulled Tim Keyser through,
- And he was scudding through the waves
- The first thing that he knew.

- Then onward swam that savage fish
- With swiftness toward its nest,
- Still chewing Mr. Keyser's nose;
- While Mr. Keyser guessed
- What sort of policy would suit
- His circumstances best.

- Just then his nose was tickled with
- A spear of grass close by;
- Then came an awful sneeze, which knocked
- The pickerel into pi,
- And blew its bones, the ice and waves
- Two hundred feet on high!

- Tim Keyser swam up to the top
- A breath of air to take;
- And finding broken ice, he hooked
- His nose upon a cake,
- And gloried in a nose which could
- Such a concussion make.

- And thus he drifted slowly on
- Until he reached the shore;
- And creeping out all dripping wet,
- He very roundly swore
- To use that crimson nose as bait
- For pickerel no more.

- His Christmas turkey on that day
- He tackled with a vim,
- And thanked his stars as, shuddering,
- He thought upon his swim,
- That that wild pickerel had not
- Spent Christmas eating him!
