JACK-IN-THE-BOX

(Grandfather, musing.)

In childish days! O memory,

You bring such curious things to me!—

Laughs to the lip—tears to the eye,

In looking on the gifts that lie

Like broken playthings scattered o'er

Imagination's nursery floor!

Did these old hands once click the key

That let "Jack's" box-lid upward fly,

And that blear-eyed, fur-whiskered elf

Leap, as though frightened at himself,

And quiveringly lean and stare

At me, his jailer, laughing there?

A child then! Now—I only know

They call me very old; and so

They will not let me have my way,—

But uselessly I sit all day

Here by the chimney-jamb, and poke

The lazy fire, and smoke and smoke,

And watch the wreaths swoop up the flue,

And chuckle—ay, I often do—

Seeing again, all vividly,

Jack-in-the-box leap, as in glee

To see how much he looks like me!

... They talk. I can't hear what they say—

But I am glad, clean through and through

Sometimes, in fancying that they

Are saying, "Sweet, that fancy strays

In age back to our childish days!"