| Slow the Kansas sun was setting, |
| O'er the wheat fields far away, |
| Streaking all the air with cobwebs |
| At the close of one hot day; |
| And the last rays kissed the forehead |
| Of a man and maiden fair, |
| He with whiskers short and frowsy, |
| She with red and glistening hair, |
| He with shut jaws stern and silent; |
| She, with lips all cold and white, |
| Struggled to keep back the murmur, |
| "Towser shall be tied to-night." |
|
| |
| "Papa," slowly spoke the daughter, |
| "I am almost seventeen, |
| And I have a real lover, |
| Though he's rather young and green; |
| But he has a horse and buggy |
| And a cow and thirty hens,— |
| Boys that start out poor, dear Papa, |
| Make the best of honest men, |
| But if Towser sees and bites him, |
| Fills his eyes with misty light, |
| He will never come again, Pa; |
| Towser must be tied to-night." |
| |
| "Daughter," firmly spoke the farmer, |
| (Every word pierced her young heart |
| Like a carving knife through chicken |
| As it hunts the tender part)— |
| "I've a patch of early melons, |
| Two of them are ripe to-day; |
| Towser must be loose to watch them |
| Or they'll all be stole away. |
| I have hoed them late and early |
| In dim morn and evening light; |
| Now they're grown I must not lose them; |
| Towser'll not be tied to-night." |
| |
| Then the old man ambled forward, |
| Opened wide the kennel-door, |
| Towser bounded forth to meet him |
| As he oft had done before. |
| And the farmer stooped and loosed him |
| From the dog-chain short and stout; |
| To himself he softly chuckled, |
| "Bessie's feller must look out." |
| But the maiden at the window |
| Saw the cruel teeth show white; |
| In an undertone she murmured,— |
| "Towser must be tied to-night." |
| |
| Then the maiden's brow grew thoughtful |
| And her breath came short and quick, |
| Till she spied the family clothesline, |
| And she whispered, "That's the trick." |
| From the kitchen door she glided |
| With a plate of meat and bread; |
| Towser wagged his tail in greeting, |
| Knowing well he would be fed. |
| In his well-worn leather collar, |
| Tied she then the clothesline tight, |
| All the time her white lips saying: |
| "Towser shall be tied to-night," |
| |
| "There, old doggie," spoke the maiden, |
| "You can watch the melon patch, |
| But the front gate's free and open, |
| When John Henry lifts the latch. |
| For the clothesline tight is fastened |
| To the harvest apple tree, |
| You can run and watch the melons, |
| But the front gate you can't see." |
| Then her glad ears hear a buggy, |
| And her eyes grow big and bright, |
| While her young heart says in gladness, |
| "Towser dog is tied to-night." |
| |
| Up the path the young man saunters |
| With his eye and cheek aglow; |
| For he loves the red-haired maiden |
| And he aims to tell her so. |
| Bessie's roguish little brother, |
| In a fit of boyish glee, |
| Had untied the slender clothesline, |
| From the harvest apple tree. |
| Then old Towser heard the footsteps, |
| Raised his bristles, fixed for fight,— |
| "Bark away," the maiden whispers; |
| "Towser, you are tied to-night." |
| |
| Then old Towser bounded forward, |
| Passed the open kitchen door; |
| Bessie screamed and quickly followed, |
| But John Henry's gone before. |
| Down the path he speeds most quickly, |
| For old Towser sets the pace; |
| And the maiden close behind them |
| Shows them she is in the race. |
| Then the clothesline, can she get it? |
| And her eyes grow big and bright; |
| And she springs and grasps it firmly: |
| "Towser shall be tied to-night." |
| |
| Oftentimes a little minute |
| Forms the destiny of men. |
| You can change the fate of nations |
| By the stroke of one small pen. |
| Towser made one last long effort, |
| Caught John Henry by the pants, |
| But John Henry kept on running |
| For he thought that his last chance. |
| But the maiden held on firmly, |
| And the rope was drawn up tight. |
| But old Towser kept the garments, |
| For he was not tied that night. |
| |
| Then the father hears the racket; |
| With long strides he soon is there, |
| When John Henry and the maiden, |
| Crouching, for the worst prepare. |
| At his feet John tells his story, |
| Shows his clothing soiled and torn; |
| And his face so sad and pleading, |
| Yet so white and scared and worn, |
| Touched the old man's heart with pity, |
| Filled his eyes with misty light. |
| "Take her, boy, and make her happy,— |
| Towser shall be tied to-night." |
| Beneath the hot midsummer sun |
| The men had marched all day, |
| And now beside a rippling stream |
| Upon the grass they lay. |
| Tiring of games and idle jest |
| As swept the hours along, |
| They cried to one who mused apart, |
| "Come, friend, give us a song." |
| |
| "I fear I can not please," he said; |
| "The only songs I know |
| Are those my mother used to sing |
| For me long years ago." |
| "Sing one of those," a rough voice cried. |
| "There's none but true men here; |
| To every mother's son of us |
| A mother's songs are dear." |
| |
| Then sweetly rose the singer's voice |
| Amid unwonted calm: |
| "Am I a soldier of the Cross, |
| A follower of the Lamb? |
| And shall I fear to own His cause?" |
| The very stream was stilled, |
| And hearts that never throbbed with fear, |
| With tender thoughts were filled. |
| |
| Ended the song, the singer said, |
| As to his feet he rose, |
| "Thanks to you all, my friends; goodnight. |
| God grant us sweet repose." |
| "Sing us one more," the captain begged. |
| The soldier bent his head, |
| Then, glancing round, with smiling lips, |
| "You'll join with me?" he said. |
|
| |
| "We'll sing that old familiar air |
| Sweet as the bugle call, |
| 'All hail the power of Jesus' name! |
| Let angels prostrate fall.'" |
| Ah, wondrous was the old tune's spell. |
| As on the soldiers sang; |
| Man after man fell into line, |
| And loud the voices rang. |
| |
| The songs are done, the camp is still, |
| Naught but the stream is heard; |
| But, ah! the depths of every soul |
| By those old hymns are stirred, |
| And up from many a bearded lip, |
| In whispers soft and low, |
| Rises the prayer that mother taught |
| Her boy long years ago. |
| We all look on with anxious eyes |
| When Father carves the duck, |
| And Mother almost always sighs |
| When Father carves the duck; |
| Then all of us prepare to rise |
| And hold our bibs before our eyes, |
| And be prepared for some surprise |
| When Father carves the duck. |
| |
| He braces up and grabs the fork, |
| Whene'er he carves the duck, |
| And won't allow a soul to talk |
| Until he carves the duck. |
| The fork is jabbed into the sides, |
| Across the breast the knife he slides, |
| While every careful person hides |
| From flying chips of duck. |
| |
| The platter's always sure to slip |
| When Father carves the duck, |
| And how it makes the dishes skip— |
| Potatoes fly amuck. |
| The squash and cabbage leap in space, |
| We get some gravy in our face, |
| And Father mutters Hindoo grace |
| Whene'er he carves a duck. |
| |
| We then have learned to walk around |
| The dining room and pluck |
| From off the window-sills and walls |
| Our share of Father's duck. |
| While Father growls and blows and jaws, |
| And swears the knife was full of flaws, |
| And Mother laughs at him because |
| He couldn't carve a duck. |
| |
| E.V. Wright. |
| I was sitting in my study, |
| Writing letters when I heard, |
| "Please, dear mamma, Mary told me |
| Mamma mustn't be 'isturbed. |
| |
| "But I'se tired of the kitty, |
| Want some ozzer fing to do. |
| Witing letters, is 'ou, mamma? |
| Tan't I wite a letter too?" |
| |
| "Not now, darling, mamma's busy; |
| Run and play with kitty, now." |
| "No, no, mamma, me wite letter; |
| Tan if 'ou will show me how." |
| |
| I would paint my darling's portrait |
| As his sweet eyes searched my face— |
| Hair of gold and eyes of azure, |
| Form of childish, witching grace. |
| |
| But the eager face was clouded, |
| As I slowly shook my head, |
| Till I said, "I'll make a letter |
| Of you, darling boy, instead." |
| |
| So I parted back the tresses |
| From his forehead high and white, |
| And a stamp in sport I pasted |
| 'Mid its waves of golden light. |
| |
| Then I said, "Now, little letter, |
| Go away and bear good news." |
| And I smiled as down the staircase |
| Clattered loud the little shoes. |
| |
|
| Leaving me, the darling hurried |
| Down to Mary in his glee, |
| "Mamma's witing lots of letters; |
| I'se a letter, Mary—see!" |
| |
| No one heard the little prattler, |
| As once more he climbed the stair, |
| Reached his little cap and tippet, |
| Standing on the entry stair. |
| |
| No one heard the front door open, |
| No one saw the golden hair, |
| As it floated o'er his shoulders |
| In the crisp October air. |
| |
| Down the street the baby hastened |
| Till he reached the office door. |
| "I'se a letter, Mr. Postman; |
| Is there room for any more? |
| |
| "'Cause dis letter's doin' to papa, |
| Papa lives with God, 'ou know, |
| Mamma sent me for a letter, |
| Does 'ou fink 'at I tan go?" |
| |
| But the clerk in wonder answered, |
| "Not to-day, my little man." |
| "Den I'll find anozzer office, |
| 'Cause I must go if I tan." |
| |
| Fain the clerk would have detained him, |
| But the pleading face was gone, |
| And the little feet were hastening— |
| By the busy crowd swept on. |
| |
| Suddenly the crowd was parted, |
| People fled to left and right, |
| As a pair of maddened horses |
| At the moment dashed in sight. |
| |
| No one saw the baby figure— |
| No one saw the golden hair, |
| Till a voice of frightened sweetness |
| Rang out on the autumn air. |
| |
| 'Twas too late—a moment only |
| Stood the beauteous vision there, |
| Then the little face lay lifeless, |
| Covered o'er with golden hair. |
| |
| Reverently they raised my darling, |
| Brushed away the curls of gold, |
| Saw the stamp upon the forehead, |
| Growing now so icy cold. |
| |
| Not a mark the face disfigured, |
| Showing where a hoof had trod; |
| But the little life was ended— |
| "Papa's letter" was with God. |
| "To-whit! to-whit! to-whee! |
| Will you listen to me? |
| Who stole four eggs I laid, |
| And the nice nest I made?" |
| |
| "Not I," said the cow, "Moo-oo! |
| Such a thing I'd never do; |
| I gave you a wisp of hay, |
| But didn't take your nest away. |
| Not I," said the cow, "Moo-oo! |
| Such a thing I'd never do." |
| |
| "To-whit! to-whit! to-whee! |
| Will you listen to me? |
| Who stole four eggs I laid, |
| And the nice nest I made?" |
| |
| "Not I," said the dog, "Bow-wow! |
| I wouldn't be so mean, anyhow! |
| I gave the hairs the nest to make, |
| But the nest I did not take. |
| Not I," said the dog, "Bow-wow! |
| I'm not so mean, anyhow." |
| |
| "To-whit! to-whit! to-whee! |
| Will you listen to me? |
| Who stole four eggs I laid, |
| And the nice nest I made?" |
| |
| "Not I," said the sheep, "oh, no! |
| I wouldn't treat a poor bird so. |
| I gave the wool the nest to line, |
| But the nest was none of mine. |
| Baa! Baa!" said the sheep; "oh, no! |
| I wouldn't treat a poor bird so." |
| |
| "Caw! Caw!" cried the crow; |
| "I should like to know |
| What thief took away |
| A bird's nest to-day?" |
| |
| "I would not rob a bird," |
| Said little Mary Green; |
| "I think I never heard |
| Of anything so mean." |
| |
| "It is very cruel, too," |
| Said little Alice Neal; |
| "I wonder if he knew |
| How sad the bird would feel?" |
| |
| A little boy hung down his head, |
| And went and hid behind the bed, |
| For he stole that pretty nest |
| From poor little yellow-breast; |
| And he felt so full of shame, |
| He didn't like to tell his name. |
| |
| Lydia Maria Child. |
| I, who was always counted, they say, |
| Rather a bad stick anyway, |
| Splintered all over with dodges and tricks, |
| Known as "the worst of the Deacon's six"; |
| I, the truant, saucy and bold, |
| The one black sheep in my father's fold, |
| "Once on a time," as the stories say, |
| Went over the hill on a winter's day— |
| Over the hill to the poor-house. |
| |
| Tom could save what twenty could earn; |
| But givin' was somethin' he ne'er would learn; |
| Isaac could half o' the Scriptur's speak— |
| Committed a hundred verses a week; |
| Never forgot, an' never slipped; |
| But "Honor thy father and mother," he skipped; |
| So over the hill to the poor-house! |
| |
| As for Susan, her heart was kind |
| An' good—what there was of it, mind; |
| Nothin' too big, an' nothin' too nice, |
| Nothin' she wouldn't sacrifice |
| For one she loved; an' that 'ere one |
| Was herself, when all was said an' done; |
| An' Charley an' 'Becca meant well, no doubt, |
| But anyone could pull 'em about; |
| An' all o' our folks ranked well, you see, |
| Save one poor fellow, an' that was me; |
| An' when, one dark an' rainy night, |
| A neighbor's horse went out o' sight, |
| They hitched on me, as the guilty chap |
| That carried one end o' the halter-strap. |
| An' I think, myself, that view of the case |
| Wasn't altogether out o' place; |
| My mother denied it, as mothers do, |
| But I am inclined to believe 'twas true. |
| Though for me one thing might be said— |
| That I, as well as the horse, was led; |
| And the worst of whisky spurred me on, |
| Or else the deed would have never been done. |
| But the keenest grief I ever felt |
| Was when my mother beside me knelt, |
| An' cried, an' prayed, till I melted down, |
| As I wouldn't for half the horses in town. |
| I kissed her fondly, then an' there, |
| An' swore henceforth to be honest and square. |
|
| I served my sentence—a bitter pill |
| Some fellows should take who never will; |
| And then I decided to go "out West," |
| Concludin' 'twould suit my health the best; |
| Where, how I prospered, I never could tell, |
| But Fortune seemed to like me well; |
| An' somehow every vein I struck |
| Was always bubbling over with luck. |
| An', better than that, I was steady an' true, |
| An' put my good resolutions through. |
| But I wrote to a trusty old neighbor, an' said, |
| "You tell 'em, old fellow, that I am dead, |
| An' died a Christian; 'twill please 'em more, |
| Than if I had lived the same as before." |
| |
| But when this neighbor he wrote to me, |
| "Your mother's in the poor-house," says he, |
| I had a resurrection straightway, |
| An' started for her that very day. |
| And when I arrived where I was grown, |
| I took good care that I shouldn't be known; |
| But I bought the old cottage, through and through, |
| Of someone Charley had sold it to; |
| And held back neither work nor gold |
| To fix it up as it was of old. |
| The same big fire-place, wide and high, |
| Flung up its cinders toward the sky; |
| The old clock ticked on the corner-shelf— |
| I wound it an' set it a-goin' myself; |
| An' if everything wasn't just the same, |
| Neither I nor money was to blame; |
| Then—over the hill to the poor-house! |
| |
| One blowin', blusterin' winter's day, |
| With a team an' cutter I started away; |
| My fiery nags was as black as coal; |
| (They some'at resembled the horse I stole;) |
| I hitched, an' entered the poor-house door— |
| A poor old woman was scrubbin' the floor; |
| She rose to her feet in great surprise, |
| And looked, quite startled, into my eyes; |
| I saw the whole of her trouble's trace |
| In the lines that marred her dear old face; |
| "Mother!" I shouted, "your sorrows is done! |
| You're adopted along o' your horse thief son, |
| Come over the hill from the poor-house!" |
| |
| She didn't faint; she knelt by my side, |
| An' thanked the Lord, till I fairly cried. |
| An' maybe our ride wasn't pleasant an' gay, |
| An' maybe she wasn't wrapped up that day; |
| An' maybe our cottage wasn't warm an' bright, |
| An' maybe it wasn't a pleasant sight, |
| To see her a-gettin' the evenin's tea, |
| An' frequently stoppin' an' kissin' me; |
| An' maybe we didn't live happy for years, |
| In spite of my brothers' and sisters' sneers, |
| Who often said, as I have heard, |
| That they wouldn't own a prison-bird; |
| (Though they're gettin' over that, I guess, |
| For all of 'em owe me more or less;) |
| But I've learned one thing; an' it cheers a man |
| In always a-doin' the best he can; |
| That whether on the big book, a blot |
| Gets over a fellow's name or not, |
| Whenever he does a deed that's white, |
| It's credited to him fair and right. |
| An' when you hear the great bugle's notes, |
| An' the Lord divides his sheep and goats, |
| However they may settle my case, |
| Wherever they may fix my place, |
| My good old Christian mother, you'll see, |
| Will be sure to stand right up for me, |
| With over the hill from the poor-house! |
| |
| Will Carleton. |
| O'Grady lived in Shanty row, |
| The neighbors often said |
| They wished that Tim would move away |
| Or that his goat was dead. |
| He kept the neighborhood in fear, |
| And the children always vexed; |
| They couldn't tell jist whin or where |
| The goat would pop up next. |
| |
| Ould Missis Casey stood wan day |
| The dirty clothes to rub |
| Upon the washboard, when she dived |
| Headforemosht o'er the tub; |
| She lit upon her back an' yelled, |
| As she was lying flat: |
| "Go git your goon an' kill the bashte." |
| O'Grady's goat doon that. |
| |
| Pat Doolan's woife hung out the wash |
| Upon the line to dry. |
| She wint to take it in at night, |
| But stopped to have a cry. |
| The sleeves av two red flannel shirts, |
| That once were worn by Pat, |
| Were chewed off almost to the neck. |
| O'Grady's goat doon that. |
| |
| They had a party at McCune's, |
| An' they wor having foon, |
| Whin suddinly there was a crash |
| An' ivrybody roon. |
| The iseter soup fell on the floor |
| An' nearly drowned the cat; |
| The stove was knocked to smithereens. |
| O'Grady's goat doon that. |
| |
| Moike Dyle was coortin' Biddy Shea, |
| Both standin' at the gate, |
| An' they wor just about to kiss |
| Aich oother sly and shwate. |
| They coom togither loike two rams. |
| An' mashed their noses flat. |
| They niver shpake whin they goes by. |
| O'Grady's goat doon that. |
|
| |
| O'Hoolerhan brought home a keg |
| Av dannymite wan day |
| To blow a cistern in his yard |
| An' hid the stuff away. |
| But suddinly an airthquake coom, |
| O'Hoolerhan, house an' hat, |
| An' ivrything in sight wint up. |
| O'Grady's goat doon that. |
| |
| An' there was Dooley's Savhin's Bank, |
| That held the byes' sphare cash. |
| One day the news came doon the sthreet |
| The bank had gone to smash. |
| An' ivrybody 'round was dum |
| Wid anger and wid fear, |
| Fer on the dhoor they red the whords, |
| "O'Grady's goat sthruck here." |
| |
| The folks in Grady's naborhood |
| All live in fear and fright; |
| They think it's certain death to go |
| Around there after night. |
| An' in their shlape they see a ghost |
| Upon the air afloat, |
| An' wake thimselves by shoutin' out: |
| "Luck out for Grady's goat." |
| |
| Will S. Hays. |
| By Nebo's lonely mountain, |
| On this side Jordan's wave, |
| In a vale in the land of Moab |
| There lies a lonely grave, |
| And no man knows that sepulchre, |
| And no man saw it e'er, |
| For the angels of God upturn'd the sod |
| And laid the dead man there. |
| |
| That was the grandest funeral |
| That ever pass'd on earth; |
| But no man heard the trampling, |
| Or saw the train go forth— |
| Noiselessly as the daylight |
| Comes back when night is done, |
| And the crimson streak on ocean's cheek |
| Grows into the great sun. |
| |
| Noiselessly as the springtime |
| Her crown of verdure weaves, |
| And all the trees on all the hills |
| Open their thousand leaves; |
| So without sound of music, |
| Or voice of them that wept, |
| Silently down from the mountain's crown |
| The great procession swept. |
| |
| Perchance the bald old eagle |
| On gray Beth-peor's height, |
| Out of his lonely eyrie |
| Look'd on the wondrous sight; |
| Perchance the lion, stalking, |
| Still shuns that hallow'd spot, |
| For beast and bird have seen and heard |
| That which man knoweth not. |
| |
| But when the warrior dieth, |
| His comrades in the war, |
| With arms reversed and muffled drum, |
| Follow his funeral car; |
| They show the banners taken, |
| They tell his battles won, |
| And after him lead his masterless steed, |
| While peals the minute gun. |
| |
| Amid the noblest of the land |
| We lay the sage to rest, |
| And give the bard an honor'd place, |
| With costly marble drest, |
| In the great minster transept |
| Where lights like glories fall, |
| And the organ rings, and the sweet choir sings |
| Along the emblazon'd wall. |
| |
| This was the truest warrior |
| That ever buckled sword, |
| This was the most gifted poet |
| That ever breathed a word; |
| And never earth's philosopher |
| Traced with his golden pen, |
| On the deathless page, truths half so sage |
| As he wrote down for men. |
| |
| And had he not high honor,— |
| The hillside for a pall, |
| To lie in state while angels wait |
| With stars for tapers tall, |
| And the dark rock-pines like tossing plumes, |
| Over his bier to wave, |
| And God's own hand, in that lonely land, |
| To lay him in the grave? |
| |
| In that strange grave without a name, |
| Whence his uncoffin'd clay |
| Shall break again, O wondrous thought! |
| Before the judgment day, |
| And stand with glory wrapt around |
| On the hills he never trod, |
| And speak of the strife that won our life |
| With the Incarnate Son of God. |
| |
| O lonely grave in Moab's land |
| O dark Beth-peor's hill, |
| Speak to these curious hearts of ours, |
| And teach them to be still. |
| God hath His mysteries of grace, |
| Ways that we cannot tell; |
| He hides them deep like the hidden sleep |
| Of him He loved so well. |
| |
| Cecil F. Alexander. |
| Alone in the dreary, pitiless street, |
| With my torn old dress, and bare, cold feet, |
| All day have I wandered to and fro, |
| Hungry and shivering, and nowhere to go; |
| The night's coming on in darkness and dread, |
| And the chill sleet beating upon my bare head. |
| Oh! why does the wind blow upon me so wild? |
| Is it because I am nobody's child? |
| |
| Just over the way there's a flood of light, |
| And warmth, and beauty, and all things bright; |
| Beautiful children, in robes so fair, |
| Are caroling songs in their rapture there. |
| I wonder if they, in their blissful glee, |
| Would pity a poor little beggar like me, |
| Wandering alone in the merciless street, |
| Naked and shivering, and nothing to eat? |
| |
| Oh! what shall I do when the night comes down |
| In its terrible blackness all over the town? |
| Shall I lay me down 'neath the angry sky, |
| On the cold, hard pavement, alone to die, |
| When the beautiful children their prayers have said, |
| And their mammas have tucked them up snugly in bed? |
| For no dear mother on me ever smiled. |
| Why is it, I wonder, I'm nobody's child? |
| |
| No father, no mother, no sister, not one |
| In all the world loves me—e'en the little dogs run |
| When I wander too near them; 'tis wondrous to see |
| How everything shrinks from a beggar like me! |
| Perhaps 'tis a dream; but sometimes, when I lie |
| Gazing far up in the dark blue sky, |
| Watching for hours some large bright star, |
| I fancy the beautiful gates are ajar, |
| |
| And a host of white-robed, nameless things |
| Come fluttering o'er me on gilded wings; |
| A hand that is strangely soft and fair |
| Caresses gently my tangled hair, |
| And a voice like the carol of some wild bird— |
| The sweetest voice that was ever heard— |
| Calls me many a dear, pet name, |
| Till my heart and spirit are all aflame. |
| |
| They tell me of such unbounded love, |
| And bid me come to their home above; |
| And then with such pitiful, sad surprise |
| They look at me with their sweet, tender eyes, |
| And it seems to me, out of the dreary night |
| I am going up to that world of light, |
| And away from the hunger and storm so wild; |
| I am sure I shall then be somebody's child. |
| |
| Phila H. Case. |
| Like a dream, it all comes o'er me as I hear the Christmas bells; |
| Like a dream it floats before me, while the Christmas anthem swells; |
| Like a dream it bears me onward in the silent, mystic flow, |
| To a dear old sunny Christmas in the happy long ago. |
| |
| And my thoughts go backward, backward, and the years that intervene |
| Are but as the mists and shadows when the sunlight comes between; |
| And all earthly wealth and splendor seem but as a fleeting show, |
| As there comes to me the picture of a Christmas long ago. |
| |
| I can see the great, wide hearthstone and the holly hung about; |
| I can see the smiling faces, I can hear the children shout; |
| I can feel the joy and gladness that the old room seem to fill, |
| E'en the shadows on the ceiling—I can see them dancing still. |
| |
| I can see the little stockings hung about the chimney yet; |
| I can feel my young heart thrilling lest the old man should forget. |
| Ah! that fancy! Were the world mine, I would give it, if I might, |
| To believe in old St. Nicholas, and be a child to-night. |
| |
| Just to hang my little stocking where it used to hang, and feel |
| For one moment all the old thoughts and the old hopes o'er me steal. |
| But, oh! loved and loving faces, in the firelight's dancing glow, |
| There will never come another like that Christmas long ago! |
| |
| For the old home is deserted, and the ashes long have lain |
| In the great, old-fashioned fireplace that will never shine again. |
| Friendly hands that then clasped ours now are folded 'neath the snow; |
| Gone the dear ones who were with us on that Christmas long ago. |
| |
| Let the children have their Christmas—let them have it while they may; |
| Life is short and childhood's fleeting, and there'll surely come a day |
| When St. Nicholas will sadly pass on by the close-shut door, |
| Missing all the merry faces that had greeted him of yore; |
| |
| When no childish step shall echo through the quiet, silent room; |
| When no childish smile shall brighten, and no laughter lift the gloom; |
| When the shadows that fall 'round us in the fire-light's fitful glow |
| Shall be ghosts of those who sat there in the Christmas long ago. |
| Grandma told me all about it, |
| Told me so I could not doubt it, |
| How she danced, my grandma danced, long ago! |
| How she held her pretty head, |
| How her dainty skirts she spread, |
| How she turned her little toes, |
| Smiling little human rose! |
| |
| Grandma's hair was bright and shining, |
| Dimpled cheeks, too! ah! how funny! |
| Bless me, now she wears a cap, |
| My grandma does, and takes a nap every single day; |
| Yet she danced the minuet long ago; |
| Now she sits there rocking, rocking, |
| Always knitting grandpa's stocking— |
| Every girl was taught to knit long ago— |
| But her figure is so neat, |
| And her ways so staid and sweet, |
| I can almost see her now, |
| Bending to her partner's bow, long ago. |
| |
| Grandma says our modern jumping, |
| Rushing, whirling, dashing, bumping, |
| Would have shocked the gentle people long ago. |
| No, they moved with stately grace, |
| Everything in proper place, |
| Gliding slowly forward, then |
| Slowly courtesying back again. |
| |
| Modern ways are quite alarming, grandma says, |
| But boys were charming— |
| Girls and boys I mean, of course—long ago, |
| Sweetly modest, bravely shy! |
| What if all of us should try just to feel |
| Like those who met in the stately minuet, long ago. |
| With the minuet in fashion, |
| Who could fly into a passion? |
| All would wear the calm they wore long ago, |
| And if in years to come, perchance, |
| I tell my grandchild of our dance, |
| I should really like to say, |
| We did it in some such way, long ago. |
| |
| Mary Mapes Dodge. |
| We are two travellers, Roger and I. |
| Roger's my dog—Come here, you scamp! |
| Jump for the gentleman—mind your eye! |
| Over the table—look out for the lamp!— |
| The rogue is growing a little old; |
| Five years we've tramped through wind and weather, |
| And slept outdoors when nights were cold, |
| And ate, and drank—and starved together. |
| |
| We've learned what comfort is, I tell you: |
| A bed on the floor, a bit of rosin, |
| A fire to thaw our thumbs (poor fellow, |
| The paw he holds up there has been frozen), |
| Plenty of catgut for my fiddle, |
| (This outdoor business is bad for strings), |
| Then a few nice buckwheats hot from the griddle, |
| And Roger and I set up for kings! |
| |
| No, thank you, Sir, I never drink. |
| Roger and I are exceedingly moral. |
| Aren't we, Roger? see him wink. |
| Well, something hot then, we won't quarrel. |
| He's thirsty, too—see him nod his head? |
| What a pity, Sir, that dogs can't talk; |
| He understands every word that's said, |
| And he knows good milk from water and chalk. |
| |
| The truth is, Sir, now I reflect, |
| I've been so sadly given to grog, |
| I wonder I've not lost the respect |
| (Here's to you, Sir!) even of my dog. |
| But he sticks by through thick and thin; |
| And this old coat with its empty pockets |
| And rags that smell of tobacco and gin, |
| He'll follow while he has eyes in his sockets. |
| |
| There isn't another creature living |
| Would do it, and prove, through every disaster, |
| So fond, so faithful, and so forgiving, |
| To such a miserable, thankless master. |
| No, Sir! see him wag his tail and grin— |
| By George! it makes my old eyes water— |
| That is, there's something in this gin |
| That chokes a fellow, but no matter! |
| |
| We'll have some music, if you're willing. |
| And Roger (hem! what a plague a cough is, Sir!) |
| Shall march a little.—Start, you villain! |
| Paws up! eyes front! salute your officer! |
| 'Bout face! attention! take your rifle! |
| (Some dogs have arms, you see.) Now hold |
| Your cap while the gentleman gives a trifle |
| To aid a poor old patriot soldier! |
| |
| March! Halt! Now show how the Rebel shakes, |
| When he stands up to hear his sentence; |
| Now tell me how many drams it takes |
| To honor a jolly new acquaintance. |
| Five yelps—that's five; he's mighty knowing; |
| The night's before us, fill the glasses;— |
| Quick, Sir! I'm ill, my brain is going!— |
| Some brandy,—thank you;—there,—it passes! |
| |
| Why not reform? That's easily said; |
| But I've gone through such wretched treatment, |
| Sometimes forgetting the taste of bread, |
| And scarce remembering what meat meant, |
| That my poor stomach's past reform; |
| And there are times when, mad with thinking, |
| I'd sell out heaven for something warm |
| To prop a horrible inward sinking. |
| |
| Is there a way to forget to think? |
| At your age, Sir, home, fortune, friends, |
| A dear girl's love,—but I took to drink;— |
| The same old story; you know how it ends. |
| If you could have seen these classic features,— |
| You needn't laugh, Sir; I was not then |
| Such a burning libel on God's creatures; |
| I was one of your handsome men— |
| |
| If you had seen her, so fair, so young, |
| Whose head was happy on this breast; |
| If you could have heard the songs I sung |
| When the wine went round, you wouldn't have guess'd |
| That ever I, Sir, should be straying |
| From door to door, with fiddle and dog, |
| Ragged and penniless, and playing |
| To you to-night for a glass of grog. |
| |
| She's married since,—a parson's wife, |
| 'Twas better for her that we should part; |
| Better the soberest, prosiest life |
| Than a blasted home and a broken heart. |
| I have seen her—once; I was weak and spent |
| On the dusty road; a carriage stopped, |
| But little she dreamed as on she went, |
| Who kissed the coin that her fingers dropped. |
| |
| You've set me talking, Sir; I'm sorry; |
| It makes me wild to think of the change! |
| What do you care for a beggar's story? |
| Is it amusing? you find it strange? |
| I had a mother so proud of me! |
| 'Twas well she died before—Do you know |
| If the happy spirits in heaven can see |
| The ruin and wretchedness here below? |
| |
| Another glass, and strong, to deaden |
| This pain; then Roger and I will start. |
| I wonder, has he such a lumpish, leaden, |
| Aching thing, in place of a heart? |
| He is sad sometimes, and would weep, if he could, |
| No doubt, remembering things that were,— |
| A virtuous kennel, with plenty of food, |
| And himself a sober, respectable cur. |
| |
| I'm better now; that glass was warming— |
| You rascal! limber your lazy feet! |
| We must be fiddling and performing |
| For supper and bed, or starve in the street.— |
| Not a very gay life to lead, you think. |
| But soon we shall go where lodgings are free, |
| And the sleepers need neither victuals nor drink;— |
| The sooner, the better for Roger and me. |
| |
| J.T. Trowbridge. |
| Oh, a wonderful stream is the river of Time, |
| As it runs through the realm of tears, |
| With a faultless rhythm and a musical rhyme, |
| And a boundless sweep and a surge sublime, |
| As it blends with the ocean of Years. |
| |
| How the winters are drifting, like flakes of snow, |
| And the summers, like buds between; |
| And the year in the sheaf—so they come and they go, |
| On the river's breast, with its ebb and flow, |
| As it glides in the shadow and sheen. |
| |
| There's a magical isle up the river of Time, |
| Where the softest of airs are playing; |
| There's a cloudless sky and a tropical clime, |
| And a song as sweet as a vesper chime, |
| And the Junes with the roses are staying. |
| |
| And the name of that isle is the Long Ago, |
| And we bury our treasures there; |
| There are brows of beauty and bosoms of snow— |
| There are heaps of dust—but we love them so!— |
| There are trinkets and tresses of hair; |
| |
| There are fragments of song that nobody sings, |
| And a part of an infant's prayer, |
| There's a lute unswept, and a harp without strings; |
| There are broken vows and pieces of rings, |
| And the garments that she used to wear. |
| |
| There are hands that are waved, when the fairy shore |
| By the mirage is lifted in air; |
| And we sometimes hear, through the turbulent roar, |
| Sweet voices we heard in the days gone before, |
| When the wind down the river is fair. |
| |
| Oh, remembered for aye be the blessed Isle, |
| All the day of our life till night— |
| When the evening comes with its beautiful smile. |
| And our eyes are closing to slumber awhile, |
| May that "Greenwood" of Soul be in sight! |
| |
| Benjamin Franklin Taylor. |
| |
| |
| In an attic bare and cheerless, Jim the newsboy dying lay |
| On a rough but clean straw pallet, at the fading of the day; |
| Scant the furniture about him but bright flowers were in the room, |
| Crimson phloxes, waxen lilies, roses laden with perfume. |
| On a table by the bedside open at a well-worn page, |
| Where the mother had been reading lay a Bible stained by age, |
| Now he could not hear the verses; he was flighty, and she wept |
| With her arms around her youngest, who close to her side had crept. |
| |
| Blacking boots and selling papers, in all weathers day by day, |
| Brought upon poor Jim consumption, which was eating life away, |
| And this cry came with his anguish for each breath a struggle cost, |
| "'Ere's the morning Sun and 'Erald—latest news of steamship lost. |
| Papers, mister? Morning papers?" Then the cry fell to a moan, |
| Which was changed a moment later to another frenzied tone: |
| "Black yer boots, sir? Just a nickel! Shine 'em like an evening star. |
| It grows late, Jack! Night is coming. Evening papers, here they are!" |
| |
| Soon a mission teacher entered, and approached the humble bed; |
| Then poor Jim's mind cleared an instant, with his cool hand on his head, |
| "Teacher," cried he, "I remember what you said the other day, |
| Ma's been reading of the Saviour, and through Him I see my way. |
| He is with me! Jack, I charge you of our mother take good care |
| When Jim's gone! Hark! boots or papers, which will I be over there? |
| Black yer boots, sir? Shine 'em right up! Papers! Read God's book instead, |
| Better'n papers that to die on! Jack—" one gasp, and Jim was dead! |
| |
| Floating from that attic chamber came the teacher's voice in prayer, |
| And it soothed the bitter sorrow of the mourners kneeling there, |
| He commended them to Heaven, while the tears rolled down his face, |
| Thanking God that Jim had listened to sweet words of peace and grace, |
| Ever 'mid the want and squalor of the wretched and the poor, |
| Kind hearts find a ready welcome, and an always open door; |
| For the sick are in strange places, mourning hearts are everywhere, |
| And such need the voice of kindness, need sweet sympathy and prayer. |
| |
| Emily Thornton. |
| I've got a letter, parson, from my son away out West, |
| An' my old heart is heavy as an anvil in my breast, |
| To think the boy whose future I had once so nicely planned |
| Should wander from the right and come to such a bitter end. |
| |
| I told him when he left us, only three short years ago, |
| He'd find himself a-plowing in a mighty crooked row; |
| He'd miss his father's counsel and his mother's prayers, too, |
| But he said the farm was hateful, an' he guessed he'd have to go. |
| |
| I know there's big temptations for a youngster in the West, |
| But I believed our Billy had the courage to resist; |
| An' when he left I warned him of the ever waitin' snares |
| That lie like hidden serpents in life's pathway everywheres. |
| |
| But Bill, he promised faithful to be careful, an' allowed |
| That he'd build a reputation that'd make us mighty proud. |
| But it seems as how my counsel sort o' faded from his mind, |
| And now he's got in trouble of the very worstest kind! |
| |
| His letters came so seldom that I somehow sort o' knowed |
| That Billy was a-trampin' of a mighty rocky road; |
| But never once imagined he would bow my head in shame, |
| And in the dust would woller his old daddy's honored name. |
| |
|
| He writes from out in Denver, an' the story's mighty short— |
| I jess can't tell his mother!—It'll crush her poor old heart! |
| |
| An' so I reckoned, parson, you might break the news to her— |
| Bill's in the Legislature but he doesn't say what fur! |
| Our band is few, but true and tried, |
| Our leader frank and bold; |
| The British soldier trembles |
| When Marion's name is told. |
| Our fortress is the good green wood, |
| Our tent the cypress tree; |
| We know the forest round us |
| As seamen know the sea; |
| We know its walls of thorny vines, |
| Its glades of reedy grass, |
| Its safe and silent islands |
| Within the dark morass. |
| |
| Woe to the English soldiery |
| That little dread us near! |
| On them shall light at midnight |
| A strange and sudden fear: |
| When, waking to their tents on fire, |
| They grasp their arms in vain, |
| And they who stand to face us |
| Are beat to earth again; |
| And they who fly in terror deem |
| A mighty host behind, |
| And hear the tramp of thousands |
| Upon the hollow wind. |
| |
| Then sweet the hour that brings release |
| From danger and from toil; |
| We talk the battle over |
| And share the battle's spoil. |
| The woodland rings with laugh and shout |
| As if a hunt were up, |
| And woodland flowers are gathered |
| To crown the soldier's cup. |
| With merry songs we mock the wind |
| That in the pine-top grieves, |
| And slumber long and sweetly |
| On beds of oaken leaves. |
| |
| Well knows the fair and friendly moon |
| The band that Marion leads— |
| The glitter of their rifles, |
| The scampering of their steeds. |
| 'Tis life our fiery barbs to guide |
| Across the moonlight plains; |
| 'Tis life to feel the night wind |
| That lifts their tossing manes. |
| A moment in the British camp— |
| A moment—and away— |
| Back to the pathless forest |
| Before the peep of day. |
| |
| Grave men there are by broad Santee, |
| Grave men with hoary hairs; |
| Their hearts are all with Marion, |
| For Marion are their prayers. |
| And lovely ladies greet our band |
| With kindliest welcoming, |
| With smiles like those of summer, |
| And tears like those of spring. |
| For them we wear these trusty arms, |
| And lay them down no more |
| Till we have driven the Briton |
| Forever from our shore. |
| |
| William Cullen Bryant. |
| Our old brown homestead reared its walls, |
| From the wayside dust aloof, |
| Where the apple-boughs could almost cast |
| Their fruitage on its roof: |
| And the cherry-tree so near it grew, |
| That when awake I've lain, |
| In the lonesome nights, I've heard the limbs, |
| As they creaked against the pane: |
| And those orchard trees, O those orchard trees! |
| I've seen my little brothers rocked |
| In their tops by the summer breeze. |
| |
| The sweet-brier under the window-sill, |
| Which the early birds made glad, |
| And the damask rose by the garden fence |
| Were all the flowers we had. |
| I've looked at many a flower since then, |
| Exotics rich and rare, |
| That to other eyes were lovelier, |
| But not to me so fair; |
| O those roses bright, O those roses bright! |
| I have twined them with my sister's locks, |
| That are hid in the dust from sight! |
| |
| We had a well, a deep old well, |
| Where the spring was never dry, |
| And the cool drops down from the mossy stones |
| Were falling constantly: |
| And there never was water half so sweet |
| As that in my little cup, |
| Drawn up to the curb by the rude old sweep, |
| Which my father's hand set up; |
| And that deep old well, O that deep old well! |
| I remember yet the splashing sound |
| Of the bucket as it fell. |
| |
| Our homestead had an ample hearth, |
| Where at night we loved to meet; |
| There my mother's voice was always kind, |
| And her smile was always sweet; |
| And there I've sat on my father's knee, |
| And watched his thoughtful brow, |
| With my childish hand in his raven hair,— |
| That hair is silver now! |
| But that broad hearth's light, O that broad hearth's light! |
| And my father's look, and my mother's smile,— |
| They are in my heart to-night. |
| |
| Phoebe Cary. |
| Whene'er a noble deed is wrought, |
| Whene'er is spoken a noble thought, |
| Our hearts, in glad surprise, |
| To higher levels rise. |
| |
| The tidal wave of deeper souls |
| Into our inmost being rolls |
| And lifts us unawares |
| Out of all meaner cares. |
| |
| Honor to those whose words or deeds |
| Thus help us in our daily needs, |
| And by their overflow, |
| Raise us from what is low! |
| |
| Thus thought I, as by night I read |
| Of the great army of the dead, |
| The trenches cold and damp, |
| The starved and frozen camp,— |
| |
| The wounded from the battle-plain, |
| In dreary hospitals of pain, |
| The cheerless corridors, |
| The cold and stony floors. |
| |
| Lo! in that house of misery |
| A lady with a lamp I see |
| Pass through the glimmering gloom, |
| And flit from room to room. |
| |
| And slow, as in a dream of bliss, |
| The speechless sufferer turns to kiss |
| Her shadow, as it falls |
| Upon the darkening walls. |
| |
| As if a door in heaven should be |
| Opened and then closed suddenly, |
| The vision came and went, |
| The light shone and was spent. |
| |
|
| On England's annals, through the long |
| Hereafter of her speech and song, |
| That light its rays shall cast |
| From portals of the past. |
| |
| A lady with a lamp shall stand |
| In the great history of the land |
| A noble type of good, |
| Heroic Womanhood. |
| |
| Nor even shall be wanting here |
| The palm, the lily, and the spear, |
| The symbols that of yore |
| Saint Filomena bore. |
| |
| Henry W. Longfellow. |
| The feast is o'er! Now brimming wine |
| In lordly cup is seen to shine |
| Before each eager guest; |
| And silence fills the crowded hall, |
| As deep as when the herald's call |
| Thrills in the loyal breast. |
| |
| Then up arose the noble host, |
| And, smiling, cried: "A toast! a toast! |
| To all our ladies fair! |
| Here before all, I pledge the name |
| Of Staunton's proud and beauteous dame, |
| The Ladye Gundamere!" |
| |
| Then to his feet each gallant sprung, |
| And joyous was the shout that rung, |
| As Stanley gave the word; |
| And every cup was raised on high, |
| Nor ceased the loud and gladsome cry |
| Till Stanley's voice was heard. |
| |
| "Enough, enough," he, smiling, said, |
| And lowly bent his haughty head; |
| "That all may have their due, |
| Now each in turn must play his part, |
| And pledge the lady of his heart, |
| Like gallant knight and true!" |
| |
| Then one by one each guest sprang up, |
| And drained in turn the brimming cup, |
| And named the loved one's name; |
| And each, as hand on high he raised, |
| His lady's grace or beauty praised, |
| Her constancy and fame. |
| |
| 'Tis now St. Leon's turn to rise; |
| On him are fixed those countless eyes;— |
| A gallant knight is he; |
| Envied by some, admired by all, |
| Far famed in lady's bower and hall,— |
| The flower of chivalry. |
| |
| St. Leon raised his kindling eye, |
| And lifts the sparkling cup on high: |
| "I drink to one," he said, |
| "Whose image never may depart, |
| Deep graven on this grateful heart, |
| Till memory be dead. |
| |
| "To one, whose love for me shall last |
| When lighter passions long have past,— |
| So holy 'tis and true; |
| To one, whose love hath longer dwelt, |
| More deeply fixed, more keenly felt, |
| Than any pledged by you." |
| |
| Each guest upstarted at the word, |
| And laid a hand upon his sword, |
| With fury flashing eye; |
| And Stanley said: "We crave the name, |
| Proud knight, of this most peerless dame, |
| Whose love you count so high." |
| |
| St. Leon paused, as if he would |
| Not breathe her name in careless mood, |
| Thus lightly to another; |
| Then bent his noble head, as though |
| To give that word the reverence due, |
| And gently said: "My Mother!" |
| |
| Sir Walter Scott. |
| O for one hour of youthful joy! |
| Give back my twentieth spring! |
| I'd rather laugh a bright-haired boy |
| Than reign a gray-beard king; |
| |
| Off with the spoils of wrinkled age! |
| Away with learning's crown! |
| Tear out life's wisdom-written page, |
| And dash its trophies down! |
| |
| One moment let my life-blood stream |
| From boyhood's fount of flame! |
| Give me one giddy, reeling dream |
| Of life all love and fame! |
| |
| My listening angel heard the prayer, |
| And, calmly smiling, said, |
| "If I but touch thy silvered hair, |
| Thy hasty wish hath sped. |
| |
| "But is there nothing in thy track |
| To bid thee fondly stay, |
| While the swift seasons hurry back |
| To find the wished-for day?" |
| |
| Ah! truest soul of womankind! |
| Without thee what were life? |
| One bliss I cannot leave behind: |
| I'll take—my—precious—wife! |
| |
| The angel took a sapphire pen |
| And wrote in rainbow dew, |
| "The man would be a boy again, |
| And be a husband, too!" |
| |
| "And is there nothing yet unsaid |
| Before the change appears? |
| Remember, all their gifts have fled |
| With those dissolving years!" |
| |
| "Why, yes; for memory would recall |
| My fond paternal joys; |
| I could not bear to leave them all: |
| I'll take—my—girl—and—boys!" |
| |
| The smiling angel dropped his pen— |
| "Why, this will never do; |
| The man would be a boy again, |
| And be a father too!" |
| |
| And so I laughed—my laughter woke |
| The household with its noise— |
| And wrote my dream, when morning broke, |
| To please the gray-haired boys. |
| |
| Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
| Oh, such a commotion under the ground |
| When March called, "Ho, there! ho!" |
| Such spreading of rootlets far and wide, |
| Such whispering to and fro; |
| And, "Are you ready?" the Snowdrop asked, |
| "'Tis time to start, you know." |
| "Almost, my dear," the Scilla replied; |
| "I'll follow as soon as you go." |
| Then, "Ha! ha! ha!" a chorus came |
| Of laughter soft and low, |
| From the millions of flowers under the ground, |
| Yes—millions—beginning to grow. |
| |
| O, the pretty brave things! through the coldest days, |
| Imprisoned in walls of brown, |
| They never lost heart though the blast shrieked loud, |
| And the sleet and the hail came down, |
| But patiently each wrought her beautiful dress, |
| Or fashioned her beautiful crown; |
| And now they are coming to brighten the world, |
| Still shadowed by Winter's frown; |
| And well may they cheerily laugh, "Ha! ha!" |
| In a chorus soft and low, |
| The millions of flowers hid under the ground |
| Yes—millions—beginning to grow. |
| God makes sech nights, all white an' still |
| Fur 'z you can look or listen, |
| Moonshine an' snow on field an' hill, |
| All silence an' all glisten. |
| |
| Zekle crep' up quite unbeknown |
| An' peeked in thru the winder. |
| An' there sot Huldy all alone, |
| 'ith no one nigh to hender. |
| |
| A fireplace filled the room's one side |
| With half a cord o' wood in— |
| There warn't no stoves (tell comfort died) |
| To bake ye to a puddin'. |
| |
| The wa'nut logs shot sparkles out |
| Towards the pootiest, bless her, |
| An' leetle flames danced all about |
| The chiny on the dresser. |
| |
| Agin the chimbley crook-necks hung, |
| An' in amongst 'em rusted |
| The ole queen's-arm thet gran'ther Young |
| Fetched back from Concord busted. |
| |
| The very room, coz she was in, |
| Seemed warm from floor to ceilin', |
| An' she looked full ez rosy agin |
| Ez the apples she was peelin'. |
| |
| 'Twas kin' o' kingdom-come to look |
| On sech a blessed cretur, |
| A dogrose blushin' to a brook |
| Ain't modester nor sweeter. |
| |
| He was six foot o' man, A 1, |
| Clear grit an' human natur'; |
| None couldn't quicker pitch a ton |
| Nor dror a furrer straighter, |
| |
| He'd sparked it with full twenty gals, |
| Hed squired 'em, danced 'em, druv 'em, |
| Fust this one, an' then thet, by spells— |
| All is, he couldn't love 'em, |
| |
| But long o' her his veins 'ould run |
| All crinkly like curled maple, |
| The side she breshed felt full o' sun |
| Ez a south slope in Ap'il. |
| |
| She thought no v'ice hed sech a swing |
| Ez hisn in the choir; |
| My! when he made Ole Hunderd ring, |
| She knowed the Lord was nigher. |
| |
| An' she'd blush scarlet, right in prayer, |
| When her new meetin'-bunnit |
| Felt somehow thru its crown a pair |
| O' blue eyes sot upun it. |
| |
| Thet night, I tell ye, she looked some! |
| She seemed to 've gut a new soul, |
| For she felt sartin-sure he'd come, |
| Down to her very shoe-sole. |
| |
| She heered a foot, an' knowed it tu, |
| A-raspin' on the scraper,— |
| All ways to once her feelin's flew |
| Like sparks in burnt-up paper. |
| |
| He kin' o' l'itered on the mat, |
| Some doubtfle o' the sekle, |
| His heart kep' goin' pity-pat, |
| But hern went pity Zekle. |
| |
| An' yit she gin her cheer a jerk |
| Ez though she wished him furder, |
| An' on her apples kep' to work, |
| Parin' away like murder. |
| |
| "You want to see my Pa, I s'pose?" |
| "Wal—no—I come dasignin'"— |
| "To see my Ma? She's sprinklin' clo'es |
| Agin to-morrer's i'nin'." |
| |
| To say why gals acts so or so, |
| Or don't, 'ould be presumin'; |
| Mebby to mean yes an' say no |
| Comes nateral to women. |
| |
| He stood a spell on one foot fust, |
| Then stood a spell on t'other, |
| An' on which one he felt the wust |
| He couldn't ha' told ye nuther. |
| |
| Says he, "I'd better call agin"; |
| Says she, "Think likely, Mister"; |
| Thet last work pricked him like a pin, |
| An'—Wal, he up an' kist her. |
| |
| When Ma bimeby upon 'em slips, |
| Huldy sot pale ez ashes, |
| All kin' o' smily roun' the lips |
| An' teary roun' the lashes. |
| |
| For she was jes' the quiet kind |
| Whose naturs never vary, |
| Like streams that keep a summer mind |
| Snowhid in Jenooary. |
| |
| The blood clost roun' her heart felt glued |
| Too tight for all expressin', |
| Tell mother see how metters stood, |
| An' gin 'em both her blessin'. |
| |
| Then her red come back like the tide |
| Down to the Bay o' Fundy. |
| An' all I know is they was cried |
| In meetin' come nex' Sunday. |
| |
| James Russell Lowell. |
| It was the twilight hour; |
| Behind the western hill the sun had sunk, |
| Leaving the evening sky aglow with crimson light. |
| The air is filled with fragrance and with sound; |
| High in the tops of shadowy vine-wreathed trees, |
| Grave parent-birds were twittering good-night songs, |
| To still their restless brood. |
| Across the way |
| A noisy little brook made pleasant |
| Music on the summer air, |
| And farther on, the sweet, faint sound |
| Of Whippoorwill Falls rose on the air, and fell |
| Like some sweet chant at vespers. |
| The air is heavy |
| With the scent of mignonette and rose, |
| And from the beds of flowers the tall |
| White lilies point like angel fingers upward, |
| Casting on the air an incense sweet, |
| That brings to mind the old, old story |
| Of the alabaster box that loving Mary |
| Broke upon the Master's feet. |
| |
| Upon his vine-wreathed porch |
| An old white-headed man sits dreaming |
| Happy, happy dreams of days that are no more; |
| And listening to the quaint old song |
| With which his daughter lulled her child to rest: |
| |
| "Abide with me," she says; |
| "Fast falls the eventide; |
| The darkness deepens,— |
| Lord, with me abide." |
| |
| And as he listens to the sounds that fill the |
| Summer air, sweet, dreamy thoughts |
| Of his "lost youth" come crowding thickly up; |
| And, for a while, he seems a boy again. |
| With feet all bare |
| He wades the rippling brook, and with a boyish shout |
| Gathers the violets blue, and nodding ferns, |
| That wave a welcome from the other side. |
| With those he wreathes |
| The sunny head of little Nell, a neighbor's child, |
| Companion of his sorrows and his joys. |
| Sweet, dainty Nell, whose baby life |
| Seemed early linked with his, |
| And whom he loved with all a boy's devotion. |
| |
| Long years have flown. |
| No longer boy and girl, but man and woman grown, |
| They stand again beside the brook, that murmurs |
| Ever in its course, nor stays for time nor man, |
| And tell the old, old story, |
| And promise to be true till life for them shall end. |
| |
| Again the years roll on, |
| And they are old. The frost of age |
| Has touched the once-brown hair, |
| And left it white as are the chaliced lilies. |
| Children, whose rosy lips once claimed |
| A father's blessing and a mother's love, |
| Have grown to man's estate, save two |
| Whom God called early home to wait |
| For them in heaven. |
| |
| And then the old man thinks |
| How on a night like this, when faint |
| And sweet as half-remembered dreams |
| Old Whippoorwill Falls did murmur soft |
| Its evening psalms, when fragrant lilies |
| Pointed up the way her Christ had gone, |
| God called the wife and mother home, |
| And bade him wait. |
| Oh! why is it so hard for |
| Man to wait? to sit with folded hands, |
| Apart, amid the busy throng, |
| And hear the buzz and hum of toil around; |
| To see men reap and bind the golden sheaves |
| Of earthly fruits, while he looks idly on, |
| And knows he may not join, |
| But only wait till God has said, "Enough!" |
| And calls him home! |
| |
| And thus the old man dreams, |
| And then awakes; awakes to hear |
| The sweet old song just dying |
| On the pulsing evening air: |
| |
| "When other helpers fail, |
| And comforts flee, |
| Lord of the helpless, |
| Oh, abide with me!" |
| |
| Eliza M. Sherman. |
| The rosy clouds float overhead, |
| The sun is going down, |
| And now the Sandman's gentle tread |
| Comes stealing through the town. |
| "White sand, white sand," he softly cries, |
| And, as he shakes his hand, |
| Straightway there lies on babies' eyes |
| His gift of shining sand. |
| Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown, |
| As shuts the rose, they softly close, |
| when he goes through the town. |
| |
| From sunny beaches far away, |
| Yes, in another land, |
| He gathers up, at break of day, |
| His store of shining sand. |
| No tempests beat that shore remote, |
| No ships may sail that way; |
| His little boat alone may float |
| Within that lovely bay. |
| Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown, |
| As shuts the rose, they softly close, |
| when he goes through the town. |
| |
| He smiles to see the eyelids close |
| Above the happy eyes, |
| And every child right well he knows— |
| Oh, he is very wise! |
| But if, as he goes through the land, |
| A naughty baby cries, |
| His other hand takes dull gray sand |
| To close the wakeful eyes. |
| Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown, |
| As shuts the rose, they softly close, |
| when he goes through the town. |
| |
| So when you hear the Sandman's song |
| Sound through the twilight sweet, |
| Be sure you do not keep him long |
| A-waiting in the street. |
| Lie softly down, dear little head, |
| Rest quiet, busy hands, |
| Till by your bed when good-night's said, |
| He strews the shining sands. |
| Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown, |
| As shuts the rose, they softly close, |
| when he goes through the town. |
| |
| Margaret Vandegrift. |
| Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky, |
| The flying cloud, the frosty light: |
| The year is dying in the night; |
| Ring out, wild bells, and let him die. |
| |
| Ring out the old, ring in the new, |
| Ring, happy bells, across the snow: |
| The year is going, let him go; |
| Ring out the false, ring in the true. |
| |
| Ring out the grief that saps the mind, |
| For those that here we see no more; |
| Ring out the feud of rich and poor, |
| Ring in redress to all mankind. |
| |
| Ring out a slowly dying cause, |
| And ancient forms of party strife; |
| Ring in the nobler modes of life, |
| With sweeter manners, purer laws. |
| |
| Ring out false pride in place and blood, |
| The civic slander and the spite; |
| Ring in the love of truth and right, |
| Ring in the common love of good. |
| |
| Ring out old shapes of foul disease; |
| Ring out the narrowing lust of gold; |
| Ring out the thousand wars of old, |
| Ring in the thousand years of peace. |
| |
| Ring in the valiant man and free, |
| The larger heart, the kindlier hand; |
| Ring out the darkness of the land, |
| Ring in the Christ that is to be. |
| |
| Alfred, Lord Tennyson. |
| Among the legends sung or said |
| Along our rocky shore, |
| The Wishing Bridge of Marblehead |
| May well be sung once more. |
| |
| An hundred years ago (so ran |
| The old-time story) all |
| Good wishes said above its span |
| Would, soon or late, befall. |
| |
| If pure and earnest, never failed |
| The prayers of man or maid |
| For him who on the deep sea sailed, |
| For her at home who stayed. |
| |
| Once thither came two girls from school |
| And wished in childish glee: |
| And one would be a queen and rule, |
| And one the world would see. |
| |
| Time passed; with change of hopes and fears |
| And in the selfsame place, |
| Two women, gray with middle years, |
| Stood wondering, face to face. |
| |
| With wakened memories, as they met, |
| They queried what had been: |
| "A poor man's wife am I, and yet," |
| Said one, "I am a queen. |
| |
| "My realm a little homestead is, |
| Where, lacking crown and throne, |
| I rule by loving services |
| And patient toil alone." |
| |
| The other said: "The great world lies |
| Beyond me as it laid; |
| O'er love's and duty's boundaries |
| My feet have never strayed. |
| |
| "I see but common sights at home, |
| Its common sounds I hear, |
| My widowed mother's sick-bed room |
| Sufficeth for my sphere. |
| |
| "I read to her some pleasant page |
| Of travel far and wide, |
| And in a dreamy pilgrimage |
| We wander side by side. |
| |
| "And when, at last, she falls asleep, |
| My book becomes to me |
| A magic glass: my watch I keep, |
| But all the world I see. |
| |
| "A farm-wife queen your place you fill, |
| While fancy's privilege |
| Is mine to walk the earth at will, |
| Thanks to the Wishing Bridge." |
| |
| "Nay, leave the legend for the truth," |
| The other cried, "and say |
| God gives the wishes of our youth |
| But in His own best way!" |
| |
| John Greenleaf Whittier. |
| These are the things I hold divine: |
| A trusting child's hand laid in mine, |
| Rich brown earth and wind-tossed trees, |
| The taste of grapes and the drone of bees, |
| A rhythmic gallop, long June days, |
| A rose-hedged lane and lovers' lays, |
| The welcome smile on neighbors' faces, |
| Cool, wide hills and open places, |
| Breeze-blown fields of silver rye, |
| The wild, sweet note of the plover's cry, |
| Fresh spring showers and scent of box, |
| The soft, pale tint of the garden phlox, |
| Lilacs blooming, a drowsy noon, |
| A flight of geese and an autumn moon, |
| Rolling meadows and storm-washed heights, |
| A fountain murmur on summer nights, |
| A dappled fawn in the forest hush, |
| Simple words and the song of a thrush, |
| Rose-red dawns and a mate to share |
| With comrade soul my gypsy fare, |
| A waiting fire when the twilight ends, |
| A gallant heart and the voice of friends. |
| |
| Jean Brooks Burt. |
| The bravest battle that ever was fought! |
| Shall I tell you where and when? |
| On the map of the world you will find it not, |
| 'Twas fought by the mothers of men. |
| |
| Nay, not with cannon or battle shot, |
| With sword or nobler pen, |
| Nay, not with eloquent words or thought |
| From mouths of wonderful men; |
| |
| But deep in the walled-up woman's heart— |
| Of woman that would not yield, |
| But bravely, silently, bore her part— |
| Lo, there is that battle field! |
| |
| No marshaling troup, no bivouac song, |
| No banner to gleam or wave, |
| But oh! these battles, they last so long— |
| From babyhood to the grave. |
| |
| Yet, faithful as a bridge of stars, |
| She fights in her walled-up town— |
| Fights on and on in the endless wars, |
| Then, silent, unseen, goes down. |
|
| |
| Oh, ye with banner and battle shot, |
| And soldiers to shout and praise, |
| I tell you the kingliest victories fought |
| Were fought in those silent ways. |
| |
| Oh, spotless in a world of shame, |
| With splendid and silent scorn, |
| Go back to God as white as you came— |
| The kingliest warrior born! |
| |
| Joaquin Miller. |
| "I asked of Echo, t'other day |
| (Whose words are often few and funny), |
| What to a novice she could say |
| Of courtship, love and matrimony. |
| Quoth Echo plainly,—'Matter-o'-money!' |
| |
| "Whom should I marry? Should it be |
| A dashing damsel, gay and pert, |
| A pattern of inconstancy; |
| Or selfish, mercenary flirt? |
| Quoth Echo, sharply,—'Nary flirt!' |
| |
| "What if, aweary of the strife |
| That long has lured the dear deceiver, |
| She promise to amend her life. |
| And sin no more; can I believe her? |
| Quoth Echo, very promptly;—'Leave her!' |
| |
| "But if some maiden with a heart |
| On me should venture to bestow it, |
| Pray should I act the wiser part |
| To take the treasure or forgo it? |
| Quoth Echo, with decision,—'Go it!' |
| |
| "But what if, seemingly afraid |
| To bind her fate in Hymen's fetter, |
| She vow she means to die a maid, |
| In answer to my loving letter? |
| Quoth Echo, rather coolly,—'Let her!' |
| |
| "What if, in spite of her disdain, |
| I find my heart entwined about |
| With Cupid's dear, delicious chain |
| So closely that I can't get out? |
| Quoth Echo, laughingly,—'Get out!' |
| |
| "But if some maid with beauty blest, |
| As pure and fair as Heaven can make her, |
| Will share my labor and my rest |
| Till envious Death shall overtake her? |
| Quoth Echo (sotto voce),-'Take her!'" |
| |
| John G. Saxe. |
| Out of the hills of Habersham, |
| Down the valleys of Hall, |
| I hurry amain to reach the plain, |
| Run the rapid and leap the fall, |
| Split at the rock and together again, |
| Accept my bed, or narrow or wide, |
| And flee from folly on every side |
| With a lover's pain to attain the plain |
| Far from the hills of Habersham, |
| Far from the valleys of Hall. |
| |
| All down the hills of Habersham, |
| All through the valleys of Hall, |
| The rushes cried "Abide, abide," |
| The wilful waterweeds held me thrall, |
| The laving laurel turned my tide, |
| The ferns and the fondling grass said "Stay," |
| The dewberry dipped for to work delay, |
| And the little reeds sighed "Abide, abide |
| Here in the hills of Habersham, |
| Here in the valleys of Hall." |
| |
| High o'er the hills of Habersham, |
| Veiling the valleys of Hall, |
| The hickory told me manifold |
| Fair tales of shade, the poplar tall |
| Wrought me her shadowy self to hold, |
| The chestnut, the oak, the walnut, the pine, |
| O'erleaning, with flickering meaning and sign, |
| Said, "Pass not, so cold, these manifold |
| Deep shades of the hills of Habersham, |
| These glades in the valleys of Hall." |
| |
| And oft in the hills of Habersham, |
| And oft in the valleys of Hall, |
| The white quartz shone, and the smooth brookstone |
| Did bar me of passage with friendly brawl, |
| And many a luminous jewel lone |
| —Crystals clear or a-cloud with mist, |
| Ruby, garnet, and amethyst— |
| Made lures with the lights of streaming stone, |
| In the clefts of the hills of Habersham, |
| In the beds of the valleys of Hall. |
| |
| But oh, not the hills of Habersham, |
| And oh, not the valleys of Hall |
| Avail: I am fain for to water the plain. |
| Downward the voices of Duty call— |
| Downward, to toil and be mixed with the main. |
| The dry fields burn, and the mills are to turn, |
| And a myriad flowers mortally yearn, |
| And the lordly main from beyond the plain |
| Calls o'er the hills of Habersham, |
| Calls through the valleys of Hall. |
| |
| Sidney Lanier. |