A STACCATO TO O LE LUPE

O LE LUPE, Gelett Burgess, this is very sad to find;

In the Bookman for September, in a manner most unkind,

There appears a half-page picture, makes me think

I've lost my mind.

They have reproduced a window,—Doxey's window (I dare say

In your rambles you have seen it, passed it twenty times a day),—

As "A Novel Exhibition of Examples of Decay."

There is Nordau we all sneer at, and Verlaine we all adore,

And a little book of verses with its betters by the score,

With three faces on the cover I believe I've seen before.

Well, here's matter for reflection, makes me wonder where I am.

Here is Ibsen the gray lion, linked to Beardsley the black lamb.

I was never out of Boston; all that I can say is, "Damn!"

Who could think, in two short summers we should cause so much remark,

With no purpose but our pastime, and to make the public hark,

When I soloed on THE CHAP-BOOK, and you answered with THE LARK!

Do young people take much pleasure when they read that sort of thing?

"Well, they buy it," answered Doxey, "and I take what it will bring.

Publishers may dread extinction—not with such fads on the string.

"There is always sale for something, and demand for what is new.

These young people who are restless, and have nothing else to do,

Like to think there is 'a movement,' just to keep themselves in view.

"There is nothing in Decadence but the magic of a name.

People talk and papers drivel, scent a vice, and hint a shame;

And all that is good for business, helps to boom my little game."

But when I sit down to reason, think to stand upon my nerve,

Meditate on portly leisure with a balance in reserve,

In he comes with his "Decadence!" like a fly in my preserve.

I can see myself, O Burgess, half a century from now,

Laid to rest among the ghostly, like a broken toy somehow;

All my lovely songs and ballads vanished with your "Purple Cow."

But I will return some morning, though I know it will be hard,

To Cornhill among the bookstalls, and surprise some minor bard;

Turning over their old rubbish for the treasures we discard.

I shall warn him like a critic, creeping when his back is turned:

"Ink and paper, dead and done with; Doxey spent what Doxey earned;

Poems doubtless are immortal where a poem can be discerned!"

How his face will go to ashes, when he feels his empty purse!

How he'll wish his vogue were greater,—plume himself it is no worse;

Then go bother the dear public with his puny little verse!

Don't I know how he will pose it, patronize our larger time:

"Poor old Browning; little Kipling; what attempts they made to rhyme!"

Just let me have half an hour with that nincompoop sublime!

I will haunt him like a purpose, I will ghost him like a fear;

When he least expects my presence, I'll be mumbling in his ear:

"O Le Lupe lived in Frisco, and I lived in Boston here.

"Never heard of us? Good heavens, can you never have been told

Of the Larks we used to publish, and the Chap-Books that we sold?

Where are all our first editions?" I feel damp and full of mould.

Bliss Carman.

BY THE SEA

Mutatis Mutandis

IS it life or is it death?

A whiff of the cool salt scum,

As the whole sea puffed its breath

Against you,—blind and dumb:

This way it answereth.

Nearer the sands it shows

Spotted and leprous tints;

But stay! yon fisher knows

Rock-tokens, which evince

How high the tide arose.

How high? In you and me

'Twas falling then, I think;

Open your heart's eyes, see

From just so slight a chink

The chasm that now must be.

You sighed and shivered then.

Blue ecstasies of June

Around you, shouts of fishermen,

Sharp wings of sea gulls, soon

To dip—the clock struck ten!

Was it the cup too full,

To carry it you grew

Too faint, the wine's hue dull

(Dulness, misjudged untrue!),

Love's flower unfit to cull?

You should have held me fast

One moment, stopped my pace.

Crushed down the feeble, vast

Suggestions of embrace,

And so be crowned at last.

But now! Bare-legged and brown

Bait-diggers delve the sand,

Tramp i' the sunshine down

Burnt-ochre vestured land,

And yonder stares the town.

A heron screams! I shut

This book of scurf and scum,

Its final pages uncut;

The sea-beast, blind and dumb,

Done with his bellowing? All but!

Bayard Taylor.