THE LEAN-TO SHED.

(Communicated by an eight-year-old.)

I've a palace set in a garden fair,

And, oh, but the flowers are rich and rare,

Always growing

And always blowing

Winter or summer—it doesn't matter—

For there's never a wind that dares to scatter

The wonderful petals that scent the air

About the walls of my palace there.

And the palace itself is very old,

And it's built of ivory splashed with gold.

It has silver ceilings and jasper floors

And stairs of marble and crystal doors;

And whenever I go there, early or late,

The two tame dragons who guard the gate

And refuse to open the frowning portals

To sisters, brothers and other mortals,

Get up with a grin

And let me in.

And I tickle their ears and pull their tails

And pat their heads and polish their scales;

And they never attempt to flame or fly,

Being quelled by me and my human eye.

Then I pour them drink out of golden flagons,

Drink for my two tame trusty dragons....

But John,

Who's a terrible fellow for chattering on,

John declares

They are Teddy-bears;

And the palace itself, he has often said,

Is only the gardener's lean-to shed.

In the vaulted hall where we have the dances

There are suits of armour and swords and lances,

Plenty of steel-wrought who's-afraiders,

All of them used by real crusaders;

Corslets, helmets and shields and things

Fit to be worn by warrior-kings,

Glittering rows of them—

Think of the blows of them,

Lopping,

Chopping,

Smashing

And slashing

The Paynim armies at Ascalon....

But, bother the boy, here comes our John

Munching a piece of currant cake,

Who says the lance is a broken rake,

And the sword with its keen Toledo blade

Is a hoe, and the dinted shield a spade,

Bent and useless and rusty-red,

In the gardener's silly old lean-to shed.

And sometimes, too, when the night comes soon

With a great magnificent tea-time moon,

Through the nursery-window I peep and see

My palace lit for a revelry;

And I think I shall try to go there instead

Of going to sleep in my dull small bed.

But who are these

In the shade of the trees

That creep so slow

In a stealthy row?

They are Indian braves, a terrible band,

Each with a tomahawk in his hand,

And each has a knife without a sheath

Fiercely stuck in his gleaming teeth.

Are the dragons awake? Are the dragons sleepers?

Will they meet and scatter these crafty creepers?

What ho! ... But John, who has sorely tried me,

Trots up and flattens his nose beside me;

Against the window he flattens it

And says he can see

As well as me,

But never an Indian—not a bit;

Not even the top of a feathered head,

But only a wall and the lean-to shed.

R. C. L.