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Transcriber's Note: Dialect has been retained as it appears in the
original publication.




THE OLD SOLDIER'S STORY

_Poems and Prose Sketches_


JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY


Indianapolis

The Bobbs-Merrill Company Publishers

Copyright 1913, 1914, 1915

James Whitcomb Riley


Press of Braunworth & Co. Bookbinders and Printers Brooklyn, N. Y.




TO

GEORGE THOMPSON, ESQ.

"_Apples ben ripe in my gardayne_"




CONTENTS

                                           PAGE

    THE OLD SOLDIER'S STORY                   1

    SOMEP'N COMMON-LIKE                       5

    MONSIEUR LE SECRETAIRE                    6

    A PHANTOM                                 7

    IN THE CORRIDOR                           8

    LOUELLA WAINIE                            9

    THE TEXT                                 11

    WILLIAM BROWN                            12

    WHY                                      14

    THE TOUCH OF LOVING HANDS                15

    A TEST                                   16

    A SONG FOR CHRISTMAS                     17

    SUN AND RAIN                             19

    WITH HER FACE                            20

    MY NIGHT                                 21

    THE HOUR BEFORE THE DAWN                 22

    GOOD-BY, OLD YEAR                        23

    FALSE AND TRUE                           24

    A BALLAD FROM APRIL                      25

    BRUDDER SIMS                             27

    DEFORMED                                 28

    FAITH                                    30

    THE LOST THRILL                          31

    AT DUSK                                  32

    ANOTHER RIDE FROM GHENT TO AIX           33

    IN THE HEART OF JUNE                     36

    DREAMS                                   37

    BECAUSE                                  42

    TO THE CRICKET                           43

    THE OLD-FASHIONED BIBLE                  44

    UNCOMFORTED                              46

    WHAT THEY SAID                           48

    AFTER THE FROST                          50

    CHARLES H. PHILLIPS                      51

    WHEN IT RAINS                            53

    AN ASSASSIN                              55

    BEST OF ALL                              56

    BIN A-FISHIN'                            57

    UNCLE DAN'L IN TOWN OVER SUNDAY          59

    SOLDIERS HERE TO-DAY                     61

    SHADOW AND SHINE                         65

    THAT NIGHT                               66

    AUGUST                                   67

    THE GUIDE                                68

    SUTTER'S CLAIM                           71

    HER LIGHT GUITAR                         73

    WHILE CIGARETTES TO ASHES TURN           74

    TWO SONNETS TO THE JUNE-BUG              77

    AUTOGRAPHIC                              79

    AN IMPROMPTU ON ROLLER SKATES            80

    WRITTEN IN BUNNER'S "AIRS FROM ARCADY"   81

    IN THE AFTERNOON                         82

    AT MADAME MANICURE'S                     84

    A CALLER FROM BOONE                      86

    LORD BACON                               98

    MY FIRST WOMERN                          99

    AS WE READ BURNS                        101

    TO JAMES NEWTON MATTHEWS                102

    SONG                                    103

    WHEN WE THREE MEET                      105

    JOSH BILLINGS                           106

    WHICH ANE                               108

    THE EARTHQUAKE                          111

    A FALL-CRICK VIEW OF THE EARTHQUAKE     112

    LEWIS D. HAYES                          114

    IN DAYS TO COME                         116

    LUTHER A. TODD                          117

    WHEN THE HEARSE COMES BACK              121

    OUR OLD FRIEND NEVERFAIL                124

    DAN O'SULLIVAN                          126

    JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY                     127

    MEREDITH NICHOLSON                      129

    GOD'S MERCY                             130

    CHRISTMAS GREETING                      131

    TO RUDYARD KIPLING                      132

    THE GUDEWIFE                            133

    TENNYSON                                134

    ROSAMOND C. BAILEY                      135

    MRS. BENJAMIN HARRISON                  136

    GEORGE A. CARR                          138

    TO ELIZABETH                            139

    TO ALMON KEEFER                         140

    TO--"THE J. W. R. LITERARY CLUB"        142

    LITTLE MAID-O'-DREAMS                   143

    TO THE BOY WITH A COUNTRY               145

    CLAUDE MATTHEWS                         146

    TO LESLEY                               147

    THE JUDKINS PAPERS                      148

    TO THE QUIET OBSERVER--ERASMUS WILSON   165

    AMERICA'S THANKSGIVING                  166

    WILLIAM PINKNEY FISHBACK                168

    JOHN CLARK RIDPATH                      170

    NEW YEAR'S NURSERY JINGLE               173

    TO THE MOTHER                           174

    TO MY SISTER                            175

    A MOTTO                                 176

    TO A POET ON HIS MARRIAGE               177

    ART AND POETRY                          178

    HER SMILE OF CHEER AND VOICE OF SONG    179

    OLD INDIANY                             180

    ABE MARTIN                              183

    O. HENRY                                185

    "MONA MACHREE"                          186

    WILLIAM MCKINLEY                        187

    BENJAMIN HARRISON                       190

    LEE O. HARRIS                           192

    THE HIGHEST GOOD                        194

    MY CONSCIENCE                           195

    MY BOY                                  197

    THE OBJECT LESSON                       198




THE OLD SOLDIER'S STORY

AS TOLD BEFORE THE NEW ENGLAND SOCIETY IN NEW YORK CITY


Since we have had no stories to-night I will venture, Mr. President,
to tell a story that I have heretofore heard at nearly all the
banquets I have ever attended. It is a story simply, and you must bear
with it kindly. It is a story as told by a friend of us all, who is
found in all parts of all countries, who is immoderately fond of a
funny story, and who, unfortunately, attempts to tell a funny story
himself--one that he has been particularly delighted with. Well, he is
not a story-teller, and especially he is not a funny story-teller. His
funny stories, indeed, are oftentimes touchingly pathetic. But to such
a story as he tells, being a good-natured man and kindly disposed, we
have to listen, because we do not want to wound his feelings by
telling him that we have heard that story a great number of times, and
that we have heard it ably told by a great number of people from the
time we were children. But, as I say, we can not hurt his feelings. We
can not stop him. We can not kill him; and so the story generally
proceeds. He selects a very old story always, and generally tells it
in about this fashion:--

I heerd an awful funny thing the other day--ha! ha! I don't know
whether I kin git it off er not, but, anyhow, I'll tell it to you.
Well!--le's see now how the fool-thing goes. Oh, yes!--W'y, there was
a feller one time--it was durin' the army, and this feller that I
started in to tell you about was in the war, and--ha! ha!--there was a
big fight a-goin' on, and this feller was in the fight, and it was a
big battle and bullets a-flyin' ever' which way, and bombshells
a-bu'stin', and cannon-balls a-flyin' 'round promiskus; and this
feller right in the midst of it, you know, and all excited and het up,
and chargin' away; and the fust thing you know along come a
cannon-ball and shot his head off--ha! ha! ha! Hold on here a
minute!--no sir; I'm a-gittin' ahead of my story; no, no; it didn't
shoot his _head_ off--I'm gittin' the cart before the horse there--shot
his _leg_ off; that was the way; shot his leg off; and down the poor
feller drapped, and, of course, in that condition was perfectly
he'pless, you know, but yit with presence o' mind enough to know that
he was in a dangerous condition ef somepin' wasn't done fer him right
away. So he seen a comrade a-chargin' by that he knowed, and he
hollers to him and called him by name--I disremember now what the
feller's name was....

Well, that's got nothin' to do with the story, anyway; he hollers to
him, he did, and says, "Hello, there," he says to him; "here, I want
you to come here and give me a lift; I got my leg shot off, and I want
you to pack me back to the rear of the battle"--where the doctors
always is, you know, during a fight--and he says, "I want you to pack
me back there where I can get med-dy-cinal attention er I'm a dead
man, fer I got my leg shot off," he says, "and I want you to pack me
back there so's the surgeons kin take keer of me." Well--the feller,
as luck would have it, ricko-nized him and run to him and throwed down
his own musket, so's he could pick him up; and he stooped down and
picked him up and kindo' half-way shouldered him and half-way helt him
betwixt his arms like, and then he turned and started back with
him--ha! ha! ha! Now, mind, the fight was still a-goin' on--and right
at the hot of the fight, and the feller, all excited, you know, like
he was, and the soldier that had his leg shot off gittin' kindo fainty
like, and his head kindo' stuck back over the feller's shoulder that
was carryin' him. And he hadn't got more'n a couple o' rods with him
when another cannon-ball come along and tuk his head off, shore
enough!--and the curioust thing about it was--ha! ha!--that the feller
was a-packin' him didn't know that he had been hit ag'in at all, and
back he went--still carryin' the deceased back--ha! ha! ha!--to where
the doctors could take keer of him--as he thought. Well, his cap'n
happened to see him, and he thought it was a ruther cur'ous
p'ceedin's--a soldier carryin' a dead body out o' the fight--don't you
see? And so he hollers at him, and he says to the soldier, the cap'n
did, he says, "Hullo, there; where you goin' with that thing?" the
cap'n said to the soldier who was a-carryin' away the feller that had
his leg shot off. Well, his head, too, by that time. So he says,
"Where you goin' with that thing?" the cap'n said to the soldier who
was a-carryin' away the feller that had his leg shot off. Well, the
soldier he stopped--kinder halted, you know, like a private soldier
will when his presidin' officer speaks to him--and he says to him,
"W'y," he says, "Cap, it's a comrade o' mine and the pore feller has
got his leg shot off, and I'm a-packin' him back to where the doctors
is; and there was nobody to he'p him, and the feller would 'a' died in
his tracks--er track ruther--if it hadn't a-been fer me, and I'm
a-packin' him back where the surgeons can take keer of him; where he
can get medical attendance--er his wife's a widder!" he says, "'cause
he's got his leg shot off!" Then _Cap'n_ says, "You blame fool you, he's
got his _head_ shot off." So then the feller slacked his grip on the
body and let it slide down to the ground, and looked at it a minute,
all puzzled, you know, and says, "W'y, he told me it was his leg!" Ha!
ha! ha!




SOMEP'N COMMON-LIKE


    Somep'n 'at's common-like, and good
    And plain, and easy understood;
    Somep'n 'at folks like me and you
    Kin understand, and relish, too,
    And find some sermint in 'at hits
    The spot, and sticks and benefits.

    We don't need nothin' extry fine;
    'Cause, take the run o' minds like mine,
    And we'll go more on good horse-sense
    Than all your flowery eloquence;
    And we'll jedge best of honest acts
    By Nature's statement of the facts.

    So when you're wantin' to express
    Your misery, er happiness,
    Er anything 'at's wuth the time
    O' telling in plain talk er rhyme--
    Jes' sort o' let your subject run
    As ef the Lord wuz listenun.




MONSIEUR LE SECRETAIRE

[JOHN CLARK RIDPATH]


    Mon cher Monsieur le Secretaire,
    Your song flits with me everywhere;
    It lights on Fancy's prow and sings
    Me on divinest voyagings:
    And when my ruler love would fain
    Be laid upon it--high again
    It mounts, and hugs itself from me
    With rapturous wings--still dwindlingly--
    On!--on! till but a _ghost_ is there
    Of song, Monsieur le Secretaire!




A PHANTOM


    Little baby, you have wandered far away,
    And your fairy face comes back to me to-day,
      But I can not feel the strands
        Of your tresses, nor the play
      Of the dainty velvet-touches of your hands.

    Little baby, you were mine to hug and hold;
    Now your arms cling not about me as of old--
      O my dream of rest come true,
        And my richer wealth than gold,
      And the surest hope of Heaven that I knew!

    O for the lisp long silent, and the tone
    Of merriment once mingled with my own--
      For the laughter of your lips,
        And the kisses plucked and thrown
      In the lavish wastings of your finger-tips!

    Little baby, O as then, come back to me,
    And be again just as you used to be,
      For this phantom of you stands
        All too cold and silently,
      And will not kiss nor touch me with its hands.




IN THE CORRIDOR


    Ah! at last alone, love!
      Now the band may play
    Till its sweetest tone, love,
      Swoons and dies away!
    They who most will miss us
      We're not caring for--
    Who of them could kiss us
      In the corridor?

    Had we only known, dear,
      Ere this long delay,
    Just how all alone, dear,
      We might waltz away,
    Then for hours, like this, love,
      We are longing for,
    We'd have still to kiss, love,
      In the corridor!

    Nestle in my heart, love;
      Hug and hold me close--
    Time will come to part, love,
      Ere a fellow knows;
    There! the Strauss is ended--
      Whirl across the floor:
    Isn't waltzing splendid
      In the corridor?




LOUELLA WAINIE


    Louella Wainie! where are you?
      Do you not hear me as I cry?
    Dusk is falling; I feel the dew;
      And the dark will be here by and by:
        I hear no thing but the owl's hoo-hoo!
        Louella Wainie! where are you?

    Hand in hand to the pasture bars
      We came loitering, Lou and I,
    Long ere the fireflies coaxed the stars
      Out of their hiding-place on high.
        O how sadly the cattle moo!
        Louella Wainie! where are you?

    Laughingly we parted here--
      "I will go this way," said she,
    "And you will go that way, my dear"--
      Kissing her dainty hand at me--
        And the hazels hid her from my view.
        Louella Wainie! where are you?

    Is there ever a sadder thing
      Than to stand on the farther brink
    Of twilight, hearing the marsh-frogs sing?
      Nothing could sadder be, I think!
        And ah! how the night-fog chills one through.
        Louella Wainie! where are you?

    Water-lilies and oozy leaves--
      Lazy bubbles that bulge and stare
    Up at the moon through the gloom it weaves
      Out of the willows waving there!
        Is it despair I am wading through?
        Louella Wainie! where are you?

    Louella Wainie, listen to me,
      Listen, and send me some reply,
    For so will I call unceasingly
      Till death shall answer me by and by--
        Answer, and help me to find you too!
        Louella Wainie! where are you?




THE TEXT


    The text: Love thou thy fellow man!
      He may have sinned;--One proof indeed,
    He is thy fellow, reach thy hand
      And help him in his need!

    Love thou thy fellow man. He may
      Have wronged thee--then, the less excuse
    Thou hast for wronging him. Obey
      What he has dared refuse!

    Love thou thy fellow man--for, be
      His life a light or heavy load,
    No less he needs the love of thee
      To help him on his road.




WILLIAM BROWN


    "He bore the name of William Brown"--
    His name, at least, did not go down
      With him that day
      He went the way
      Of certain death where duty lay.

    He looked his fate full in the face--
    He saw his watery resting-place
      Undaunted, and
      With firmer hand
      Held others' hopes in sure command.--

    The hopes of full three hundred lives--
    Aye, babes unborn, and promised wives!
      "The odds are dread,"
      He must have said,
      "Here, God, is one poor life instead."

    No time for praying overmuch--
    No time for tears, or woman's touch
      Of tenderness,
      Or child's caress--
      His last "God bless them!" stopped at "bless"--

    Thus man and engine, nerved with steel,
    Clasped iron hands for woe or weal,
      And so went down
      Where dark waves drown
      All but the name of William Brown.




WHY


    Why are they written--all these lovers' rhymes?
      I catch faint perfumes of the blossoms white
      That maidens drape their tresses with at night,
      And, through dim smiles of beauty and the din
      Of the musicians' harp and violin,
      I hear, enwound and blended with the dance,
      The voice whose echo is this utterance,--
    Why are they written--all these lovers' rhymes?

    Why are they written--all these lovers' rhymes?
      I see but vacant windows, curtained o'er
      With webs whose architects forevermore
      Race up and down their slender threads to bind
      The buzzing fly's wings whirless, and to wind
      The living victim in his winding sheet.--
      I shudder, and with whispering lips repeat,
    Why are they written--all these lovers' rhymes?

    Why are they written--all these lovers' rhymes?
      What will you have for answer?--Shall I say
      That he who sings the merriest roundelay
      Hath neither joy nor hope?--and he who sings
      The lightest, sweetest, tenderest of things
      But utters moan on moan of keenest pain,
      So aches his heart to ask and ask in vain,
    Why are they written--all these lovers' rhymes?




THE TOUCH OF LOVING HANDS

IMITATED


    Light falls the rain-drop on the fallen leaf,
    And light o'er harvest-plain and garnered sheaf--
      But lightlier falls the touch of loving hands.

    Light falls the dusk of mild midsummer night,
    And light the first star's faltering lance of light
      On glimmering lawns,--but lightlier loving hands.

    And light the feathery flake of early snows,
    Or wisp of thistle-down that no wind blows,
      And light the dew,--but lightlier loving hands.

    Light-falling dusk, or dew, or summer rain,
    Or down of snow or thistle--all are vain,--
      Far lightlier falls the touch of loving hands.




A TEST


    'Twas a test I designed, in a quiet conceit
    Of myself, and the thoroughly fixed and complete
    Satisfaction I felt in the utter control
    Of the guileless young heart of the girl of my soul.

    So--we parted. I said it were better we should--
    That she could forget me--I knew that she could;
    For I never was worthy so tender a heart,
    And so for her sake it were better to part.

    She averted her gaze, and she sighed and looked sad
    As I held out my hand--for the ring that she had--
    With the bitterer speech that I hoped she might be
    Resigned to look up and be happy with me.

    'Twas a test, as I said--but God pity your grief,
    At a moment like this when a smile of relief
    Shall leap to the lips of the woman you prize,
    And no mist of distress in her glorious eyes.




A SONG FOR CHRISTMAS


    Chant me a rhyme of Christmas--
      Sing me a jovial song,--
    And though it is filled with laughter,
      Let it be pure and strong.

    Let it be clear and ringing,
      And though it mirthful be,
    Let a low, sweet voice of pathos
      Run through the melody.

    Sing of the hearts brimmed over
      With the story of the day--
    Of the echo of childish voices
      That will not die away.--

    Of the blare of the tasselled bugle,
      And the timeless clatter and beat
    Of the drum that throbs to muster
     Squadrons of scampering feet.--

    Of the wide-eyed look of wonder,
      And the gurgle of baby-glee,
    As the infant hero wrestles
      From the smiling father's knee.

    Sing the delights unbounded
      Of the home unknown of care,
    Where wealth as a guest abideth,
      And want is a stranger there.

    But O let your voice fall fainter,
      Till, blent with a minor tone,
    You temper your song with the beauty
      Of the pity Christ hath shown:

    And sing one verse for the voiceless;
      And yet, ere the song be done,
    A verse for the ears that hear not,
      And a verse for the sightless one:

    And one for the outcast mother,
      And one for the sin-defiled
    And hopeless sick man dying,
      And one for his starving child.

    For though it be time for singing
      A merry Christmas glee,
    Let a low, sweet voice of pathos
      Run through the melody.




SUN AND RAIN


    All day the sun and rain have been as friends,
      Each vying with the other which shall be
      Most generous in dowering earth and sea
    With their glad wealth, till each, as it descends,
    Is mingled with the other, where it blends
      In one warm, glimmering mist that falls on me
      As once God's smile fell over Galilee.
    The lily-cup, filled with it, droops and bends
      Like some white saint beside a sylvan shrine
    In silent prayer; the roses at my feet,
      Baptized with it as with a crimson wine,
    Gleam radiant in grasses grown so sweet,
      The blossoms lift, with tenderness divine,
      Their wet eyes heavenward with these of mine.




WITH HER FACE


    With her face between his hands!
      Was it any wonder she
      Stood atiptoe tremblingly?
    As his lips along the strands
    Of her hair went lavishing
    Tides of kisses, such as swing
    Love's arms to like iron bands.--
    With her face between his hands!

    And the hands--the hands that pressed
      The glad face--Ah! where are they?
      Folded limp, and laid away
    Idly over idle breast?
    He whose kisses drenched her hair,
    As he caught and held her there,
    In Love's alien, lost lands,
    With her face between his hands?

    Was it long and long ago,
      When her face was not as now,
      Dim with tears? nor wan her brow
    As a winter-night of snow?
    Nay, anointing still the strands
    Of her hair, his kisses flow
    Flood-wise, as she dreaming stands,
    With her face between his hands.




MY NIGHT


    Hush! hush! list, heart of mine, and hearken low!
      You do not guess how tender is the Night,
      And in what faintest murmurs of delight
    Her deep, dim-throated utterances flow
    Across the memories of long-ago!
      Hark! do your senses catch the exquisite
      Staccatos of a bird that dreams he sings?
    Nay, then, you hear not rightly,--'tis a blur
      Of misty love-notes, laughs and whisperings
    The Night pours o'er the lips that fondle her,
      And that faint breeze, filled with all fragrant sighs,--
      That is her breath that quavers lover-wise--
    O blessed sweetheart, with thy swart, sweet kiss,
    Baptize me, drown me in black swirls of bliss!




THE HOUR BEFORE THE DAWN


    The hour before the dawn!
      O ye who grope therein, with fear and dread
      And agony of soul, be comforted,
    Knowing, ere long, the darkness will be gone,
      And down its dusky aisles the light be shed;
    Therefore, in utter trust, fare on--fare on,
      This hour before the dawn!




GOOD-BY, OLD YEAR


    Good-by, Old Year!
            Good-by!
    We have been happy--you and I;
      We have been glad in many ways;
    And now, that you have come to die,
      Remembering our happy days,
    'Tis hard to say, "Good-by--
      Good-by, Old Year!
            Good-by!"

    Good-by, Old Year!
            Good-by!
    We have seen sorrow--you and I--
      Such hopeless sorrow, grief and care,
    That now, that you have come to die,
      Remembering our old despair,
    'Tis sweet to say, "Good-by--
      Good-by, Old Year!
            Good-by!"




FALSE AND TRUE


    One said: "Here is my hand to lean upon
      As long as you may need it." And one said:
      "Believe me true to you till I am dead."
    And one, whose dainty way it was to fawn
    About my face, with mellow fingers drawn
      Most soothingly o'er brow and drooping head,
      Sighed tremulously: "Till my breath is fled
    Know I am faithful!" ... Now, all these are gone
      And many like to them--and yet I make
    No bitter moan above their grassy graves--
      Alas! they are not dead for me to take
    Such sorry comfort!--but my heart behaves
      Most graciously, since one who never spake
      A vow is true to me for true love's sake.




A BALLAD FROM APRIL


    I am dazed and bewildered with living
      A life but an intricate skein
    Of hopes and despairs and thanksgiving
      Wound up and unravelled again--
    Till it seems, whether waking or sleeping,
      I am wondering ever the while
    At a something that smiles when I'm weeping,
      And a something that weeps when I smile.

    And I walk through the world as one dreaming
      Who knows not the night from the day,
    For I look on the stars that are gleaming,
      And lo, they have vanished away:
    And I look on the sweet-summer daylight,
      And e'en as I gaze it is fled,
    And, veiled in a cold, misty, gray light,
      The winter is there in its stead.

    I feel in my palms the warm fingers
      Of numberless friends--and I look,
    And lo, not a one of them lingers
      To give back the pleasure he took;
    And I lift my sad eyes to the faces
      All tenderly fixed on my own,
    But they wither away in grimaces
      That scorn me, and leave me alone.

    And I turn to the woman that told me
      Her love would live on until death--
    But her arms they no longer enfold me,
      Though barely the dew of her breath
    Is dry on the forehead so pallid
      That droops like the weariest thing
    O'er this most inharmonious ballad
    That ever a sorrow may sing.

    So I'm dazed and bewildered with living
      A life but an intricate skein
    Of hopes and despairs and thanksgiving
      Wound up and unravelled again--
    Till it seems, whether waking or sleeping,
      I am wondering ever the while
    At a something that smiles when I'm weeping,
      And a something that weeps when I smile.




BRUDDER SIMS


    Dah's Brudder Sims! Dast slam yo' Bible shet
      An' lef' dat man alone--kase he's de boss
      Ob all de preachahs ev' I come across!
    Day's no twis' in dat gospil book, I bet,
    Ut Brudder Sims cain't splanify, an' set
      You' min' at eaze! W'at's Moses an' de Laws?
      W'at's fo'ty days an' nights ut Noey toss
    Aroun' de Dil-ooge?--W'at dem Chillen et
      De Lo'd rain down? W'at s'prise ole Joney so
    In dat whale's inna'ds?--W'at dat laddah mean
      Ut Jacop see?--an' wha' dat laddah go?--
    Who clim dat laddah?--Wha' dat laddah lean?--
      An' wha' dat laddah now? "Dast chalk yo' toe
      Wid Faith," sez Brudder Sims, "an' den you know!"




DEFORMED


    Crouched at the corner of the street
      She sits all day, with face too white
    And hands too wasted to be sweet
      In anybody's sight.

    Her form is shrunken, and a pair
      Of crutches leaning at her side
    Are crossed like homely hands in prayer
      At quiet eventide.

    Her eyes--two lustrous, weary things--
      Have learned a look that ever aches,
    Despite the ready jinglings
      The passer's penny makes.

    And, noting this, I pause and muse
      If any precious promise touch
    This heart that has so much to lose
      If dreaming overmuch--

    And, in a vision, mistily
      Her future womanhood appears,--
    A picture framed with agony
      And drenched with ceaseless tears--

    Where never lover comes to claim
      The hand outheld so yearningly--
    The laughing babe that lisps her name
      Is but a fantasy!

    And, brooding thus, all swift and wild
      A daring fancy, strangely sweet,
    Comes o'er me, that the crippled child
      That crouches at my feet--

    Has found her head a resting-place
      Upon my shoulder, while my kiss
    Across the pallor of her face
      Leaves crimson trails of bliss.




FAITH


    The sea was breaking at my feet,
      And looking out across the tide,
    Where placid waves and heaven meet,
      I thought me of the Other Side.

    For on the beach on which I stood
      Were wastes of sands, and wash, and roar,
    Low clouds, and gloom, and solitude,
      And wrecks, and ruins--nothing more.

    "O, tell me if beyond the sea
      A heavenly port there is!" I cried,
    And back the echoes laughingly
      "There is! there is!" replied.




THE LOST THRILL


    I grow so weary, someway, of all thing
      That love and loving have vouchsafed to me,
      Since now all dreamed-of sweets of ecstasy
    Am I possessed of: The caress that clings--
    The lips that mix with mine with murmurings
      No language may interpret, and the free,
      Unfettered brood of kisses, hungrily
    Feasting in swarms on honeyed blossomings
    Of passion's fullest flower--For yet I miss
      The essence that alone makes love divine--
    The subtle flavoring no tang of this
      Weak wine of melody may here define:--
    A something found and lost in the first kiss
      A lover ever poured through lips of mine.




AT DUSK


    A something quiet and subdued
      In all the faces that we meet;
    A sense of rest, a solitude
      O'er all the crowded street;
        The very noises seem to be
        Crude utterings of harmony,
        And all we hear, and all we see,
      Has in it something sweet.

    Thoughts come to us as from a dream
      Of some long-vanished yesterday;
    The voices of the children seem
      Like ours, when young as they;
        The hand of Charity extends
        To meet Misfortune's, where it blends,
        Veiled by the dusk--and oh, my friends,
      Would it were dusk alway!




ANOTHER RIDE FROM GHENT TO AIX


    We sprang for the side-holts--my gripsack and I--
    It dangled--I dangled--we both dangled by.
    "Good speed!" cried mine host, as we landed at last--
    "Speed?" chuckled the watch we went lumbering past;
    Behind shut the switch, and out through the rear door
    I glared while we waited a half hour more.

    I had missed the express that went thundering down
    Ten minutes before to my next lecture town,
    And my only hope left was to catch this "wild freight,"
    Which the landlord remarked was "most luckily late--
    But the twenty miles distance was easily done,
    If they run half as fast as they usually run!"

    Not a word to each other--we struck a snail's pace--
    Conductor and brakeman ne'er changing a place--
    Save at the next watering-tank, where they all
    Got out--strolled about--cut their names on the wall,
    Or listlessly loitered on down to the pile
    Of sawed wood just beyond us, to doze for a while.

    'Twas high noon at starting, but while we drew near
    "Arcady" I said, "We'll not make it, I fear!
    I must strike Aix by eight, and it's three o'clock now;
    Let me stoke up that engine, and I'll show you how!"
    At which the conductor, with patience sublime,
    Smiled up from his novel with, "Plenty of time!"

    At "Trask," as we jolted stock-still as a stone,
    I heard a cow bawl in a five o'clock tone;
    And the steam from the saw-mill looked misty and thin,
    And the snarl of the saw had been stifled within:
    And a frowzy-haired boy, with a hat full of chips,
    Came out and stared up with a smile on his lips.

    At "Booneville," I groaned, "Can't I telegraph on?"
    No! Why? "'Cause the telegraph-man had just gone
    To visit his folks in Almo"--and one heard
    The sharp snap of my teeth through the throat of a word,
    That I dragged for a mile and a half up the track,
    And strangled it there, and came skulkingly back.

    Again we were off. It was twilight, and more,
    As we rolled o'er a bridge where beneath us the roar
    Of a river came up with so wooing an air
    I mechanic'ly strapped myself fast in my chair
    As a brakeman slid open the door for more light,
    Saying: "Captain, brace up, for your town is in sight!"

    "How they'll greet me!"--and all in a moment--"chewang!"
    And the train stopped again, with a bump and a bang.
    What was it? "The section-hands, just in advance."
    And I spit on my hands, and I rolled up my pants,
    And I clumb like an imp that the fiends had let loose
    Up out of the depths of that deadly caboose.

    I ran the train's length--I lept safe to the ground--
    And the legend still lives that for five miles around
    They heard my voice hailing the hand-car that yanked
    Me aboard at my bidding, and gallantly cranked,
    As I grovelled and clung, with my eyes in eclipse,
    And a rim of red foam round my rapturous lips.

    Then I cast loose my ulster--each ear-tab let fall--
    Kicked off both my shoes--let go arctics and all--
    Stood up with the boys--leaned--patted each head
    As it bobbed up and down with the speed that we sped;
    Clapped my hands--laughed and sang--any noise, bad or good,
    Till at length into Aix we rotated and stood.

    And all I remember is friends flocking round
    As I unsheathed my head from a hole in the ground;
    And no voice but was praising that hand-car divine,
    As I rubbed down its spokes with that lecture of mine.
    Which (the citizens voted by common consent)
    Was no more than its due. 'Twas the lecture they meant.




IN THE HEART OF JUNE


    In the heart of June, love,
      You and I together,
    On from dawn till noon, love,
      Laughing with the weather;
    Blending both our souls, love,
      In the selfsame tune,
    Drinking all life holds, love,
      In the heart of June.

    In the heart of June, love,
      With its golden weather,
    Underneath the moon, love,
      You and I together.
    Ah! how sweet to seem, love,
      Drugged and half aswoon
    With this luscious dream, love,
      In the heart of June.




DREAMS

    "Do I sleep, do I dream,
      Do I wonder and doubt--
    Are things what they seem
      Or is visions about?"


There has always been an inclination, or desire, rather, on my part to
believe in the mystic--even as far back as stretches the gum-elastic
remembrance of my first "taffy-pullin'" given in honor of my fifth
birthday; and the ghost-stories, served by way of ghastly dessert, by
our hired girl. In fancy I again live over all the scenes of that
eventful night:--

The dingy kitchen, with its haunting odors of a thousand feasts and
wash-days; the old bench-legged stove, with its happy family of
skillets, stewpans and round-bellied kettles crooning and blubbering
about it. And how we children clustered round the genial hearth, with
the warm smiles dying from our faces just as the embers dimmed and
died out in the open grate, as with bated breath we listened to how
some one's grandmother had said that her first man went through a
graveyard once, one stormy night, "jest to show the neighbors that he
wasn't afeard o' nothin'," and how when he was just passing the grave
of his first wife "something kind o' big and white-like, with great
big eyes like fire, raised up from behind the headboard, and kind o'
re'ched out for him"; and how he turned and fled, "with that air white
thing after him as tight as it could jump, and a hollerin'
'wough-yough-yough!' till you could hear it furder'n you could a
bullgine," and how, at last, just as the brave and daring intruder was
clearing two graves and the fence at one despairing leap, the "white
thing," had made a grab at him with its iron claws, and had nicked him
so close his second wife was occasioned the onerous duty of affixing
another patch in his pantaloons. And in conclusion, our hired girl
went on to state that this blood-curdling incident had so wrought upon
the feelings of "the man that wasn't afeard o' nothin'," and had given
him such a distaste for that particular graveyard, that he never
visited it again, and even entered a clause in his will to the effect
that he would ever remain an unhappy corpse should his remains be
interred in said graveyard.

I forgot my pop-corn that night; I forgot my taffy; I forgot all
earthly things; and I tossed about so feverishly in my little bed, and
withal so restlessly, that more than once my father's admonition above
the footboard of the big bed, of "Drat you! go to sleep, there!"
foreshadowed my impending doom. And once he leaned over and made a
vicious snatch at me, and holding me out at arm's length by one leg,
demanded in thunder-tones, "what in the name o' flames and flashes I
meant, anyhow!"

I was afraid to stir a muscle from that on, in consequence of which I
at length straggled off in fitful dreams--and heavens! what dreams!--A
very long and lank, and slim and slender old woman in white knocked at
the door of my vision, and I let her in. She patted me on the
head--and oh! how cold her hands were! And they were very hard hands,
too, and very heavy--and, horror of horrors!--they were not
hands--they were claws!--they were iron!--they were like the things I
had seen the hardware man yank nails out of a keg with. I quailed and
shivered till the long and slim and slender old woman jerked my head
up and snarled spitefully, "What's the matter with you, bub," and I
said, "Nawthin'!" and she said, "Don't you dare to lie to me!" I
moaned.

"Don't you like me?" she asked.

I hesitated.

"And lie if you dare!" she said--"Don't you like me?"

"Oomh-oomh!" said I.

"Why?" said she.

"Cos, you're too long--and slim--an'"--

"Go on!" said she.

"--And tall!" said I.

"Ah, ha!" said she,--"and that's it, hey?"

And then she began to grow shorter and thicker, and fatter and
squattier.

"And how do I suit you now?" she wheezed at length, when she had
wilted down to about the size of a large loaf of bread.

I shook more violently than ever at the fearful spectacle.

"How do you like me now?" she yelped again,--"And don't you lie to me
neither, or I'll swaller you whole!"

I writhed and hid my face.

"Do you like me?"

"No-o-oh!" I moaned.

She made another snatch at my hair. I felt her jagged claws sink into
my very brain. I struggled and she laughed hideously.

"You don't, hey?"

"Yes, yes, I do. I love you!" said I.

"You lie! You lie!" She shrieked derisively. "You know you lie!" and
as I felt the iron talons sinking and gritting in my very brain, with
one wild, despairing effort, I awoke.

I saw the fire gleaming in the grate, and by the light it made I dimly
saw the outline of the old mantelpiece that straddled it, holding the
old clock high upon its shoulders. I was awake then, and the little
squatty woman with her iron talons was a dream! I felt an oily
gladness stealing over me, and yet I shuddered to be all alone.

If only some one were awake, I thought, whose blessed company would
drown all recollections of that fearful dream; but I dared not stir or
make a noise. I could only hear the ticking of the clock, and my
father's sullen snore. I tried to compose my thoughts to pleasant
themes, but that telescopic old woman in white would rise up and mock
my vain appeals, until in fancy I again saw her altitudinous
proportions dwindling into that repulsive and revengeful figure with
the iron claws, and I grew restless and attempted to sit up. Heavens!
something yet held me by the hair. The chill sweat that betokens
speedy dissolution gathered on my brow. I made another effort and
arose, that deadly clutch yet fastened in my hair. Could it be
possible! The short, white woman still held me in her vengeful grasp!
I could see her white dress showing from behind either of my ears. She
still clung to me, and with one wild, unearthly cry of "Pap!" I
started round the room.

I remember nothing further, until as the glowing morn sifted through
the maple at the window, powdering with gold the drear old room, and
baptizing with its radiance the anxious group of old home-faces
leaning over my bed, I heard my father's voice once more rasping on my
senses--"Now get the booby up, and wash that infernal wax out of his
hair!"




BECAUSE


    Why did we meet long years of yore?
      And why did we strike hands and say:
    "We will be friends, and nothing more";
      Why are we musing thus to-day?
        Because because was just because,
        And no one knew just why it was.

    Why did I say good-by to you?
      Why did I sail across the main?
    Why did I love not heaven's own blue
      Until I touched these shores again?
        Because because was just because,
        And you nor I knew why it was.

    Why are my arms about you now,
      And happy tears upon your cheek?
    And why my kisses on your brow?
      Look up in thankfulness and speak!
        Because because was just because,
        And only God knew why it was.




TO THE CRICKET


    The chiming seas may clang; and Tubal Cain
      May clink his tinkling metals as he may;
      Or Pan may sit and pipe his breath away;
    Or Orpheus wake his most entrancing strain
    Till not a note of melody remain!--
      But thou, O cricket, with thy roundelay,
      Shalt laugh them all to scorn! So wilt thou, pray,
    Trill me thy glad song o'er and o'er again:
      I shall not weary; there is purest worth
    In thy sweet prattle, since it sings the lone
      Heart home again. Thy warbling hath no dearth
    Of childish memories--no harsher tone
      Than we might listen to in gentlest mirth,
      Thou poor plebeian minstrel of the hearth.




THE OLD-FASHIONED BIBLE


    How dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood
      That now but in mem'ry I sadly review;
    The old meeting-house at the edge of the wildwood,
      The rail fence and horses all tethered thereto;
    The low, sloping roof, and the bell in the steeple,
      The doves that came fluttering out overhead
    As it solemnly gathered the God-fearing people
      To hear the old Bible my grandfather read.
        The old-fashioned Bible--
          The dust-covered Bible--
    The leathern-bound Bible my grandfather read.

    The blessed old volume! The face bent above it--
      As now I recall it--is gravely severe,
    Though the reverent eye that droops downward to love it
      Makes grander the text through the lens of a tear,
    And, as down his features it trickles and glistens,
      The cough of the deacon is stilled, and his head
    Like a haloéd patriarch's leans as he listens
      To hear the old Bible my grandfather read.
        The old-fashioned Bible--
          The dust-covered Bible--
    The leathern-bound Bible my grandfather read.

    Ah! who shall look backward with scorn and derision
      And scoff the old book though it uselessly lies
    In the dust of the past, while this newer revision
      Lisps on of a hope and a home in the skies?
    Shall the voice of the Master be stifled and riven?
      Shall we hear but a tithe of the words He has said,
    When so long He has, listening, leaned out of Heaven
      To hear the old Bible my grandfather read?
        The old-fashioned Bible--
          The dust-covered Bible--
    The leathern-bound Bible my grandfather read.




UNCOMFORTED


    Lelloine! Lelloine! Don't you hear me calling?
      Calling through the night for you, and calling through the day;
    Calling when the dawn is here, and when the dusk is falling--
      Calling for my Lelloine the angels lured away!

    Lelloine! I call and listen, starting from my pillow--
      In the hush of midnight, Lelloine! I cry,
    And o'er the rainy window-pane I hear the weeping willow
      Trail its dripping leaves like baby-fingers in reply.

    Lelloine, I miss the glimmer of your glossy tresses,
      I miss the dainty velvet palms that nestled in my own;
    And all my mother-soul went out in answerless caresses,
      And a storm of tears and kisses when you left me here alone.

    I have prayed, O Lelloine, but Heaven will not hear me,
      I can not gain one sign from Him who leads you by the hand;
    And O it seems that ne'er again His mercy will come near me--
      That He will never see my need, nor ever understand.

    Won't you listen, Lelloine?--just a little leaning
      O'er the walls of Paradise--lean and hear my prayer,
    And interpret death to Him in all its awful meaning,
      And tell Him you are lonely without your mother there.




WHAT THEY SAID


    Whispering to themselves apart,
      They who knew her said of her,
    "Dying of a broken heart--
      Death her only comforter--
        For the man she loved is dead--
        She will follow soon!" they said.

    Beautiful? Ah! brush the dust
      From Raphael's fairest face,
    And restore it, as it must
      First have smiled back from its place
        On his easel as he leant
        Wrapt in awe and wonderment!

    Why, to kiss the very hem
      Of the mourning-weeds she wore,
    Like the winds that rustled them,
      I had gone the round world o'er;
        And to touch her hand I swear
        All things dareless I would dare!

    But unto themselves apart,
      Whispering, they said of her,
    "Dying of a broken heart--
      Death her only comforter--
        For the man she loved is dead--
        She will follow soon!" they said.

    So I mutely turned away,
      Turned with sorrow and despair,
    Yearning still from day to day
      For that woman dying there,
        Till at last, by longing led,
        I returned to find her--dead?

    "Dead?"--I know that word would tell
      Rhyming there--but in this case
    "Wed" rhymes equally as well
      In the very selfsame place--
        And, in fact, the latter word
        Is the one she had preferred.

    Yet unto themselves apart,
      Whisp'ring they had said of her--
    "Dying of a broken heart--
      Death her only comforter--
        For the man she loved is dead--
        She will follow soon!" they said.




AFTER THE FROST


    After the frost! O the rose is dead,
    And the weeds lie pied in the garden-bed,
    And the peach tree's shade in the wan sunshine,
    Faint as the veins in these hands of mine,
    Streaks the gray of the orchard wall
    Where the vine rasps loose, and the last leaves fall,
    And the bare boughs writhe, and the winds are lost--
          After the frost--the frost!

    After the frost! O the weary head
    And the hands and the heart are quietéd;
    And the lips we loved are locked at last,
    And kiss not back, though the rain falls fast
    And the lashes drip, and the soul makes moan,
    And on through the dead leaves walks alone
    Where the bare boughs writhe and the winds are lost--
          After the frost--the frost!




CHARLES H. PHILLIPS

OBIT NOVEMBER 5TH, 1881


    O friend! There is no way
      To bid farewell to thee!
    The words that we would say
    Above thy grave to-day
    Still falter and delay
      And fail us utterly.

    When walking with us here,
      The hand we loved to press
    Was gentle, and sincere
    As thy frank eyes were clear
    Through every smile and tear
      Of pleasure and distress.

    In years, young; yet in thought
      Mature; thy spirit, free,
    And fired with fervor caught
    Of thy proud sire, who fought
    His way to fame, and taught
      Its toilsome way to thee.

    So even thou hast gained
      The victory God-given--
    Yea, as our cheeks are stained
    With tears, and our souls pained
    And mute, thou hast attained
      Thy high reward in Heaven!




WHEN IT RAINS


    When it rains, and with the rain
      Never bird has heart to sing,
    And across the window-pane
      Is no sunlight glimmering;
    When the pitiless refrain
      Brings a tremor to the lips,
    Our tears are like the rain
      As it drips, drips, drips--
      Like the sad, unceasing rain as it drips.

    When the light of heaven's blue
      Is blurred and blotted quite,
    And the dreary day to you
      Is but a long twilight;
    When it seems that ne'er again
      Shall the sun break its eclipse,
    Our tears are like the rain
      As it drips, drips, drips--
      Like the endless, friendless rain as it drips.

    When it rains! weary heart,
      O be of better cheer!
    The leaden clouds will part,
      And the morrow will be clear;
    Take up your load again,
      With a prayer upon your lips,
    Thanking Heaven for the rain
      As it drips, drips, drips--
      With the golden bow of promise as it drips.




AN ASSASSIN


    Cat-like he creeps along where ways are dim,
      From covert unto covert's secrecy;
    His shadow in the moonlight shrinks from him
      And crouches warily.

    He hugs strange envies to his breast, and nurses
      Wild hatreds, till the murderous hand he grips
    Falls, quivering with the tension of the curses
      He launches from his lips.

    Drenched in his victim's blood he holds high revel;
      He mocks at justice, and in all men's eyes
    Insults his God--and no one but the devil
      Is sorry when he dies.




BEST OF ALL


    Of all good gifts that the Lord lets fall,
    Is not silence the best of all?

    The deep, sweet hush when the song is closed,
    And every sound but a voiceless ghost;

    And every sigh, as we listening leant,
    A breathless quiet of vast content?

    The laughs we laughed have a purer ring
    With but their memory echoing;

    And the joys we voiced, and the words we said,
    Seem so dearer for being dead.

    So of all good gifts that the Lord lets fall,
    Is not silence the best of all?




BIN A-FISHIN'


    W'en de sun's gone down, un de moon is riz,
      Bin a-fishin'! Bin a-fishin'!
    It's I's aguine down wha' the by-o is!
      Bin a-fishin' all night long!

    Chorus

    Bin a-fishin'! Bin a-fishin'!
    Bin a-fishin' clean fum de dusk of night
    Twell away 'long on in de mornin' light.

    Bait my hook, un I plunk her down!
      Bin a-fishin'! Bin a-fishin'!
    Un I lay dat catfish weigh five pound!
      Bin a-fishin' all night long!

    Chorus

    Folks tells me ut a sucker won't bite,
      Bin a-fishin'! Bin a-fishin'!
    Yit I lif' out fo' last Chuesday night,
      Bin a-fishin' all night long!

    Chorus

    Little fish nibble un de big fish come;
      Bin a-fishin'! Bin a-fishin'!
    "Go way, little fish! I want some!"
      Bin a-fishin' all night long!

    Chorus

    Sez de bull frog, "D-runk!" sez de ole owl, "Whoo!"
      Bin a-fishin'! Bin a-fishin'!
    'Spec, Mr. Nigger, dey's a-meanin' you,
      Bin a-fishin' all night long!

    Chorus




UNCLE DAN'L IN TOWN OVER SUNDAY


    I cain't git used to city ways--
    Ner never could, I' bet my hat!
    Jevver know jes' whur I was raised?--
    Raised on a farm! D' ever tell you that?
    Was undoubtatly, I declare!
    And now, on Sunday--fun to spare
    Around a farm! Why jes' to set
    Up on the top three-cornered rail
    Of Pap's old place, nigh La Fayette,
    I'd swap my soul off, hide and tail!
    You fellers in the city here,
    You don't know nothin'!--S'pose to-day,
    This clatterin' Sunday, you waked up
    Without no jinglin'-janglin' bells,
    Ner rattlin' of the milkman's cup,
    Ner any swarm of screechin' birds
    Like these here English swallers--S'pose
    Ut you could miss all noise like those,
    And git shet o' thinkin' of 'em afterwerds,
    And then, in the country, wake and hear
    Nothin' but silence--wake and see
    Nothin' but green woods fur and near?--
    What sort o' Sunday would that be?...
    Wisht I hed you home with me!
    Now think! The laziest of all days--
    To git up any time--er sleep--
    Er jes' lay round and watch the haze
    A-dancin' 'crost the wheat, and keep
    My pipe a-goern laisurely,
    And puff and whiff as pleases me--
    And ef I leave a trail of smoke
    Clean through the house, no one to say,
    "Wah! throw that nasty thing away;
    Hev some regyard fer decency!"
    To walk round barefoot, if you choose;
    Er saw the fiddle--er dig some bait
    And go a-fishin'--er pitch hoss shoes
    Out in the shade somewhurs, and wait
    For dinner-time, with an appetite
    Ut folks in town cain't equal quite!
    To laze around the barn and poke
    Fer hens' nests--er git up a match
    Betwixt the boys, and watch 'em scratch
    And rassle round, and sweat and swear
    And quarrel to their hearts' content;
    And me a-jes' a-settin' there
    A-hatchin' out more devilment!
    What sort o' Sunday would that be?...
    Wisht I hed you home with me!




SOLDIERS HERE TO-DAY


I

    Soldiers and saviours of the homes we love;
      Heroes and patriots who marched away,
    And who marched back, and who marched on above--
        All--all are here to-day!

    By the dear cause you fought for--you are here;
      At summons of bugle, and the drum
    Whose palpitating syllables were ne'er
        More musical, you come!

    Here--by the stars that bloom in fields of blue,
      And by the bird above with shielding wings;
    And by the flag that floats out over you,
        With silken beckonings--

    Ay, here beneath its folds are gathered all
      Who warred unscathed for blessings that it gave--
    Still blessed its champion, though it but fall
        A shadow on his grave!


II

    We greet you, Victors, as in vast array
      You gather from the scenes of strife and death--
    From spectral fortress walls where curls away
        The cannon's latest breath.

    We greet you--from the crumbling battlements
      Where once again the old flag feels the breeze
    Stroke out its tattered stripes and smooth its rents
        With rippling ecstasies.

    From living tombs where every hope seemed lost--
      With famine quarantined by bristling guns--
    The prison pens--the guards--the "dead-line" crossed
        By--riddled skeletons!

    From furrowed plains, sown thick with bursting shells--
      From mountain gorge, and toppling crags o'erhead--
    From wards of pestilential hospitals,
        And trenches of the dead.


III

    In fancy all are here. The night is o'er,
      And through dissolving mists the morning gleams;
    And clustered round their hearths we see once more
        The heroes of our dreams.

    Strong, tawny faces, some, and some are fair,
      And some are marked with age's latest prime,
    And, seer-like, browed and aureoled with hair
        As hoar as winter-time.

    The faces of fond lovers, glorified--
      The faces of the husband and the wife--
    The babe's face nestled at the mother's side,
        And smiling back at life;

    A bloom of happiness in every cheek--
      A thrill of tingling joy in every vein--
    In every soul a rapture they will seek
        In Heaven, and find again!


IV

    'Tis not a vision only--we who pay
      But the poor tribute of our praises here
    Are equal sharers in the guerdon they
        Purchased at price so dear.

    The angel, Peace, o'er all uplifts her hand,
      Waving the olive, and with heavenly eyes
    Shedding a light of love o'er sea and land
        As sunshine from the skies--

    Her figure pedestalled on Freedom's soil--
      Her sandals kissed with seas of golden grain--
    Queen of a realm of joy-requited toil
        That glories in her reign.

    O blessed land of labor and reward!
      O gracious Ruler, let Thy reign endure;
    In pruning-hook and ploughshare beat the sword,
        And reap the harvest sure!




SHADOW AND SHINE


    Storms of the winter, and deepening snows,
      When will you end? I said,
    For the soul within me was numb with woes,
      And my heart uncomforted.
    When will you cease, O dismal days?
      When will you set me free?
    For the frozen world and its desolate ways
      Are all unloved of me!

    I waited long, but the answer came--
      The kiss of the sunshine lay
    Warm as a flame on the lips that frame
      The song in my heart to-day.
    Blossoms of summer-time waved in the air,
      Glimmers of sun in the sea;
    Fair thoughts followed me everywhere,
      And the world was dear to me.




THAT NIGHT


    You and I, and that night, with its perfume and glory!--
      The scent of the locusts--the light of the moon;
    And the violin weaving the waltzers a story,
      Enmeshing their feet in the weft of the tune,
        Till their shadows uncertain
        Reeled round on the curtain,
      While under the trellis we drank in the June.

    Soaked through with the midnight the cedars were sleeping,
      Their shadowy tresses outlined in the bright
    Crystal, moon-smitten mists, where the fountain's heart, leaping
      Forever, forever burst, full with delight;
        And its lisp on my spirit
        Fell faint as that near it
      Whose love like a lily bloomed out in the night.

    O your love was an odorous sachet of blisses!
      The breath of your fan was a breeze from Cathay!
    And the rose at your throat was a nest of spilled kisses!--
      And the music!--in fancy I hear it to-day,
        As I sit here, confessing
        Our secret, and blessing
      My rival who found us, and waltzed you away.




AUGUST


    O mellow month and merry month,
      Let me make love to you,
    And follow you around the world
      As knights their ladies do.
    I thought your sisters beautiful,
      Both May and April, too,
    But April she had rainy eyes,
      And May had eyes of blue.

    And June--I liked the singing
      Of her lips--and liked her smile--
    But all her songs were promises
      Of something, after while;
    And July's face--the lights and shades
      That may not long beguile
    With alterations o'er the wheat
      The dreamer at the stile.

    But you!--ah, you are tropical,
      Your beauty is so rare;
    Your eyes are clearer, deeper eyes
      Than any, anywhere;
    Mysterious, imperious,
      Deliriously fair,
    O listless Andalusian maid,
      With bangles in your hair!




THE GUIDE

IMITATED


    We rode across the level plain--
    We--my sagacious guide and I.--
    He knew the earth--the air--the sky;
    He knew when it would blow or rain,
    And when the weather would be dry:
    The blended blades of grass spake out
    To him when Redskins were about;
    The wagon tracks would tell him too,
    The very day that they rolled through:
    He knew their burden--whence they came--
    If any horse along were lame,
    And what its owner ought to do;
    He knew when it would snow; he knew,
    By some strange intuition, when
    The buffalo would overflow
    The prairies like a flood, and then
    Recede in their stampede again.
    He knew all things--yea, he did know
    The brand of liquor in my flask,
    And many times did tilt it up,
    Nor halt or hesitate one whit,
    Nor pause to slip the silver cup
    From off its crystal base, nor ask
    Why I preferred to drink from it.
    And more and more I plied him, and
    Did query of him o'er and o'er,
    And seek to lure from him the lore
    By which the man did understand
    These hidden things of sky and land:
    And, wrought upon, he sudden drew
    His bridle--wheeled, and caught my hand--
    Pressed it, as one that loved me true,
    And bade me listen.
    ................... There be few
    Like tales as strange to listen to!
    He told me all--How, when a child,
    The Indians stole him--there he laughed--
    "They stole me, and I stole their craft!"
    Then slowly winked both eyes, and smiled,
    And went on ramblingly,--"And they--
    They reared me, and I ran away--
    'Twas winter, and the weather wild;
    And, caught up in the awful snows
    That bury wilderness and plain,
    I struggled on until I froze
    My feet ere human hands again
    Were reached to me in my distress,--
    And lo, since then not any rain
    May fall upon me anywhere,
    Nor any cyclone's cussedness
    Slip up behind me unaware,--
    Nor any change of cold, or heat,
    Or blow, or snow, but I do know
    It's coming, days and days before;--
    I know it by my frozen feet--
    I know it by my itching heels,
    And by the agony one feels
    Who knows that scratching nevermore
    Will bring to him the old and sweet
    Relief he knew ere thus endowed
    With knowledge that a certain cloud
    Will burst with storm on such a day,
    And when a snow will fall, and--nay,
    I speak not falsely when I say
    That by my tingling heels and toes
    I measure time, and can disclose
    The date of month--the week--and lo,
    The very day and minute--yea--
    Look at your watch!--An hour ago
    And twenty minutes I did say
    Unto myself with bitter laugh,
    'In less than one hour and a half
    Will I be drunken!' Is it so?"




SUTTER'S CLAIM

IMITATED


    Say! _you_ feller! _You_--
      With that spade and the pick!--
    What do you 'pose to do
      On this side o' the crick?
    Goin' to tackle this claim? Well, I reckon
      You'll let up ag'in, purty quick!

    No bluff, understand,--
      But the same has been tried,
    And the claim never panned--
      Or the fellers has lied,--
    For they tell of a dozen that tried it,
      And quit it most onsatisfied.

    The luck's dead ag'in it!--
      The first man I see
    That stuck a pick in it
      Proved _that_ thing to me,--
    For he sort o' took down, and got homesick,
      And went back whar he'd orto be!

    Then others they worked it
      Some--more or less,
    But finally shirked it,
      In grades of distress,--
    With an eye out--a jaw or skull busted,
      Or some sort o' seriousness.

    The _last_ one was plucky--
      He wasn't afeerd,
    And bragged he was "lucky,"
      And said that "he'd heerd
    A heap of bluff-talk," and swore awkard
      He'd work any claim that he keered!

    Don't you strike nary lick
      With that pick till I'm through;
    This-here feller talked slick
      And as peart-like as you!
    And he says: "I'll abide here
      As long as I please!"
    But he didn't.... He died here--
      And I'm his disease!




HER LIGHT GUITAR


    She twankled a tune on her light guitar--
      A low, sweet jangle of tangled sounds,
    As blurred as the voices of the fairies are,
      Dancing in moondawn dales and downs;
        And the tinkling drip of the strange refrain
        Ran over the rim of my soul like rain.

    The great blond moon in the midnight skies
      Paused and poised o'er the trellis eaves,
    And the stars, in the light of her upturned eyes,
      Sifted their love through the rifted leaves,
        Glittered and splintered in crystal mist
        Down the glittering strings that her fingers kissed.

    O the melody mad! O the tinkle and thrill
      Of the ecstasy of the exquisite thing!
    The red rose dropped from the window-sill
      And lay in a long swoon quivering;
        While the dying notes of the strain divine
        Rippled in glee up my spellbound spine.




WHILE CIGARETTES TO ASHES TURN


I

    "He smokes--and that's enough," says Ma--
    "And cigarettes, at that!" says Pa.

    "He must not call again," says she--
    "He _shall_ not call again!" says he.

    They both glare at me as before--
    Then quit the room and bang the door.--

    While I, their wilful daughter, say,
    "I guess I'll love him, anyway!"


II

    At twilight, in his room, alone,
    His careless feet inertly thrown

    Across a chair, my fancy can
    But worship this most worthless man!

    I dream what joy it is to set
    His slow lips round a cigarette,

    With idle-humored whiff and puff--
    Ah! this is innocent enough!

    To mark the slender fingers raise
    The waxen match's dainty blaze,

    Whose chastened light an instant glows
    On drooping lids and arching nose,

    Then, in the sudden gloom, instead,
    A tiny ember, dim and red,

    Blooms languidly to ripeness, then
    Fades slowly, and grows ripe again.


III

    I lean back, in my own boudoir--
    The door is fast, the sash ajar;

    And in the dark, I smiling stare
    At one wide window over there,

    Where some one, smoking, pinks the gloom,
    The darling darkness of his room!

    I push my shutters wider yet,
    And lo! I light a cigarette;

    And gleam for gleam, and glow for glow,
    Each pulse of light a word we know,

    We talk of love that still will burn
    While cigarettes to ashes turn.




TWO SONNETS TO THE JUNE-BUG


I

    You make me jes' a little nervouser
      Than any dog-gone bug I ever see!
      And you know night's the time to pester me--
    When any tetch at all 'll rub the fur
    Of all my patience back'ards! You're the myrrh
      And ruburb of my life! A bumblebee
      Cain't hold a candle to you; and a he
    Bald hornet, with a laminated spur
    In his hip pocket, daresent even cheep
      When you're around! And, dern ye! you have made
    Me lose whole ricks and stacks and piles of sleep,--
      And many of a livelong night I've laid
    And never shut an eye, hearin' you keep
      Up that eternal buzzin' serenade!


II

    And I've got up and lit the lamp, and clum
      On cheers and trunks and wash-stands and bureaus,
      And all such dangerous articles as those,
    And biffed at you with brooms, and never come
    'In two feet of you,--maybe skeered you some,--
      But what does that amount to when it throws
      A feller out o' balance, and his nose
    Gits barked ag'inst the mantel, while you hum
    Fer joy around the room, and churn your head
      Ag'inst the ceilin', and draw back and butt
    The plasterin' loose, and drop--behind the bed,
      Where never human-bein' ever putt
    Harm's hand on you, er ever truthful said
      He'd choked yer dern infernal wizzen shut!




AUTOGRAPHIC

_For an Album_


    I feel, if aught I ought to rhyme,
    I ought 'a' thought a longer time,
    And ought 'a' caught a higher sense,
    Of autocratic eloquence.
    I ought 'a' sought each haughty Muse
    That taught a thought I ought to use,
    And fought and fraught, and so devised
    A poem _unmonotonized_.--
    But since all this was vain, I thought
    I ought to simply say,--I ought
    To thank you, as I ought to do,
    And ought to bow my best to you;
    And ought to trust not to intrude
    A rudely wrought-up gratitude,
    But ought to smile, and ought to laugh,
    And ought to write--an autograph.




AN IMPROMPTU ON ROLLER SKATES


    Rumble, tumble, growl, and grate!
    Skip, and trip, and gravitate!
    Lunge, and plunge, and thrash the planks
    With your blameless, shameless shanks:
    In excruciating pain,
    Stand upon your head again,
    And, uncoiling kink by kink,
    Kick the roof out of the rink!

    In derisive bursts of mirth,
    Drop ka-whop and jar the earth!
    Jolt your lungs down in your socks,
    Oh! tempestuous equinox
    Of dismembered legs and arms!
    Strew your ways with wild alarms;
    Fameward skoot and ricochet
    On your glittering vertebræ!




WRITTEN IN BUNNER'S "AIRS FROM ARCADY"


    O ever gracious Airs from Arcady!
      What lack is there of any jocund thing
      In glancing wit or glad imagining
    Capricious fancy may not find in thee?--
    The laugh of Momus, tempered daintily
      To lull the ear and lure its listening;
      The whistled syllables the birds of spring
    Flaunt ever at our guessings what they be;
    The wood, the seashore, and the clanging town;
      The pets of fashion, and the ways of such;
    The _robe de chambre_, and the russet gown;
      The lordling's carriage, and the pilgrim's crutch--
    From hale old Chaucer's wholesomeness, clean down
      To our artistic Dobson's deftest touch!




IN THE AFTERNOON


    You in the hammock; and I, near by,
      Was trying to read, and to swing you, too;
    And the green of the sward was so kind to the eye,
      And the shade of the maples so cool and blue,
      That often I looked from the book to you
    To say as much, with a sigh.

    You in the hammock. The book we'd brought
      From the parlor--to read in the open air,--
    Something of love and of Launcelot
      And Guinevere, I believe, was there--
      But the afternoon, it was far more fair
    Than the poem was, I thought.

    You in the hammock; and on and on
      I droned and droned through the rhythmic stuff--
    But, with always a half of my vision gone
      Over the top of the page--enough
      To caressingly gaze at you, swathed in the fluff
    Of your hair and your odorous "lawn."

    You in the hammock--and that was a year--
      Fully a year ago, I guess--
    And what do we care for their Guinevere
      And her Launcelot and their lordliness!--
      You in the hammock still, and--Yes--
    Kiss me again, my dear!




AT MADAME MANICURE'S


    Daintiest of Manicures!
    What a cunning hand is yours;
    And how awkward, rude and great
    Mine, as you manipulate!
    Wonderfully cool and calm
    Are the touches of your palm
    To my fingers, as they rest
    In their rosy, cosey nest,
    While your own, with deftest skill,
    Dance and caper as they will,--
    Armed with instruments that seem
    Gathered from some fairy dream--
    Tiny spears, and simitars
    Such as pixy armorers
    Might have made for jocund fays
    To parade on holidays,
    And flash round in dewy dells,
    Lopping down the lily-bells;
    Or in tilting, o'er the leas,
    At the clumsy bumblebees,
    Splintering their stings, perchance,
    As the knights in old romance
    Snapped the spears of foes that fought
    In the jousts at Camelot!
    Smiling? Dainty Manicure?--
    'Twould delight me, but that you're
    Simply smiling, as I see,
    At my nails and not at me!
    Haply this is why they glow
    And light up and twinkle so!




A CALLER FROM BOONE

BENJ. F. JOHNSON VISITS THE EDITOR


It was a dim and chill and loveless afternoon in the late fall of
eighty-three when I first saw the genial subject of this hasty sketch.
From time to time the daily paper on which I worked had been
receiving, among the general literary driftage of amateur essayists,
poets and sketch-writers, some conceits in verse that struck the
editorial head as decidedly novel; and, as they were evidently the
production of an unlettered man, and an _old_ man, and a farmer at that,
they were usually spared the waste-basket, and preserved--not for
publication, but to pass from hand to hand among the members of the
staff as simply quaint and mirth-provoking specimens of the verdancy
of both the venerable author and the Muse inspiring him. Letters as
quaint as were the poems invariably accompanied them, and the oddity
of these, in fact, had first called attention to the verses. I well
remember the general merriment of the office when the first of the old
man's letters was read aloud, and I recall, too, some of his comments
on his own verse, verbatim. In one place he said: "I make no doubt you
will find some purty _sad_ spots in my poetry, considerin'; but I hope
you will bear in mind that I am a great sufferer with rheumatizum, and
have been, off and on, sence the cold New Year's. In the main,
however," he continued, "I allus aim to write in a cheerful,
comfortin' sperit, so's ef the stuff hangs fire, and don't do no good,
it hain't a-goin' to do no harm,--and them's my honest views on
poetry."

In another letter, evidently suspecting his poem had not appeared in
print because of its dejected tone, he said: "The poetry I herewith
send was wrote off on the finest Autumn day I ever laid eyes on! I
never felt better in my life. The morning air was as invigoratin' as
bitters with tanzy in it, and the folks at breakfast said they never
saw such a' appetite on mortal man before. Then I lit out for the
barn, and after feedin', I come back and tuck my pen and ink out on
the porch, and jest cut loose. I writ and writ till my fingers was
that cramped I couldn't hardly let go of the penholder. And the poem I
send you is the upshot of it all. Ef you don't find it cheerful enough
fer your columns, I'll have to knock under, that's all!" And that
poem, as I recall it, certainly was cheerful enough for publication,
only the "copy" was almost undecipherable, and the ink, too, so pale
and vague, it was thought best to reserve the verses, for the time, at
least, and later on revise, copy, punctuate, and then print it
sometime, as much for the joke of it as anything. But it was still
delayed, neglected, and in a week's time almost entirely forgotten.
And so it was, upon this chill and sombre afternoon I speak of that an
event occurred which most pleasantly reminded me of both the poem with
the "sad spots" in it, and the "cheerful" one, "writ out on the porch"
that glorious autumn day that poured its glory through the old man's
letter to us.

Outside and in the sanctum the gloom was too oppressive to permit an
elevated tendency of either thought or spirit. I could do nothing but
sit listless and inert. Paper and pencil were before me, but I could
not write--I could not even think coherently, and was on the point of
rising and rushing out into the streets for a wild walk, when there
came a hesitating knock at the door.

"Come in!" I snarled, grabbing up my pencil and assuming a frightfully
industrious air: "Come in!" I almost savagely repeated, "Come in! And
shut the door behind you!" and I dropped my lids, bent my gaze fixedly
upon the blank pages before me and began scrawling some disconnected
nothings with no head or tail or anything.

"Sir; howdy," said a low and pleasant voice. And at once, in spite of
my perverse resolve, I looked up. I someway felt rebuked.

The speaker was very slowly, noiselessly closing the door. I could
hardly face him when he turned around. An old man, of sixty-five, at
least, but with a face and an eye of the most cheery and wholesome
expression I had ever seen in either youth or age. Over his broad
bronzed forehead and white hair he wore a low-crowned, wide-brimmed
black felt hat, somewhat rusted now, and with the band grease-crusted,
and the binding frayed at intervals, and sagging from the threads that
held it on. An old-styled frock coat of black, dull brown in streaks,
and quite shiny about the collar and lapels. A waistcoat of no
describable material or pattern, and a clean white shirt and collar of
one piece, with a black string-tie and double bow, which would have
been entirely concealed beneath the long white beard but for its
having worked around to one side of the neck. The front outline of the
face was cleanly shaven, and the beard, growing simply from the under
chin and throat, lent the old pioneer the rather singular appearance
of having hair all over him with this luxurious growth pulled out
above his collar for mere sample.

I arose and asked the old man to sit down, handing him a chair
decorously.

"No--no," he said--"I'm much obleeged. I hain't come in to bother you
no more'n I can he'p. All I wanted was to know ef you got my poetry
all right. You know I take yer paper," he went on, in an explanatory
way, "and seein' you printed poetry in it once-in-a-while, I sent you
some of mine--neighbors kindo' advised me to," he added
apologetically, "and so I sent you some--two or three times I sent you
some, but I hain't never seed hide-ner-hair of it in your paper, and
as I wus in town to-day, anyhow, I jest thought I'd kindo' drap in and
git it back, ef you ain't goin' to print it--'cause I allus save up
most the things I write, aimin' sometime to git 'em all struck off in
pamphlet-form, to kindo' distribit round 'mongst the neighbors, don't
you know."

Already I had begun to suspect my visitor's identity, and was
mechanically opening the drawer of our poetical department.

"How was your poetry signed?" I asked.

"Signed by my own name," he answered proudly,--"signed by my own
name,--Johnson--Benjamin F. Johnson, of Boone County--this state."

"And is this one of them, Mr. Johnson?" I asked, unfolding a
clumsily-folded manuscript, and closely scrutinizing the verse.

"How does she read?" said the old man eagerly, and searching in the
meantime for his spectacles. "How does she read?--Then I can tell
you!"

"It reads," said I, studiously conning the old man's bold but bad
chirography, and tilting my chair back indolently,--"it reads like
this--the first verse does,"--and I very gravely read:--

    "Oh! the old swimmin'-hole!"

"Stop! Stop!" said the old man excitedly--"Stop right there! That's my
poetry, but that's not the way to read it by a long shot! Give it to
me!" and he almost snatched it from my hand. "Poetry like this ain't
no poetry at all, 'less you read it _natchurl_ and _in jes the same
sperit 'at it's writ in_, don't you understand. It's a' old man
a-talkin', rickollect, and a-feelin' kindo' sad, and yit kindo' sorto'
good, too, and I opine he wouldn't got that off with a face on him
like a' undertaker, and a voice as solemn as a cow-bell after dark!
He'd say it more like this."--And the old man adjusted his spectacles
and read:--

    "THE OLD SWIMMIN'-HOLE"

    "Oh! the old swimmin'-hole! whare the crick so still and deep
    Looked like a baby-river that was laying half asleep,
    And the gurgle of the worter round the drift jest below
    Sounded like the laugh of something we onc't ust to know
    Before we could remember anything but the eyes
    Of the angels lookin' out as we left Paradise;
    But the merry days of youth is beyond our controle,
    And it's hard to part ferever with the old swimmin'-hole."

I clapped my hands in genuine applause. "Read on!" I said,--"Read on!
Read all of it!"

The old man's face was radiant as he continued:--

    "Oh! the old swimmin'-hole! In the happy days of yore,
    When I ust to lean above it on the old sickamore,
    Oh! it showed me a face in its warm sunny tide
    That gazed back at me so gay and glorified,
    It made me love myself, as I leaped to caress
    My shadder smilin' up at me with sich tenderness.
    But them days is past and gone, and old Time's tuck his toll
    From the old man come back to the old swimmin'-hole.

    "Oh! the old swimmin'-hole! In the long, lazy days
    When the hum-drum of school made so many run-a-ways,
    How pleasant was the jurney down the old dusty lane,
    Whare the tracks of our bare feet was all printed so plane
    You could tell by the dent of the heel and the sole
    They was lots o' fun on hands at the old swimmin'-hole.
    But the lost joys is past! Let your tears in sorrow roll
    Like the rain that ust to dapple up the old swimmin'-hole.

    "Thare the bullrushes growed, and the cattails so tall,
    And the sunshine and shadder fell over it all;
    And it mottled the worter with amber and gold
    Tel the glad lillies rocked in the ripples that rolled;
    And the snake-feeder's four gauzy wings fluttered by
    Like the ghost of a daisy dropped out of the sky,
    Or a wownded apple-blossom in the breeze's controle
    As it cut acrost some orchurd to'rds the old swimmin'-hole.

    "Oh! the old swimmin'-hole! When I last saw the place,
    The scenes was all changed, like the change in my face;
    The bridge of the railroad now crosses the spot
    Whare the old divin'-log lays sunk and fergot.
    And I strayed down the banks whare the trees ust to be--
    But never again will theyr shade shelter me!
    And I wisht in my sorrow I could strip to the soul,
    And dive off in my grave like the old swimmin'-hole."

My applause was long and loud. The old man's interpretation of the
poem was a positive revelation, though I was glad enough to conceal
from him my moistened eyes by looking through the scraps for other
specimens of his verse.

"Here," said I enthusiastically, "is another one, signed 'Benj. F.
Johnson,' read me this," and I handed him the poem.

The old man smiled and took the manuscript. "This-here one's on '_The
Hoss_,'" he said, simply clearing his throat. "They ain't so much
fancy-work about this as the other'n, but they's jest as much _fact_,
you can bet--'cause, they're no animal a-livin' 'at I love better 'an

    "THE HOSS"

    "The hoss he is a splendud beast;
      He is man's friend, as heaven desined,
    And, search the world from west to east,
      No honester you'll ever find!

    "Some calls the hoss 'a pore dumb brute,'
      And yit, like Him who died fer you,
    I say, as I theyr charge refute,
      'Fergive; they know not what they do!'

    "No wiser animal makes tracks
      Upon these earthly shores, and hence
    Arose the axium, true as facts,
      Extoled by all, as 'Good hoss-sense!'

    "The hoss is strong, and knows his stren'th,--
      You hitch him up a time er two
    And lash him, and he'll go his len'th
      And kick the dashboard out fer you!

    "But, treat him allus good and kind,
      And never strike him with a stick,
    Ner aggervate him, and you'll find
      He'll never do a hostile trick.

    "A hoss whose master tends him right
      And worters him with daily care,
    Will do your biddin' with delight,
      And act as docile as _you_ air.

    "He'll paw and prance to hear your praise,
      Because he's learnt to love you well;
    And, though you can't tell what he says,
      He'll nicker all he wants to tell.

    "He knows you when you slam the gate
      At early dawn, upon your way
    Unto the barn, and snorts elate,
      To git his corn, er oats, er hay.

    "He knows you, as the orphant knows
      The folks that loves her like theyr own,
    And raises her and 'finds' her clothes,
      And 'schools' her tel a womern-grown!

    "I claim no hoss will harm a man,
      Ner kick, ner run away, cavort,
    Stump-suck, er balk, er 'catamaran,'
      Ef you'll jest treat him as you ort.

    "But when I see the beast abused
      And clubbed around as I've saw some,
    I want to see his owner noosed,
      And jest yanked up like Absolum!

    "Of course they's differunce in stock,--
      A hoss that has a little yeer,
    And slender build, and shaller hock,
      Can beat his shadder, mighty near!

    "Whilse one that's thick in neck and chist
      And big in leg and full in flank,
    That tries to race, I still insist
      He'll have to take the second rank.

    "And I have jest laid back and laughed,
      And rolled and wallered in the grass
    At fairs, to see some heavy-draft
      Lead out at _first_, yit come in _last_!

    "Each hoss has his appinted place,--
      The heavy hoss should plow the soil;--
    The blooded racer, he must race,
      And win big wages fer his toil.

    "I never bet--ner never wrought
      Upon my feller-man to bet--
    And yit, at times, I've often thought
      Of my convictions with regret.

    "I bless the hoss from hoof to head--
      From head to hoof, and tale to mane!--
    I bless the hoss, as I have said,
      From head to hoof, and back again!

    "I love my God the first of all,
      Then Him that perished on the cross,
    And next, my wife,--and then I fall
      Down on my knees and love the hoss."

Again I applauded, handing the old man still another of his poems, and
the last received. "Ah!" said he, as his gentle eyes bent on the
title; "this-here's the cheerfullest one of 'em all. This is the one
writ, as I wrote you about--on that glorious October morning two weeks
ago--I thought your paper would print this-un, shore!"

"Oh, it _will_ print it," I said eagerly; "and it will print the other
two as well! It will print _anything_ that you may do us the honor to
offer, and we'll reward you beside just as you may see fit to
designate.--But go on--go on! Read me the poem."

The old man's eyes were glistening as he responded with the poem
entitled

    "WHEN THE FROST IS ON THE PUNKIN"

    "When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock,
    And you hear the kyouck and gobble of the struttin' turkey-cock,
    And the clackin' of the guineys, and the cluckin' of the hens,
    And the rooster's hallylooyer as he tiptoes on the fence;
    O, it's then's the times a feller is a-feelin' at his best,
    With the risin' sun to greet him from a night of peaceful rest,
    As he leaves the house, bareheaded, and goes out to feed the stock,
    When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock.

    "They's something kindo' harty-like about the atmusfere
    When the heat of summer's over and the coolin' fall is here--
    Of course we miss the flowers, and the blossums on the trees,
    And the mumble of the hummin'-birds and buzzin' of the bees;
    But the air's so appetizin'; and the landscape through the haze
    Of a crisp and sunny morning of the airly autumn days
    Is a pictur' that no painter has the colorin' to mock--
    When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock.

    "The husky, rusty russel of the tossels of the corn,
    And the raspin' of the tangled leaves, as golden as the morn;
    The stubble in the furries--kindo' lonesome-like, but still
    A-preachin' sermuns to us of the barns they growed to fill;
    The strawstack in the medder, and the reaper in the shed;
    The hosses in theyr stalls below--the clover overhead!--
    O, it sets my hart a-clickin' like the tickin' of a clock,
    When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock!

    "Then your apples all is getherd, and the ones a feller keeps
    Is poured around the celler-floor in red and yeller heaps;
    And your cider-makin' 's over, and your wimmern-folks is through
    With theyr mince and apple-butter, and theyr souse and saussage,
        too!...
    I don't know how to tell it--but ef sich a thing could be
    As the Angels wantin' boardin', and they'd call around on _me_--
    I'd want to 'commodate 'em--all the whole-indurin' flock--
    When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock!"

That was enough! "Surely," thought I, "here is a diamond in the rough,
and a 'gem,' too, 'of purest ray serene'!" I caught the old man's hand
and wrung it with positive rapture; and it is needless to go further
in explanation of how the readers of our daily came to an acquaintance
through its columns with the crude, unpolished, yet most gentle genius
of Benj. F. Johnson, of Boone.




LORD BACON

WRITTEN AS A JOKE AND ASCRIBED TO A VERY PRACTICAL BUSINESS MAN, AMOS
J. WALKER


    Master of masters in the days of yore,
      When art met insult, with no law's redress;
      When Law itself insulted Righteousness,
    And Ignorance thine own scholastic lore,
    And thou thine own judicial office more,--
      What master living now canst love thee less,
      Seeing thou didst thy greatest art repress
    And leave the years its riches to restore
    To us, thy long neglectors. Yield us grace
      To make becoming recompense, and dawn
    On us thy poet-smile; nor let us trace,
      In fancy, where the old-world myths have gone,
    The shade of Shakespeare, with averted face,
      Withdrawn to uttermost oblivion.




MY FIRST WOMERN


    I buried my first womern
      In the spring; and in the fall
    I was married to my second,
      And hain't settled yit at all!--
    Fer I'm allus thinkin'--thinkin'
      Of the first one's peaceful ways,
    A-bilin' soap and singin'
      Of the Lord's amazin' grace.

    And I'm thinkin' of her, constant,
      Dyin' carpet chain and stuff,
    And a-makin' up rag carpets,
      When the _floor_ was good enough!
    And I mind her he'p a-feedin',
      And I riccollect her now
    A-drappin' corn, and keepin'
      Clos't behind me and the plow!

    And I'm allus thinkin' of her
      Reddin' up around the house;
    Er cookin' fer the farm-hands;
      Er a-drivin' up the cows.--
    And there she lays out yander
      By the lower medder fence,
    Where the cows was barely grazin',
      And they're usin' ever sence.

    And when I look acrost there--
      Say it's when the clover's ripe,
    And I'm settin', in the evenin',
      On the porch here, with my pipe,
    And the _other'n_ hollers "Henry!"--
      W'y they ain't no sadder thing
    Than to think of my first womern
      And her funeral last spring
        Was a year ago--




AS WE READ BURNS


    Who is speaking? Who has spoken?
    Whose voice ceasing thus has broken
    The sweet pathos of our dreams?
    Sweetest bard of sweetest themes,
      Pouring in each poet-heart
      Some rare essence of your art
      Till it seems your singing lip
      Kisses every pencil tip!
    Far across the unknown lands--
      Reach of heavenly isle and sea--
    How we long to touch the hands
      You outhold so lovingly!




TO JAMES NEWTON MATTHEWS

IN ANSWER TO A LETTER ON THE ANATOMY OF THE SONNET


    Oho! ye sunny, sonnet-singin' vagrant,
      Flauntin' your simmer sangs in sic a weather!
      Ane maist can straik the bluebells and the heather
    Keekin' aboon the snaw and bloomin' fragrant!
    Whiles you, ye whustlin' brither, sic a lay grant
      O' a' these janglin', wranglin' sweets thegither,
      I weel maun perk my ain doon-drappin' feather
    And pipe a wee: Tho' boisterous and flagrant
    The winds blow whuzzle-whazzle rhymes that trickle
      Fra' aff my tongue less limpid than I'd ha'e them,
    I in their little music hap a mickle
      O' canty praises, a' asklent to weigh them
    Agen your pride, and smile to see them tickle
      The warm nest o' the heart wherein I lay them.




SONG


    O I would I had a lover!
      A lover! a lover!
    O I would I had a lover
      With a twinkering guitar,
        To come beneath my casement
    Singing "There is none above her,"
    While I, leaning, seemed to hover
      In the scent of his cigar!

    Then at morn I'd want to meet him--
      To meet him! to meet him!
    O at morn I'd want to meet him,
      When the mist was in the sky,
        And the dew along the path I went
    To casually greet him,
    And to cavalierly treat him,
      And regret it by and by.

    And I'd want to meet his brother--
      His brother! his brother!
    O I'd want to meet his brother
      At the german or the play,
        To pin a rose on his lapel
    And lightly press the other,
    And love him like a mother--
      While he thought the other way.

    O I'd pitilessly test him!
      And test him! and test him!
    O I'd pitilessly test him
      Far beyond his own control;
        And every tantalizing lure
    With which I could arrest him,
    I'd loosen to molest him,
      Till I tried his very soul.

    But ah, when I relented--
      Relented, relented!
    But ah, when I relented
      When the stars were blurred and dim,
        And the moon above, with crescent grace,
    Looked off as I repented,
    And with rapture half demented,
      All my heart went out to him!




WHEN WE THREE MEET


    When we three meet? Ah! friend of mine
    Whose verses well and flow as wine,--
      My thirsting fancy thou dost fill
      With draughts delicious, sweeter still
    Since tasted by those lips of thine.

    I pledge thee, through the chill sunshine
    Of autumn, with a warmth divine,
      Thrilled through as only I shall thrill
          When we three meet.

    I pledge thee, if we fast or dine,
    We yet shall loosen, line by line,
      Old ballads, and the blither trill
      Of our-time singers--for there will
    Be with us all the Muses nine
          When we three meet.




JOSH BILLINGS

DEAD IN CALIFORNIA, OCTOBER 15, 1885


    Jolly-hearted old Josh Billings,
      With his wisdom and his wit,
    And his gravity of presence,
      And the drollery of it!
    Has he left us, and forever?
      When so many merry years
    He has only left us laughing--
      And he leaves us now in tears?

    Has he turned from his "Deer Publik,"
      With his slyly twinkling eyes
    Now grown dim and heavy-lidded
      In despite of sunny skies?--
    Yet with rugged brow uplifted,
      And the long hair tossed away,
    Like an old heroic lion,
      With a mane of iron-gray.

    Though we lose him, still we find him
      In the mirth of every lip,
    And we fare through all his pages
      In his glad companionship:
    His voice is wed with Nature's,
      Laughing in each woody nook
    With the chirrup of the robin
      And the chuckle of the brook.

    But the children--O the children!--
      They who leaped to his caress,
    And felt his arms about them,
      And his love and tenderness,--
    Where--where will they find comfort
      As their tears fall like the rain,
    And they swarm his face with kisses
      That he answers not again?




WHICH ANE


    Which ane, an' which ane,
      An' which ane for thee?--
    Here thou hast thy vera choice,
      An' which sall it be?--
    Ye hae the Holy Brither,
      An' ye hae the Scholarly;
    An', last, ye hae the butt o' baith--
      Which sall it be?

    Ane's oot o' Edinborough,
      Wi' the Beuk an' Gown;
    An' ane's cam frae Cambridge;
      An' ane frae scaur an' down:
    An' Deil tak the hindmaist!
      Sae the test gaes roun':
    An' here ye hae the lairdly twa,
      An' ane frae scaur an' down.

    Yon's Melancholy--
      An' the pipes a-skirlin'--
    Gangs limp an' droopet,
      Like a coof at hirlin',--
    Droopet aye his lang skirts
      I' the wins unfurlin';
    Yon's Melancholy--
      An' the pipes a-skirlin'!

    Which ane, an' which ane,
      An' which ane for thee?--
    Here thou hast thy vera choice,
      An' which sall it be?
    Ye hae the Holy Brither,
      An' ye hae the Scholarly;
    An', last, ye hae the butt o' baith--
      Which sall it be?

    Elbuck ye'r bag, mon!
      An' pipe as ye'd burst!
    Can ye gie's a waur, mon
      E'en than the first?--
    Be it Meister Wisemon,
      I' the classics versed,
    An' a slawer gait yet
      E'en than the first?

    Then gie us Merriment:
      Loose him like a linnet
    Teeterin' on a bloomin' spray--
      We ken him i' the minute,--
    Twinklin' is ane ee asklent,
      Wi' auld Clootie in it--
    Auld Sawney Lintwhite,
      We ken him i' the minute!

    An' which ane, an' which ane,
      An' which ane for thee?--
    For thou shalt hae thy vera choice,
      An' which sall it be?--
    Ye hae the Holy Brither,
      An' ye hae the Scholarly;
    A' last, ye hae the butt o' baith--
      Which sall it be?




THE EARTHQUAKE

CHARLESTON, SEPTEMBER 1, 1886


    An hour ago the lulling twilight leant
      Above us like a gentle nurse who slips
      A slow palm o'er our eyes, in soft eclipse
    Of feigned slumber of most sweet content.
    The fragrant zephyrs of the tropic went
      And came across the senses, like to sips
      Of lovers' kisses, when upon her lips
    Silence sets finger in grave merriment.
    Then--sudden--did the earth moan as it slept,
      And start as one in evil dreams, and toss
    Its peopled arms up, as the horror crept,
      And with vast breast upheaved and rent across,
    Fling down the storied citadel where wept,
      And still shall weep, a world above its loss.




A FALL-CRICK VIEW OF THE EARTHQUAKE


    I kin hump my back and take the rain,
      And I don't keer how she pours;
    I kin keep kind o' ca'm in a thunder-storm,
      No matter how loud she roars;
    I hain't much skeered o' the lightnin',
      Ner I hain't sich awful shakes
    Afeard o' _cyclones_--but I don't want none
      O' yer dad-burned old earthquakes!

    As long as my legs keeps stiddy,
      And long as my head keeps plum',
    And the buildin' stays in the front lot,
      I still kin whistle, _some_!
    But about the time the old clock
      Flops off'n the mantel-shelf,
    And the bureau skoots fer the kitchen,
      I'm a-goin' to skoot, myself!

    Plague-take! ef you keep me stabled
      While any earthquakes is around!--
    I'm jes' like the stock,--I'll beller
      And break fer the open ground!
    And I 'low you'd be as nervous
      And in jes' about my fix,
    When yer whole farm slides from in-under you,
      And on'y the mor'gage sticks!

    Now cars hain't a-goin' to kill you
      Ef you don't drive 'crost the track;
    Crediters never'll jerk you up
      Ef you go and pay 'em back;
    You kin stand all moral and mundane storms
      Ef you'll on'y jes' behave--
    But a' EARTHQUAKE:--Well, ef it wanted you
      It 'ud husk you out o' yer grave!




LEWIS D. HAYES

OBIT DECEMBER 28, 1886


    In the midmost glee of the Christmas
      And the mirth of the glad New Year,
    A guest has turned from the revel,
      And we sit in silence here.

    The band chimes on, yet we listen
      Not to the air's refrain,
    But over it ever we strive to catch
      The sound of his voice again;--

    For the sound of his voice was music,
      Dearer than any note
    Shook from the strands of harp-strings,
      Or poured from the bugle's throat.--

    A voice of such various ranges,
      His utterance rang from the height
    Of every rapture, down to the sobs
      Of every lost delight.

    Though he knew Man's force and his purpose,
      As strong as his strongest peers,
    He knew, as well, the kindly heart,
      And the tenderness of tears.

    So is it the face we remember
      Shall be always as a child's
    That, grieved some way to the very soul,
      Looks bravely up and smiles.

    O brave it shall look, as it looked its last
      On the little daughter's face--
    Pictured only--against the wall,
      In its old accustomed place--

    Where the last gleam of the lamplight
      Out of the midnight dim
    Yielded its grace, and the earliest dawn
      Gave it again to him.




IN DAYS TO COME


    In days to come--whatever ache
    Of age shall rack our bones, or quake
      Our slackened thews--whatever grip
      Rheumatic catch us i' the hip,--
    We, each one, for the other's sake,
    Will of our very wailings make
    Such quips of song as well may shake
      The spasm'd corners from the lip--
              In days to come.

    Ho! ho! how our old hearts shall rake
    The past up!--how our dry eyes slake
      Their sight upon the dewy drip
      Of juicy-ripe companionship,
    And blink stars from the blind opaque--
              In days to come.




LUTHER A. TODD

OBIT JULY 27, 1887, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI


    Gifted, and loved, and praised
      By every friend;
    Never a murmur raised
      Against him, to the end!
    With tireless interest
    He wrought as he thought best,--
      And--lo, we bend
    Where now he takes his rest!

    His heart was loyal, to
      Its latest thrill,
    To the home-loves he knew--
      And now forever will,--
    Mother and brother--they
    The first to pass away,--
      And, lingering still,
    The sister bowed to-day.

    Pure as a rose might be,
      And sweet, and white,
    His father's memory
      Was with him day and night:--
    He spoke of him, as one
    May now speak of the son,--
      Sadly and tenderly,--
    Yet as a trump had done.

    Say, then, of him: He knew
      Full depths of care
    And stress of pain, and you
      Do him scant justice there,--
    Yet in the lifted face
    Grief left not any trace,
      Nor mark unfair,
    To mar its manly grace.

    It was as if each day
      Some new hope dawned--
    Each blessing in delay,
      To him, was just beyond;
    Between whiles, waiting, he
    Drew pictures, cunningly--
      Fantastic--fond--
    Things that we laughed to see.

    Sometimes, as we looked on
      His crayon's work,
    Some angel-face would dawn
      Out radiant, from the mirk
    Of features old and thin,
    Or jowled with double-chin,
      And eyes asmirk,
    And gaping mouths agrin.

    That humor in his art,
      Of genius born,
    Welled warmly from a heart
      That could not but adorn
    All things it touched with love--
    The eagle, as the dove--
      The burst of morn--
    The night--the stars above.

    Sometimes, amid the wild
      Of faces queer,
    A mother, with her child
      Pressed warm and close to her;
    This, I have thought, somehow,
    The wife, with head abow,
      Unreconciled,
    In the great shadow now.

       *       *       *       *       *

    O you of sobbing breath,
      Put by all sighs
    Of anguish at his death--
      Turn--as he turned _his_ eyes,
    In that last hour, unknown
    In strange lands, all alone--
      Turn thine eyes toward the skies,
    And, smiling, cease thy moan.




WHEN THE HEARSE COMES BACK


    A thing 'at's 'bout as tryin' as a healthy man kin meet
    Is some poor feller's funeral a-joggin' 'long the street:
    The slow hearse and the hosses--slow enough, to say the least,
    Fer to even tax the patience of the gentleman deceased!
    The low scrunch of the gravel--and the slow grind of the wheels,--
    The low, slow go of ev'ry woe 'at ev'rybody feels!
    So I ruther like the contrast when I hear the whiplash crack
    A quickstep fer the hosses,
                  When the
                      Hearse
                          Comes
                              Back!

    Meet it goin' to'rds the cimet'ry, you'll want to drap yer eyes--
    But ef the plumes don't fetch you, it'll ketch you otherwise--
    You'll haf to see the caskit, though you'd ort to look away
    And 'conomize and save yer sighs fer any other day!
    Yer sympathizin' won't wake up the sleeper from his rest--
    Yer tears won't thaw them hands o' his 'at's froze acrost his breast!
    And this is why--when airth and sky's a-gittin' blurred and black
    I like the flash and hurry
                  When the
                      Hearse
                          Comes
                              Back!

    It's not 'cause I don't 'preciate it ain't no time fer jokes,
    Ner 'cause I' got no common human feelin' fer the folks;--
    I've went to funerals myse'f, and tuk on some, perhaps--
    Fer my heart's 'bout as mal'able as any other chap's,--
    I've buried father, mother--but I'll haf to jes' git _you_
    To "excuse _me_," as the feller says.--The p'int I'm drivin' to
    Is, simply, when we're plum broke down and all knocked out o' whack,
    It he'ps to shape us up, like,
                  When the
                      Hearse
                          Comes
                              Back!

    The idy! wadin' round here over shoe-mouth deep in woe,
    When they's a graded 'pike o' joy and sunshine, don't you know!
    When evening strikes the pastur', cows'll pull out fer the bars
    And skittish-like from out the night'll prance the happy stars:
    And so when _my_ time comes to die, and I've got ary friend
    'At wants expressed my last request--I'll, mebby, rickommend
    To drive slow, ef they haf to, goin' 'long the _out'ard_ track,
    But I'll smile and say, "You speed 'em
                  When the
                      Hearse
                          Comes
                              Back!"




OUR OLD FRIEND NEVERFAIL


    O it's good to ketch a relative 'at's richer and don't run
    When you holler out to hold up, and'll joke and have his fun;
    It's good to hear a man called bad and then find out he's not,
    Er strike some chap they call lukewarm 'at's really red-hot;
    It's good to know the Devil's painted jes' a leetle black,
    And it's good to have most anybody pat you on the back;--
    But jes' the best thing in the world's our old friend Neverfail,
    When he wags yer hand as honest as an old dog wags his tail!

    I like to strike the man I owe the same time I can pay,
    And take back things I've borried, and su'prise folks thataway;
    I like to find out that the man I voted fer last fall,
    That didn't git elected, was a scoundrel after all;
    I like the man that likes the pore and he'ps 'em when he can;
    I like to meet a ragged tramp 'at's still a gentleman;
    But most I like--with you, my boy--our old friend Neverfail,
    When he wags yer hand as honest as an old dog wags his tail!




DAN O'SULLIVAN


    Dan O'Sullivan: It's your
    Lips have kissed "The Blarney," sure!--
    To be trillin' praise av me,
    Dhrippin' shwate wid poethry!--
    Not that I'd not have ye sing--
    Don't lave off for anything--
    Jusht be aisy whilst the fit
    Av me head shwells up to it!

    Dade and thrue, I'm not the man,
    Whilst yer singin', loike ye can,
    To cry shtop because ye've blesht
    My songs more than all the resht:--
    I'll not be the b'y to ax
    Any shtar to wane or wax,
    Or ax any clock that's woun',
    To run up inshtid av down!

    Whist yez! Dan O'Sullivan!--
    Him that made the Irishman
    Mixt the birds in wid the dough,
    And the dew and mistletoe
    Wid the whusky in the quare
    Muggs av us--and here we air,
    Three parts right, and three parts wrong,
    Shpiked wid beauty, wit, and song!




JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY

SEPULTURE--BOSTON, AUGUST 13, 1890


    Dead? this peerless man of men--
    Patriot, Poet, Citizen!--
      Dead? and ye weep where he lies
        Mute, with folded eyes!

    Courage! All his tears are done;
    Mark him, dauntless, face the sun!
      He hath led you.--Still, as true,
        He is leading you.

    Folded eyes and folded hands
    Typify divine commands
      He is hearkening to, intent
        Beyond wonderment.

    'Tis promotion that has come
    Thus upon him. Stricken dumb
      Be your moanings dolorous!
        God knows what He does.

    Rather as your chief, _aspire_!--
    Rise and seize his toppling lyre,
      And sing Freedom, Home, and Love,
        And the rights thereof!

    Ere in selfish grief ye sink,
    Come! catch rapturous breath and think--
      Think what sweep of wing hath he,
        Loosed in endless liberty.




MEREDITH NICHOLSON


    Keats, and Kirk White, David Gray and the rest of you
      Heavened and blest of you young singers gone,--
    Slender in sooth though the theme unexpressed of you,
      Leave us this like of you yet to sing on!
    Let your Muse mother him and your souls brother him,
      Even as now, or in fancy, you do:
    Still let him sing to us ever, and bring to us
      Musical musings of glory and--you.

    Never a note to do evil or wrong to us--
      Beauty of melody--beauty of words,--
    Sweet and yet strong to us comes his young song to us
      Rippled along to us clear as the bird's.
    No fame elating him falsely, nor sating him--
      Feasting and fêting him faint of her joys,
    But singing on where the laurels are waiting him,
      Young yet in art, and his heart yet a boy's.




GOD'S MERCY


    Behold, one faith endureth still--
      Let factions rail and creeds contend--
    God's mercy _was_, and _is_, and _will_
      Be with us, foe and friend.




CHRISTMAS GREETING


    A word of Godspeed and good cheer
    To all on earth--or far or near,
    Or friend or foe, or thine or mine--
    In echo of the voice divine,
    Heard when the Star bloomed forth and lit
    The world's face, with God's smile on it.




TO RUDYARD KIPLING


    To do some worthy deed of charity
      In secret and then have it found out by
    Sheer accident, held gentle Elia--
      That--that was the best thing beneath the sky!
    Confirmed in part, yet somewhat differing--
      (Grant that his gracious wraith will pardon me
    If impious!)--I think a better thing
      Is: being found out when one strives to be.

    So, Poet and Romancer--old as young,
      And wise as artless--masterful as mild,--
    If there be sweet in any song I've sung,
      'Twas savored for that palate, O my Child!
    For thee the lisping of the children all--
      For thee the youthful voices of old years--
    For thee all chords untamed or musical--
      For thee the laughter, and for thee the tears.

    And thus, borne to me o'er the seas between
      Thy land and mine, thy Song of certain wing
    Circles above me in the "pure serene"
      Of our high heaven's vast o'er-welcoming;
    While, packeted with joy and thankfulness,
      And fair hopes many as the stars that shine,
    And bearing all love's loyal messages,
      Mine own goes homing back to thee and thine.




THE GUDEWIFE


    My gudewife--she that is tae be--
    O she sall seeme sang-sweete tae me
    As her ain croon tuned wi' the chiel's
        Or spinnin'-wheel's.
    An' faire she'll be, an' saft, an' light,
        An' muslin-bright
    As her spick apron, jimpy laced
        The-round her waiste.--
    Yet aye as rosy sall she bloome
        Intil the roome
    (The where alike baith bake an' dine)
        As a full-fine
    Ripe rose, lang rinset wi' the raine,
        Sun-kist againe,--
    Sall seate me at her table-spread,
        White as her bread.--
    Where I, sae kissen her for _grace_,
        Sall see her face
    Smudged, yet aye sweeter, for the bit
        O' floure on it,
    Whiles, witless, she sall sip wi' me
    Luve's tapmaist-bubblin' ecstasy.




TENNYSON

ENGLAND, OCTOBER 5, 1892


    We of the New World clasp hands with the Old
    In newer fervor and with firmer hold
          And nobler fellowship,--
    O Master Singer, with the finger-tip
    Of Death laid thus on thy melodious lip!

    All ages thou has honored with thine art,
    And ages yet unborn thou wilt be part
          Of all songs pure and true!
    Thine now the universal homage due
    From Old and New World--ay, and still The New!




ROSAMOND C. BAILEY


    Thou brave, good woman! Loved of every one;
      Not only that in singing thou didst fill
      Our thirsty hearts with sweetness, trill on trill,
    Even as a wild bird singing in the sun--
    Not only that in all thy carols none
      But held some tincturing of tears to thrill
      Our gentler natures, and to quicken still
    Our human sympathies; but thou hast won
    Our equal love and reverence because
      That thou wast ever mindful of the poor,
        And thou wast ever faithful to thy friends.
    So, loving, serving all, thy best applause
      Thy requiem--the vast throng at the door
        Of the old church, with mute prayers and amens.




MRS. BENJAMIN HARRISON

WASHINGTON, OCTOBER 25, 1892


    Now utter calm and rest;
    Hands folded o'er the breast
    In peace the placidest,
        All trials past;
    All fever soothed--all pain
    Annulled in heart and brain,
    Never to vex again--
        She sleeps at last.

    She sleeps; but O most dear
    And best beloved of her
    Ye sleep not--nay, nor stir,
        Save but to bow
    The closer each to each,
    With sobs and broken speech,
    That all in vain beseech
        Her answer now.

    And lo! we weep with you,
    One grief the wide world through:
    Yet with the faith she knew
        We see her still,
    Even as here she stood--
    All that was pure and good
    And sweet in womanhood--
        God's will her will.




GEORGE A. CARR

GREENFIELD, JULY 21, 1914


    O playmate of the far-away
    And dear delights of Boyhood's day,
    And friend and comrade true and tried
    Through length of years of life beside,
    I bid you thus a fond farewell
    Too deep for words or tears to tell.

    But though I lose you, nevermore
    To greet you at the open door,
    To grasp your hand or see your smile,
    I shall be thankful all the while
    Because your love and loyalty
    Have made a happier world for me.

    So rest you, Playmate, in that land
    Still hidden from us by His hand,
    Where you may know again in truth
    All of the glad days of your youth--
    As when in days of endless ease
    We played beneath the apple trees.




TO ELIZABETH

OBIT JULY 8, 1893


    O noble, true and pure and lovable
      As thine own blessed name, ELIZABETH!--
      Ay, even as its cadence lingereth
    Upon the lips that speak it, so the spell
    Of thy sweet memory shall ever dwell
      As music in our hearts. Smiling at Death
      As on some later guest that tarrieth,
    Too gratefully o'erjoyed to say farewell,
    Thou hast turned from us but a little space--
      We miss thy presence but a little while,
        Thy voice of sympathy, thy word of cheer,
    The radiant glory of thine eyes and face,
      The glad midsummer morning of thy smile,--
        For still we feel and know that thou art here.




TO ALMON KEEFER

INSCRIBED IN "TALES OF THE OCEAN"


    This first book that I ever knew
    Was read aloud to me by you!
    Friend of my boyhood, therefore take
    It back from me, for old times' sake--
    The selfsame "Tales" first read to me,
    Under "the old sweet apple tree,"
    Ere I myself could read such great
    Big words,--but listening all elate,
    At your interpreting, until
    Brain, heart, and soul were all athrill
    With wonder, awe, and sheer excess
    Of wildest childish happiness.

    So take the book again--forget
    All else,--long years, lost hopes, regret;
    Sighs for the joys we ne'er attain,
    Prayers we have lifted all in vain;
    Tears for the faces seen no more,
    Once as the roses at the door!
    Take the enchanted book--And lo,
    On grassy swards of long ago,
    Sprawl out again, beneath the shade
    The breezy old-home orchard made,
    The veriest barefoot boy indeed--
    And I will listen as you read.




TO--"THE J. W. R. LITERARY CLUB"


    Well, it's enough to turn his head to have a feller's name
    Swiped with a _Literary_ Club!--But _you're_ the ones to blame!--
    I call the World to witness that I never _agged_ ye to it
    By ever writin' _Classic-like_--_because I couldn't_ do it:
    I never run to "Hellicon," ner writ about "Per-nassus,"
    Ner ever tried to rack or ride around on old "P-_gassus_"!
    When "Tuneful Nines" has cross'd my lines, the ink 'ud blot and
        blur it,
    And pen 'ud jest putt back fer home, and take the short way fer it!
    And so, as I'm a-sayin',--when you name your Literary
    In honor o' this name o' mine, it's railly nessessary--
    Whilse I'm _a-thankin'_ you and all--to _warn_ you, ef you do it,
    I'll haf to jine the thing myse'f 'fore I can live up to it!




LITTLE MAID-O'-DREAMS


    Little Maid-o'-Dreams, with your
    Eery eyes so clear and pure
    Gazing, where we fain would see
    Into far futurity,--
    Tell us what you there behold,
    In your visions manifold!
    What is on beyond our sight,
    Biding till the morrow's light,
    Fairer than we see to-day,
    As our dull eyes only may?

    Little Maid-o'-Dreams, with face
    Like as in some woodland place
    Lifts a lily, chaste and white,
    From the shadow to the light;--
    Tell us, by your subtler glance,
    What strange sorcery enchants
    You as now,--here, yet afar
    As the realms of moon and star?--
    Have you magic lamp and ring,
    And genii for vassaling?

    Little Maid-o'-Dreams, confess
    You're divine and nothing less,--
    For with mortal palms, we fear,
    Yet must pet you, dreaming here--
    Yearning, too, to lift the tips
    Of your fingers to our lips;
    Fearful still you may rebel,
    High and heav'nly oracle!
    Thus, though all unmeet our kiss,
    Pardon this!--and this!--and this!

    Little Maid-o'-Dreams, we call
    Truce and favor, knowing all!--
    All your magic is, in truth,
    Pure foresight and faith of youth--
    You're a child, yet even so,
    You're a sage, in embryo--
    Prescient poet--artist--great
    As your dreams anticipate.--
    Trusting God and Man, you do
    Just as Heaven inspires you to.




TO THE BOY WITH A COUNTRY

DAN WALLINGFORD


    Dan Wallingford, my jo Dan!--
      Though but a child in years,
    Your patriot spirit thrills the land
      And wakens it to cheers,--
    You lift the flag--you roll the drums--
      We hear the bugle blow,--
    Till all our hearts are one with yours,
      Dan Wallingford, my jo!




CLAUDE MATTHEWS

GOVERNOR OF INDIANA


    Steadfastly from his childhood's earliest hour--
    From simplest country life to state and power--
    His worth has known advancement,--each new height
    A newer glory in his fellow's sight.

    So yet his happy fate--though mute the breath
      Of thronging multitudes and thundrous cheers,--
      Faith sees him raised still higher, through our tears,
    By this divine promotion of his death.




TO LESLEY


    Burns sang of bonny Lesley
      As she gaed o'er the border,--
    Gaed like vain Alexander,
      To spread her conquests farther.

    I sing another Lesley,
      Wee girlie, more alluring,
    Who stays at home, the wise one,
      Her conquests there securing.

    A queen, too, is my Lesley,
      And gracious, though blood-royal,
    My heart her throne, her kingdom,
      And I a subject loyal.

    Long shall you reign, my Lesley,
      My pet, my darling dearie,
    For love, oh, little sweetheart,
      Grows never old or weary.




THE JUDKINS PAPERS


FATHER AND SON

Mr. Judkins' boy came home yesterday with a bottle of bugs in his
pocket, and as the quiet little fellow sat on the back porch in his
favorite position, his legs elbowed and flattened out beneath him like
a letter "W," his genial and eccentric father came suddenly upon him.

"And what's the blame' boy up to now?" said Mr. Judkins, in an assumed
tone of querulous displeasure, as he bent over the boy from behind and
gently tweaked his ear.

"Oh, here, mister!" said the boy, without looking up; "you thist let
up on that, will you!"

"What you got there, I tell you!" continued the smiling Mr. Judkins,
in a still gruffer tone, relinquishing the boy's ear, and gazing down
upon the fluffy towhead with more than ordinary admiration. "What you
got there?"

"Bugs," said the boy--"you know!"

"Dead, are they?" said Mr. Judkins.

"Some of 'em's dead," said the boy, carefully running a needle through
the back of a large bumblebee. "All these uns is, you kin bet! You
don't think a feller 'ud try to string a live bumblebee, I reckon?"

"Well, no, 'Squire," said Mr. Judkins, airily, addressing the boy by
one of the dozen nicknames he had given him; "not a live bumblebee--a
real stem-winder, of course not. But what in the name o' limpin'
Lazarus air you stringin' 'em fer?"

"Got a live snake-feeder," said the boy, ignoring the parental
inquiry. "See him down there in the bottom, 'ith all th' other uns on
top of him. Thist watch him now, an' you kin see him pant. I kin. Yes,
an' I got a beetle 'at's purt' nigh alive, too--on'y he can't pull in
his other wings. See 'em?" continued the boy, with growing enthusiasm,
twirling the big-mouthed bottle like a kaleidoscope. "Hate beetles!
'cause they allus act so big, an' make s'much fuss about theirselves,
an' don't know nothin' neither! Bet ef I had as many wings as a beetle
I wouldn't let no boy my size knock the stuffin' out o' me with no
bunch o' weeds, like I done him!"

"Howd'ye know you wouldn't?" said Mr. Judkins, austerely, biting his
nails and winking archly to himself.

"W'y, I know I wouldn't," said the boy, "'cause I'd keep up in the air
where I could fly, an' wouldn't come low down ut all--bumpin' around
'mongst them bushes, an' buzzin' against things, an' buttin' my brains
out a-tryin' to git thue fence cracks."

"'Spect you'd ruther be a snake-feeder, wouldn't you, Bud?" said Mr.
Judkins suggestively. "Snake-feeders has got about enough wings to
suit you, ef you want more'n one pair, and ever' day's a picnic with a
snake-feeder, you know. Nothin' to do but jes' loaf up and down the
crick, and roost on reeds and cat-tails, er fool around a feller's
fish-line and light on the cork and bob up and down with it till she
goes clean under, don't you know?"

"Don't want to be no snake-feeder, neither," said the boy, "'cause
they gits gobbled up, first thing they know, by these 'ere big green
bullfrogs ut they can't ever tell from the skum till they've lit right
in their mouth--and then they're goners! No, sir;" continued the boy,
drawing an extra quinine-bottle from another pocket, and holding it up
admiringly before his father's eyes: "There's the feller in there ut
I'd ruther be than have a pony!"

"W'y, it's a nasty p'izen spider!" exclaimed Mr. Judkins, pushing back
the bottle with affected abhorrence, "and he's alive, too!"

"You bet he's alive!" said the boy, "an' you kin bet he'll never come
to no harm while I own him!" and as the little fellow spoke his face
glowed with positive affection, and the twinkle of his eyes, as he
continued, seemed wonderfully like his father's own. "Tell you, I like
spiders! Spiders is awful fat--all but their head--and that's level,
you kin bet! Flies hain't got no business with a spider. Ef a spider
ever reaches fer a fly, he's his meat! The spider, he likes to loaf
an' lay around in the shade an' wait fer flies an' bugs an' things to
come a-foolin' round his place. He lays back in the hole in the corner
of his web, an' waits till somepin' lights on it an' nen when he hears
'em buzzin', he thist crawls out an' fixes 'em so's they can't buzz,
an' he's got the truck to do it with! I bet ef you'd unwind all the
web-stuff out of thist one little spider not bigger'n a pill, it 'ud
be long enough fer a kite-string! Onc't they wuz one in our
wood-house, an' a taterbug got stuck in his web, an' the spider worked
purt' nigh two days 'fore he got him so's he couldn't move. Nen he
couldn't eat him neither--'cause they's shells on 'em, you know, an'
the spider didn't know how to hull him. Ever' time I'd go there the
spider, he'd be a-wrappin' more stuff around th' ole bug, an' stoopin'
down like he wuz a-whisperin' to him. An' one day I went in ag'in, an'
he was a-hangin', alas an' cold in death! An' I poked him with a
splinter an' his web broke off--'spect he'd used it all up on the
wicked bug--an' it killed him; an' I buried him in a' ink-bottle an'
mashed the old bug 'ith a chip!"

"Yes," said Judkins, in a horrified tone, turning away to conceal the
real zest and enjoyment his face must have betrayed; "yes, and some
day you'll come home p'izened, er somepin'! And I want to say right
here, my young man, ef ever you do, and it don't kill you, I'll lint
you within an inch of your life!" And as the eccentric Mr. Judkins
whirled around the corner of the porch he heard the boy murmur in his
low, absent-minded way, "Yes, you will!"


MR. JUDKINS' REMARKS

Judkins stopped us in front of the post-office yesterday to say that
that boy of his was "the blamedest boy outside o' the annals o'
history!" "Talk about this boy-naturalist out here at Indianapolis,"
says Judkins,--"w'y, he ain't nowhere to my boy! The little cuss don't
do nothin' either only set around and look sleepy, and dern him, he
gits off more dry things than you could print in your paper. Of late
he's been a-displayin' a sort o' weakness fer Nature, don't you know;
and he's allus got a bottle o' bugs in his pocket. He come home
yesterday evening with a blame' mud-turtle as big as an unabridged
dictionary, and turned him over in the back yard and commenced biffin'
away at him with a hammer and a cold-chisel. 'W'y, you're a-killin'
the turtle,' says I. 'Kill nothin'!' says he, 'I'm thist a-takin' the
lid off so's I can see his clock works.' Hoomh!" says Judkins: "He's a
good one!--only," he added, "I wouldn't have the _boy_ think so fer the
world!"


JUDKINS' BOY ON THE MUD-TURTLE

The mud-turtle is not a beast of pray, but he dearly loves catfish
bait. If a mud-turtle gits your big toe in his mouth he will hang on
till it thunders. Then he will spit it out like he was disgusted. The
mud-turtle kin swim and keep his chin out of water ef he wants to but
he don't care ef he does sink. The turtle kin stay under water until
his next birthday, an' never crack a smile. He kin breathe like a
grown person, but he don't haf to, on'y when he is on dry land, an'
then I guess he thist does it to be soshibul. Allus when you see
bubbles a-comin' up in the swimmin' hole, you kin bet your galluses
they's a mud-turtle a-layin' down there, studyin' up some cheap way to
git his dinner. Mud-turtles never dies, on'y when they make soup out
of 'em. They is seven kinds of meat in the turtle, but I'd ruther eat
thist plain burnt liver.


ON FROGS

Frogs is the people's friend, but they can't fly. Onc't they wuz
tadpoles about as big as lickerish drops, an' after while legs growed
on 'em. Oh, let us love the frog--he looks so sorry. Frogs kin swim
better'n little boys, and they don't haf to hold their nose when they
dive, neither. Onc't I had a pet frog; an' the cars run over him. It
thist squshed him. Bet he never knowed what hurt him! Onc't they wuz a
rich lady swallered one--when he wuz little, you know; an' he growed
up in her, an' it didn't kill him ut all. An' you could hear him
holler in her bosom. It was a tree-toad; and so ever' time he'd go
p-r-r-r-r- w'y, nen the grand lady she'd know it was goin' to rain,
an' make her little boy run an' putt the tub under the spout. Wasn't
that a b'utiful frog?


ON PIRUTS

Piruts is reckless to a fault. They ain't afeard of nobody ner
nothin'. Ef ever you insult a pirut onc't, he'll foller you to the
grave but what he will revenge his wrongs. Piruts all looks like
pictures of "Buffalo Bill"--on'y they don't shave off the whiskers
that sticks out over the collar of their low-necked shirt. Ever' day
is a picknick fer the piruts of the high seas. They eat gunpowder an'
drink blood to make 'em savage, and then they kill people all day, an'
set up all night an' tell ghost stories an' sing songs such as mortal
ear would quail to listen to. Piruts never comes on shore on'y when
they run out of tobacker; an' then it's a cold day ef they don't land
at midnight, an' disguize theirselves an' slip up in town like a
sleuth houn', so's the Grand Jury can't git on to 'em. They don't care
fer the police any more than us people who dwells right in their
midst. Piruts makes big wages an' spends it like a king. "Come easy,
go easy," is the fatal watchword of them whose deeds is Deth. Onc't
they wuz a pirut turned out of the house an' home by his cruel parents
when he wuz but a kid, an' so he always went by that name. He was
thrust adrift without a nickel, an' sailed fer distant shores to hide
his shame fer those he loved. In the dead of night he stol'd a new
suit of the captain's clothes. An' when he growed up big enough to fit
'em, he gaily dressed hissef and went up an' paced the quarter-deck in
deep thought. He had not fergot how the captain onc't had lashed him
to the jib-boom-poop an' whipped him. That stung his proud spirit even
then; an' so the first thing he done was to slip up behind the cruel
officer an' push him over-board. Then the ship wuz his fer better er
fer worse. An' so he took command, an' hung high upon the beetling
mast the pirut flag. Then he took the Bible his old mother give him,
an' tied a darnic round it an' sunk it in the sand with a mocking
laugh. Then it wuz that he wuz ready fer the pirut's wild seafaring
life. He worked the business fer all they wuz in it fer many years,
but wuz run in ut last. An', standin' on the gallus-tree, he sung a
song which wuz all wrote off by hissef. An' then they knocked the trap
on him. An' thus the brave man died and never made a kick. In life he
wuz allus careful with his means, an' saved up vast welth, which he
dug holes and buried, an' died with the secret locked in his bosom to
this day.


ON HACKMENS

Hackmens has the softest thing in the bizness. They hain't got nothin'
to do but look hump-shouldered an' chaw tobacker an' wait. Hackmens
all looks like detectives, an' keeps still, an' never even spits when
you walk past 'em. An' they're allus cold. A hackman that stands high
in the p'fession kin wear a overcoat in dog-days an' then look chilly
an' like his folks wuz all dead but the old man, an' he wuz a
drunkard. Ef a hackman would on'y be a blind fiddler he'd take in more
money than a fair-ground. Hackmens never gives nothin' away. You kin
trust a hackman when you can't trust your own mother. Some people
thinks when they hire a hack to take 'em some place that the hackman
has got some grudge ag'in' 'em--but he hain't--he's allus that way. He
loves you but he knows his place, and smothers his real feelings. In
life's giddy scenes hackmens all wears a mask; but down deep in their
heart you kin bet they are yourn till deth. Some hackmens look like
they wuz stuck up, but they hain't--it's only 'cause they got on so
much clothes. Onc't a hackman wuz stabbed by a friend of his in the
same bizness, an' when the doctors wuz seein' how bad he wuz karved
up, they found he had on five shurts. They said that wuz all that
saved his life. They said ef he'd on'y had on four shurts, he'd 'a'
been a ded man. An' the hackman hissef, when he got well, used to brag
it wuz the closetest call he ever had, an' laid fer the other hackman,
an' hit him with a car couplin' an' killed him, an' come mighty nigh
goin' to the penitenchary fer it. Influenshal friends wuz all that
saved him that time. No five shurts would 'a' done it. The mayor said
that when he let him off, an' brought down the house, an' made hissef
a strong man fer another term. Some mayors is purty slick, but a
humble hackman may sometimes turn out to be thist as smooth. The on'y
thing w'y a hackman don't show up no better is 'cause he loses so much
sleep. That's why he allus looks like he had the headache, an' didn't
care ef he did. Onc't a hackman wuz waitin' in front of a hotel one
morning an' wuz sort o' dozin' like, an' fell off his seat. An' they
run an' picked him up, an' he wuz unconshus, an' they worked with him
till 'way long in the afternoon 'fore they found out he wuz thist
asleep; an' he cussed fearful cause they waked him up, an' wondered
why people couldn't never tend to their own bizness like he did.


ON DUDES

Ever'body is allus a-givin' it to Dudes. Newspapers makes fun of 'em,
an' artists makes pictures of 'em; an' the on'y ones in the wide world
that stuck on Dudes is me an' the Dudes theirse'f, an' we love an'
cherish 'em with all a parent's fond regards. An' nobody knows much
about Dudes neither, 'cause they hain't been broke out long enough yit
to tell thist what the disease is. Some say it's softinning of the
brains, an' others claim it can't be that, on the groun's they hain't
got material fer the softinning to work on, &c., &c., till even
"Sientests is puzzled," as the good book says. An' ef I wuz a-goin' to
say what ails Dudes I'd have to give it up, er pernounce it a'
aggervated case of Tyfoid blues, which is my 'onnest convictions.
That's what makes me kind o' stand in with 'em--same as ef they wuz
the under-dog. I am willing to aknolege that Dudes has their weakness,
but so has ever'thing. Even Oscar Wild, ef putt to the test; an' I
allus feel sorry fer George Washington 'cause he died 'fore he got to
see Oscar Wild. An' then another reason w'y you oughten't to jump on
to Dudes is, they don't know what's the matter with 'em any more than
us folks in whom they come in daily contack. Dudes all walks an' looks
in the face like they wuz on their way to fill an engagement with a
revolvin' lady wax-figger in some milliner-winder, an' had fergot the
number of her place of bizness. Some folks is mean enough to bitterly
a'sert that Dudes is strained in their manner an' fools from choice;
but they ain't. It's a gift--Dudes is Geenuses--that's what Dudes is!


ON RED HAIR

Onc't a pore boy wuz red-hedded, an' got mad at the other boys when
they'd throw it up to him. An' when they'd laugh at his red hed, an'
ast him fer a light, er wuzn't he afeard he'd singe his cap, an' orto'
wear a tin hat, er pertend to warm their hands by him,--w'y, sometimes
the red-hedded boy'd git purty hot indeed; an' onc't he told another
boy that wuz a-bafflin' him about his red hair that ef he wuz him he'd
git a fine comb an' go to canvassin' his own hed, and then he'd be
liabul to sceer up a more livelier subjeck to talk about than red
hair. An' then the other boy says, "You're a liar" an' that got the
red-hedded boy into more trouble; fer the old man whipped him
shameful' fer breakin' up soil with the other boy. An' this here
red-hedded boy had freckles, too. An' warts. An' nobody ortn't to 'a'
jumpt on to him fer that. Ef anybody wuz a red-hedded boy they'd have
also warts an' freckles--an' thist red-hair's bad enough. Onc't
another boy told him ef he wuz him he bet he could make a big day look
sick some night. An' when the red-hedded boy says "How?" w'y, the
other boy he says "Easy enough. I'd thist march around bare-hedded in
the torch-light p'cession."--"Yes, you would," says the red-hedded
boy, an' pasted him one with a shinny club, an' got dispelled from
school 'cause he wuz so high-tempered an' impulsiv. Ef I wuz the
red-hedded boy I'd be a pirut; but he allus said he wuz goin' to be a
baker.


THE CROSS-EYED GIRL

"You don't want to never tamper with a cross-eyed girl," said Mr.
Judkins, "and I'll tell you w'y: They've natur'lly got a better focus
on things than a man would ever guess--studyin' their eyes, you
understand. A man may think he's a-foolin' a cross-eyed girl simply
because she's apparently got her eyes tangled on other topics as he's
a-talkin' to her, but at the same time that girl may be a-lookin' down
the windin' stairway of the cellar of his soul with one eye, and
a-winkin' in a whisper to her own soul with the other, and her
unconscious victim jes' a-takin' it fer granted that nothin' is the
matter with the girl, only jes' cross-eyes! You see I've studied 'em,"
continued Judkins, "and I'm on to one fact dead sure--and that is,
their natures is as deceivin' as their eyes is! Knowed one onc't that
had her eyes mixed up thataway--sensitive little thing she was, and
always referrin' to her 'misfortune,' as she called it, and eternally
threatenin' to have some surgeon straighten 'em out like other
folks'--and, sir, that girl so worked on my feelin's, and took such
underholts on my sympathies that, blame me, before I knowed it I
confessed to her that ef it hadn't 'a' been fer her defective eyes (I
made it 'defective') I never would have thought of lovin' her, and,
furthermore ef ever she did have 'em changed back normal, don't you
understand, she might consider our engagement at an end--I did,
honest. And that girl was so absolute cross-eyed it warped her ears,
and she used to amuse herself by watchin' 'em curl up as I'd be
a-talkin' to her, and that maddened me, 'cause I'm natur'lly of a
jealous disposition, you know, and so, at last, I jes' casually hinted
that ef she was really a-goin' to git them eyes carpentered up, w'y
she'd better git at it: and that ended it.

"And then the blame' girl turned right around and married a fellow
that had a better pair of eyes than mine this minute! Then I struck
another cross-eyed girl--not really a legitimate case, 'cause, in
reality, she only had one off eye--the right eye, ef I don't
disremember--the other one was as square as a gouge. And that girl
was, ef any difference, a more confusin' case than the other, and
besides all that, she had some money in her own right, and warn't
a-throwin' off no big discount on one game eye. But I finally got her
interested, and I reckon something serious might 'a' come of it--but,
you see, her father was dead, and her stepmother sort o' shet down on
my comin' to the house; besides that, she had three grown uncles, and
you know how uncles is. I didn't want to marry no family, of course,
and so I slid out of the scheme, and tackled a poor girl that clerked
in a post-office. Her eyes was bad! I never did git the hang of them
eyes of hern. She had purty hair, and a complexion, I used to tell
her, which outrivalled the rose. But them eyes, you know! I didn't
really appreciate how bad they was crossed, at first. You see, it took
time. Got her to give me her picture, and I used to cipher on that,
but finally worked her off on a young friend of mine who wanted to
marry intellect--give her a good send-off to him--and she was
smart--only them eyes, you know! Why, that girl could read a postal
card, both sides at once, and smile at a personal friend through the
office window at the same time!"


HOMESICKNESS

There was a more than ordinary earnestness in the tone of Mr. Judkins
as he said: "Referrin' to this thing of bein' homesick, I want to
say right here that of all diseases, afflictions er complaints, this
thing of bein' homesick takes the cookies! A man may think when he's
got a' aggrivated case of janders, er white-swellin', say, er
bone-erysipelas, that he's to be looked up to as bein' purty well
fixed in this vale of trouble and unrest, but I want to tell you, when
I want my sorrow blood-raw, don't you understand, you may give me
homesickness--straight goods, you know--and I'll git more clean,
legitimate agony out of that than you can out of either of the other
attractions--yes, er even ef you'd ring in the full combination on me!
You see, there's no way of treatin' homesickness only one--and that is
to git back home--but as that's a remedy you can't git at no drug
store, at so much per box--and ef you could, fer instance, and only
had enough ready money anyhow to cover half the cost of a full
box--and nothin' but a full box ever reached the case--w'y, it follers
that your condition still remains critical. And homesickness don't
show no favors. It's jes' as liable to strike you as me. High er low,
er rich er poor, all comes under her jurishdiction, and whenever she
once reaches fer a citizen, you can jes' bet she gits there Eli, ever'
time!

"She don't confine herse'f to youth, ner make no specialty of little
children either, but she stalks abroad like a census-taker, and is as
conscientious. She visits the city girl clean up to Maxinkuckee, and
makes her wonder how things really is back home without her. And then
she haunts her dreams, and wakes her up at all hours of the night, and
sings old songs over fer her, and talks to her in low thrillin' tones
of a young man whose salary ain't near big enough fer two; and then
she leaves her photograph with her and comes away, and makes it lively
fer the boys on the train, the conductor, the brakeman and the
engineer. She even nests out the travellin' man, and yanks him out of
his reclinin' chair, and walks him up and down the car, and runs him
clean out of cigars and finecut, and smiles to hear him swear. Then
she gits off at little country stations and touches up the night
operator, who grumbles at his boy companion, and wishes to dernation
'six' was in, so's he could 'pound his ear.'

"And I'll never forgit," continued Mr. Judkins, "the last case of
homesickness I had, and the cure I took fer it. 'Tain't been more'n a
week ago neither. You see my old home is a'most too many laps from
this base to make it very often, and in consequence I hadn't been
there fer five years and better, till this last trip, when I jes'
succumbed to the pressure, and th'owed up my hands and went. Seemed
like I'd 'a' died if I hadn't. And it was glorious to rack around the
old town again--things lookin' jes' the same, mighty nigh, as they was
when I was a boy, don't you know. Run acrost an old schoolmate, too,
and tuck supper at his happy little home, and then we got us a good
nickel cigar, and walked and walked, and talked and talked! Tuck me
all around, you understand, in the meller twilight--till, the first
thing you know, there stood the old schoolhouse where me and him first
learnt to chew tobacco, and all that! Well, sir! you hain't got no
idea of the feelin's that was mine! W'y, I felt like I could th'ow my
arms around the dear old buildin' and squeeze it till the cupolo would
jes' pop out of the top of the roof like the core out of a b'ile! And
I think if they ever was a' epoch in my life when I could 'a' tackled
poetry without no compunctions, as the feller says, w'y, then was the
time--shore!"




TO THE QUIET OBSERVER

ERASMUS WILSON, AFTER HIS LONG SILENCE


    Dear old friend of us all in need
    Who know the worth of a friend indeed,
      How rejoiced are we all to learn
            Of your glad return.

    We who have missed your voice so long--
    Even as March might miss the song
      Of the sugar-bird in the maples when
            They're tapped again.

    Even as the memory of these
    _Blended_ sweets,--the sap of the trees
      And the song of the birds, and the old camp too,
            We think of you.

    Hail to you, then, with welcomes deep
    As grateful hearts may laugh or weep!--
      You give us not only the bird that sings,
            But all good things.




AMERICA'S THANKSGIVING

1900


    Father all bountiful, in mercy bear
    With this our universal voice of prayer--
          The voice that needs must be
          Upraised in thanks to Thee,
    O Father, from Thy Children everywhere.

    A multitudinous voice, wherein we fain
    Wouldst have Thee hear no lightest sob of pain--
          No murmur of distress,
          Nor moan of loneliness,
    Nor drip of tears, though soft as summer rain.

    And, Father, give us first to comprehend,
    No ill can come from Thee; lean Thou and lend
          Us clearer sight to see
          Our boundless debt to Thee,
    Since all thy deeds are blessings, in the end.

    And let us feel and know that, being Thine,
    We are inheritors of hearts divine,
          And hands endowed with skill,
          And strength to work Thy will,
    And fashion to fulfilment Thy design.

    So, let us thank Thee, with all self aside,
    Nor any lingering taint of mortal pride;
          As here to Thee we dare
          Uplift our faltering prayer,
    Lend it some fervor of the glorified.

    We thank Thee that our land is loved of Thee
    The blessèd home of thrift and industry,
          With ever-open door
          Of welcome to the poor--
    Thy shielding hand o'er all abidingly.

    Even thus we thank Thee for the wrong that grew
    Into a right that heroes battled to,
          With brothers long estranged,
          Once more as brothers ranged
    Beneath the red and white and starry blue.

    Ay, thanks--though tremulous the thanks expressed--
    Thanks for the battle at its worst, and best--
          For all the clanging fray
          Whose discord dies away
    Into a pastoral song of peace and rest.




WILLIAM PINKNEY FISHBACK


    Say first he loved the dear home-hearts, and then
    He loved his honest fellow citizen--
    He loved and honored him, in any post
    Of duty where he served mankind the most.

    All that he asked of him in humblest need
    Was but to find him striving to succeed;
    All that he asked of him in highest place
    Was justice to the lowliest of his race.

    When he found these conditions, proved and tried,
    He owned he marvelled, but was satisfied--
    Relaxed in vigilance enough to smile
    And, with his own wit, flay himself a while.

    Often he liked real anger--as, perchance,
    The summer skies like storm-clouds and the glance
    Of lightning--for the clearer, purer blue
    Of heaven, and the greener old earth, too.

    All easy things to do he did with care,
    Knowing the very common danger there;
    In noblest conquest of supreme debate
    The facts are simple as the victory great.

    That which had been a task to hardiest minds
    To him was as a pleasure, such as finds
    The captive-truant, doomed to read throughout
    The one lone book he really cares about.

    Study revived him: Howsoever dim
    And deep the problem, 'twas a joy to him
    To solve it wholly; and he seemed as one
    Refreshed and rested as the work was done.

    And he had gathered, from all wealth of lore
    That time has written, such a treasure store,
    His mind held opulence--his speech the rare
    Fair grace of sharing all his riches there--

    Sharing with all, but with the greatest zest
    Sharing with those who seemed the neediest:
    The young he ever favored; and through these
    Shall he live longest in men's memories.




JOHN CLARK RIDPATH


    To the lorn ones who loved him first and best,
    And knew his dear love at its tenderest,
    We seem akin--we simplest friends who knew
    His fellowship, of heart and spirit too:

    We who have known the happy summertide
    Of his ingenuous nature, glorified
    With the inspiring smile that ever lit
    The earnest face and kindly strength of it:

    His presence, all-commanding, as his thought
    Into unconscious eloquence was wrought,
    Until the utterance became a spell
    That awed us as a spoken miracle.

    Learning, to him, was native--was, in truth,
    The earliest playmate of his lisping youth,
    Likewise, throughout a life of toil and stress,
    It was as laughter, health and happiness:

    And so he played with it--joyed at its call--
    Ran rioting with it, forgetting all
    Delights of childhood, and of age and fame,--
    A devotee of learning, still the same!

    In fancy, even now we catch the glance
    Of the rapt eye and radiant countenance,
    As when his discourse, like a woodland stream,
    Flowed musically on from theme to theme:

    The skies, the stars, the mountains, and the sea,
    He worshipped as their high divinity--
    Nor did his reverent spirit find one thing
    On earth too lowly for his worshipping.

    The weed, the rose, the wildwood or the plain,
    The teeming harvest, or the blighted grain--
    All--all were fashioned beautiful and good,
    As the soul saw and senses understood.

    Thus broadly based, his spacious faith and love
    Enfolded all below as all above--
    Nay, ev'n if overmuch he loved mankind,
    He gave his love's vast largess as designed.

    Therefore, in fondest, faithful service, he
    Wrought ever bravely for humanity--
    Stood, first of heroes for the Right allied--
    Foes, even, grieving, when (for them) he died.

    This was the man we loved--are loving yet,
    And still shall love while longing eyes are wet
    With selfish tears that well were brushed away
    Remembering his smile of yesterday.--

    For, even as we knew him, smiling still,
    Somewhere beyond all earthly ache or ill,
    He waits with the old welcome--just as when
    We met him smiling, we shall meet again.




NEW YEAR'S NURSERY JINGLE


    Of all the rhymes of all the climes
      Of where and when and how,
    We best and most can boost and boast
      The Golden Age of NOW!




TO THE MOTHER


    The mother-hands no further toil may know;
      The mother-eyes smile not on you and me;
    The mother-heart is stilled, alas!--But O
      The mother-love abides eternally.




TO MY SISTER

A BELATED OFFERING FOR HER BIRTHDAY


    These books you find three weeks behind
      Your honored anniversary
    Make me, I fear, to here appear
      Mayhap a trifle cursory.--
    Yet while the Muse must thus refuse
      The chords that fall caressfully,
    She seems to stir the publisher
      And dealer quite successfully.

    As to our _birthdays_--let 'em run
      Until they whir and whiz!
    Read Robert Louis Stevenson,
      And hum these lines of his:--
    "The eternal dawn, beyond a doubt,
      Shall break on hill and plain
    And put all stars and candles out
      Ere we be young again."




A MOTTO


    The _Brightest_ Star's the _modestest_,
    And more'n likely writes
    His motto like the lightnin'-bug's--
    _Accordin' To His Lights_.




TO A POET ON HIS MARRIAGE

MADISON CAWEIN


    Ever and ever, on and on,
    From winter dusk to April dawn,
    This old enchanted world we range
    From night to light--from change to change--
    Or path of burs or lily-bells,
    We walk a world of miracles.

    The morning evermore must be
    A newer, purer mystery--
    The dewy grasses, or the bloom
    Of orchards, or the wood's perfume
    Of wild sweet-williams, or the wet
    Blent scent of loam and violet.

    How wondrous all the ways we fare--
    What marvels wait us, unaware!...
    But yesterday, with eyes ablur
    And heart that held no hope of Her,
    You paced the lone path, but the true
    That led to where she waited you.




ART AND POETRY

TO HOMER C. DAVENPORT


    "Wess," he says, and sort o' grins,
    "Art and Poetry is twins.
    'F I could draw as you have drew,
    Like to jes' swap pens with you."




HER SMILE OF CHEER AND VOICE OF SONG

ANNA HARRIS RANDALL


    Spring fails, in all its bravery of brilliant gold and green,--
    The sun, the grass, the leafing tree, and all the dazzling scene
          Of dewy morning--orchard blooms,
          And woodland blossoms and perfumes
            With bird-songs sown between.

    Yea, since _she_ smiles not any more, so every flowery thing
    Fades, and the birds seem brooding o'er her silence as they sing--
          Her smile of cheer and voice of song
          Seemed so divinely to belong
            To ever-joyous Spring!

    Nay, still she smiles.--Our eyes are blurred and see not through our
        tears:
    And still her rapturous voice is heard, though not of mortal ears:--
          Now ever doth she smile and sing
          Where Heaven's unending clime of Spring
            Reclaims those gifts of hers.




OLD INDIANY

FRAGMENT

INTENDED FOR A DINNER OF THE INDIANA SOCIETY OF CHICAGO


    Old Indiany, 'course we know
    Is first, and best, and _most_, also,
    Of _all_ the States' whole forty-four:--
    She's first in ever'thing, that's shore!--
    And _best_ in ever'way as yet
    Made known to man; and you kin bet
    She's _most_, because she won't confess
    She ever was, or will be, _less_!
    And yet, fer all her proud array
    Of sons, how many gits away!--
    No doubt about her bein' _great_
    But, fellers, she's a leaky State!
    And them that boasts the most about
    Her, them's the ones that's dribbled out.
    Law! jes' to think of all you boys
    'Way over here in Illinoise
    A-celebratin', like ye air,
    Old Indiany, 'way back there
    In the dark ages, so to speak,
    A-prayin' for ye once a week
    And wonderin' what's a-keepin' you
    From comin', like you ort to do.
    You're all a-lookin' well, and like
    You wasn't "sidin' up the pike,"
    As the tramp-shoemaker said
    When "he sacked the boss and shed
    The blame town, to hunt fer one
    Where they didn't work fer fun!"
    Lookin' _extry_ well, I'd say,
    Your old home so fur away.--
    Maybe, though, like the old jour.,
    Fun hain't all yer workin' fer.
    So you've found a job that pays
    Better than in them old days
    You was on _The Weekly Press_,
    Heppin' run things, more er less;
    Er a-learnin' telegraph
    Operatin', with a half
    Notion of the tinner's trade,
    Er the dusty man's that laid
    Out designs on marble and
    Hacked out little lambs by hand,
    And chewed fine-cut as he wrought,
    "Shapin' from his bitter thought"
    Some squshed mutterings to say,--
    "Yes, hard work, and porer pay!"
    Er you'd kind o' thought the far-
    Gazin' kuss that owned a car
    And took pictures in it, had
    Jes' the snap you wanted--bad!
    And you even wondered why
    He kep' foolin' with his sky-
    Light the same on shiny days
    As when rainin'. ('T leaked always.)
    Wondered what strange things was hid
    In there when he shet the door
    And smelt like a burnt drug store
    Next some orchard-trees, i swan!
    With whole roasted apples on!
    That's why Ade is, here of late,
    Buyin' in the dear old State,--
    So's to cut it up in plots
    Of both town and country lots.




ABE MARTIN


    Abe Martin!--dad-burn his old picture!
    P'tends he's a Brown County fixture--
    A kind of a comical mixture
        Of hoss-sense and no sense at all!
    His mouth, like his pipe, 's allus goin',
    And his thoughts, like his whiskers, is flowin',
    And what he don't know ain't wuth knowin'--
        From Genesis clean to baseball!

    The artist, Kin Hubbard, 's so keerless
    He draws Abe most eyeless and earless,
    But he's never yet pictured him cheerless
        Er with fun 'at he tries to conceal,--
    Whuther onto the fence er clean over
    A-rootin' up ragweed er clover,
    Skeert stiff at some "Rambler" er "Rover"
        Er newfangled automo_beel_!

    It's a purty steep climate old Brown's in;
    And the rains there his ducks nearly drowns in
    The old man hisse'f wades his rounds in
        As ca'm and serene, mighty nigh
    As the old handsaw-hawg, er the mottled
    Milch cow, er the old rooster wattled
    Like the mumps had him 'most so well throttled
        That it was a pleasure to die.

    But best of 'em all's the fool-breaks 'at
    Abe don't see at all, and yit makes 'at
    Both me and you lays back and shakes at
        His comic, miraculous cracks
    Which makes him--clean back of the power
    Of genius itse'f in its flower--
    This Notable Man of the Hour,
        Abe Martin, The Joker on Facts.




O. HENRY

WRITTEN IN THE CHARACTER OF "SHERRARD PLUMMER"


    O. Henry, Afrite-chef of all delight!--
      Of all delectables conglomerate
      That stay the starved brain and rejuvenate
    The mental man. Th' esthetic appetite--
    So long anhungered that its "in'ards" fight
      And growl gutwise,--its pangs thou dost abate
      And all so amiably alleviate,
    Joy pats its belly as a hobo might
    Who haply hath attained a cherry pie
      With no burnt bottom in it, ner no seeds--
        Nothin' but crispest crust, and thickness fit,
    And squshin'-juicy, and jes' mighty nigh
      Too dratted drippin'-sweet fer human needs,
        But fer the sosh of milk that goes with it.




"MONA MACHREE"

    "_Mona Machree, I'm the wanderin' cr'ature now,
                  Over the sea;
    Slave of no lass, but a lover of Nature now
                  Careless and free._"
                                        --T. A. Daly.


    Mona Machree! och, the sootherin' flow of it,
                Soft as the sea,
    Yet, in-under the mild, moves the wild undertow of it
                Tuggin' at me,
    Until both the head and the heart o' me's fightin'
    For breath, nigh a death all so grandly invitin'
    That--barrin' your own livin' yet--I'd delight in,
      Drowned in the deeps of this billowy song to you
    Sung by a lover your beauty has banned,
    Not alone from your love but his dear native land,
    Whilst the kiss of his lips, and touch of his hand,
      And his song--all belong to you,
                Mona Machree!




WILLIAM McKINLEY

CANTON, OHIO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1907


    He said: "It is God's way:
      His will, not ours be done."
    And o'er our land a shadow lay
      That darkened all the sun.
    The voice of jubilee
      That gladdened all the air,
    Fell sudden to a quavering key
      Of suppliance and prayer.

    He was our chief--our guide--
      Sprung of our common Earth,
    From youth's long struggle proved and tried
      To manhood's highest worth:
    Through toil, he knew all needs
      Of all his toiling kind--
    The favored striver who succeeds--
      The one who falls behind.

    The boy's young faith he still
      Retained through years mature--
    The faith to labor, hand and will,
      Nor doubt the harvest sure--
    The harvest of man's love--
      A nation's joy that swells
    To heights of Song, or deeps whereof
      But sacred silence tells.

    To him his Country seemed
      Even as a Mother, where
    He rested--slept; and once he dreamed--
      As on her bosom there--
    And thrilled to hear, within
      That dream of her, the call
    Of bugles and the clang and din
      Of war.... And o'er it all

    His rapt eyes caught the bright
      Old Banner, winging wild
    And beck'ning him, as to the fight ...
      When--even as a child--
    He wakened--And the dream
      Was real! And he leapt
    As led the proud Flag through a gleam
      Of tears the Mother wept.

    His was a tender hand--
      Even as a woman's is--
    And yet as fixed, in Right's command,
      As this bronze hand of his:
    This was the Soldier brave--
      This was the Victor fair--
    This is the Hero Heaven gave
      To glory here--and There.




BENJAMIN HARRISON

ON THE UNVEILING OF HIS MONUMENT AT INDIANAPOLIS

OCTOBER 27, 1908


    As tangible a form in History
      The Spirit of this man stands forth as here
      He towers in deathless sculpture, high and clear
    Against the bright sky of his destiny.
    Sprung of our oldest, noblest ancestry,
      His pride of birth, as lofty as sincere,
      Held kith and kin, as Country, ever dear--
    Such was his sacred faith in you and me.
    Thus, natively, from youth his work was one
      Unselfish service in behalf of all--
        Home, friends, and sharers of his toil and stress;
    Ay, loving all men and despising none,
      And swift to answer every righteous call,
        His life was one long deed of worthiness.

    The voice of Duty's faintest whisper found
      Him as alert as at her battle-cry--
      When awful War's battalions thundered by,
    High o'er the havoc still he heard the sound
    Of mothers' prayers and pleadings all around;
      And ever the despairing sob and sigh
      Of stricken wives and orphan children's cry
    Made all our Land thrice consecrated ground.
    So rang his "Forward!" and so swept his sword--
      On!--on!--till from the fire-and-cloud once more
        Our proud Flag lifted in the glad sunlight
    As though the very Ensign of the Lord
      Unfurled in token that the strife was o'er,
        And victory--as ever--with the right.




LEE O. HARRIS

CHRISTMAS DAY--1909


    O say not he is dead,
      The friend we honored so;
    Lift up a grateful voice instead
      And say: He lives, we know--
    We know it by the light
      Of his enduring love
    Of honor, valor, truth, and right,
      And man, and God above.

    Remember how he drew
      The child-heart to his own,
    And taught the parable anew,
      And reaped as he had sown;
    Remember with what cheer
      He filled the little lives,
    And stayed the sob and dried the tear
      With mirth that still survives.

    All duties to his kind
      It was his joy to fill;
    With nature gentle and refined,
      Yet dauntless soul and will,
    He met the trying need
      Of every troublous call,
    Yet high and clear and glad indeed
      He sung above it all.

    Ay, listen! Still we hear
      The patriot song, the lay
    Of love, the woodland note so dear--
      These will not die away.
    Then say not he is dead,
      The friend we honor so,
    But lift a grateful voice instead
      And say: He lives, we know.




THE HIGHEST GOOD

WRITTEN FOR A HIGH-SCHOOL ANNUAL


    To attain the highest good
    Of true man and womanhood,
    Simply do your honest best--
    God with joy will do the rest.




MY CONSCIENCE


    Sometimes my Conscience says, says he,
    "Don't you know me?"
    And I, says I, skeered through and through,
    "Of course I do.
    You air a nice chap ever' way,
    I'm here to say!
    You make me cry--you make me pray,
    And all them good things thataway--
    That is, at _night_. Where do you stay
    Durin' the day?"

    And then my Conscience says, onc't more,
    "You know me--shore?"
    "Oh, yes," says I, a-trimblin' faint,
    "You're jes' a saint!
    Your ways is all so holy-right,
    I love you better ever' night
    You come around,--tel' plum daylight,
    When you air out o' sight!"

    And then my Conscience sort o' grits
    His teeth, and spits
    On his two hands and grabs, of course,
    Some old remorse,
    And beats me with the big butt-end
    O' _that_ thing--tel my clostest friend
    'Ud hardly know me. "Now," says he,
    "Be keerful as you'd orto be
    And _allus_ think o' me!"




MY BOY


    You smile and you smoke your cigar, my boy;
      You walk with a languid swing;
    You tinkle and tune your guitar, my boy,
      And you lift up your voice and sing;
    The midnight moon is a friend of yours,
      And a serenade your joy--
    And it's only an age like mine that cures
      A trouble like yours, my boy!




THE OBJECT LESSON


Barely a year ago I attended the Friday afternoon exercises of a
country school. My mission there, as I remember, was to refresh my
mind with such material as might be gathered, for a "valedictory,"
which, I regret to say, was to be handed down to posterity under
another signature than my own.

There was present, among a host of visitors, a pale young man of
perhaps thirty years, with a tall head and bulging brow and a highly
intellectual pair of eyes and spectacles. He wore his hair without
roach or "part" and the smile he beamed about him was "a joy forever."
He was an educator--from the East, I think I heard it rumoured--anyway
he was introduced to the school at last, and he bowed, and smiled, and
beamed upon us all, and entertained us after the most delightfully
edifying manner imaginable. And although I may fail to reproduce the
exact substance of his remarks upon that highly important occasion, I
think I can at least present his theme in all its coherency of detail.
Addressing more particularly the primary department of the school, he
said:--

"As the little exercise I am about to introduce is of recent origin,
and the bright, intelligent faces of the pupils before me seem rife
with eager and expectant interest, it will be well for me, perhaps, to
offer by way of preparatory preface, a few terse words of explanation.

"The Object Lesson is designed to fill a long-felt want, and is
destined, as I think, to revolutionize, in a great degree, the
educational systems of our land.--In my belief, the Object Lesson will
supply a want which I may safely say has heretofore left the most
egregious and palpable traces of mental confusion and intellectual
inadequacies stamped, as it were, upon the gleaming reasons of the
most learned--the highest cultured, and the most eminently gifted and
promising of our professors and scientists both at home and abroad.

"Now this deficiency--if it may be so termed--plainly has a beginning;
and probing deeply with the bright, clean scalpel of experience we
discover that--'As the twig is bent the tree's inclined.' To remedy,
then, a deeply seated error which for so long has rankled at the very
root of educational progress throughout the land, many plausible, and
we must admit, many helpful theories have been introduced to allay the
painful errors resulting from the discrepancy of which we speak: but
until now, nothing that seemed wholly to eradicate the defect has been
discovered, and that, too, strange as it may seem, is, at last,
emanating, like the mighty river, from the simplest source, but
broadening and gathering in force and power as it flows along, until,
at last, its grand and mighty current sweeps on in majesty to the vast
illimitable ocean of--of--of--Success! Ahem!

"And, now, little boys and girls, that we have had by implication, a
clear and comprehensive explanation of the Object Lesson and its
mission, I trust you will give me your undivided attention while I
endeavor--in my humble way--to direct your newly acquired knowledge
through the proper channel. For instance:--

"This little object I hold in my hand--who will designate it by its
proper name? Come, now, let us see who will be the first to answer. 'A
peanut,' says the little boy here at my right. Very good--very good! I
hold, then, in my hand, a peanut. And now who will tell me, what is
the peanut? A very simple question--who will answer? 'Something good
to eat,' says the little girl. Yes, 'something good to eat,' but would
it not be better to say simply that the peanut is an edible? I think
so, yes. The peanut, then, is--an edible--now, all together, an
edible!

"To what kingdom does the peanut belong? The animal, vegetable, or
mineral kingdom? A very easy question. Come, let us have prompt
answers. 'The animal kingdom,' does the little boy say? Oh, no! The
peanut does not belong to the animal kingdom! Surely the little boy
must be thinking of a larger object than the peanut--the elephant,
perhaps. To what kingdom, then, does the peanut belong? The
v-v-veg--'The vegetable kingdom,' says the bright-faced little girl on
the back seat. Ah! that is better. We find then that the peanut
belongs to the--what kingdom? The 'vegetable kingdom.' Very good, very
good!

"And now who will tell us of what the peanut is composed. Let us have
quick responses now. Time is fleeting! Of what is the peanut composed?
'The hull and the goody,' some one answers. Yes, 'the hull and the
goody' in vulgar parlance, but how much better it would be to say
simply, the shell and the kernel. Would not that sound better? Yes, I
thought you would agree with me there!

"And now who will tell me the color of the peanut! And be careful now!
for I shouldn't like to hear you make the very stupid blunder I once
heard a little boy make in reply to the same question. Would you like
to hear what color the stupid little boy said the peanut was? You
would, eh? Well, now, how many of you would like to hear what color
the stupid little boy said the peanut was? Come now, let's have an
expression. All who would like to hear what color the stupid little
boy said the peanut was, may hold up their right hands. Very good,
very good--there, that will do.

"Well, it was during a professional visit I was once called upon to
make to a neighboring city, where I was invited to address the
children of a free school--Hands down, now, little boy--founded for
the exclusive benefit of the little newsboys and bootblacks, who, it
seems, had not the means to defray the expenses of the commonest
educational accessories, and during an object lessen--identical with
the one before us now--for it is a favorite one of mine--I propounded
the question, what is the color of the peanut? Many answers were given
in response, but none as sufficiently succinct and apropos as I deemed
the facts demanded; and so at last I personally addressed a ragged,
but, as I then thought, a bright-eyed little fellow, when judge of my
surprise, in reply to my question what is the color of the peanut, the
little fellow, without the slightest gleam of intelligence lighting up
his face, answered, that 'if not scorched in roasting, the peanut was
a blond.' Why, I was almost tempted to join in the general merriment
his inapposite reply elicited. But I occupy your attention with
trivial things; and as I notice the time allotted to me has slipped
away, we will drop the peanut for the present. Trusting the few facts
gleaned from a topic so homely and unpromising will sink deep in your
minds, in time to bloom and blossom in the fields of future
usefulness--I--I----I thank you."




THE END





End of Project Gutenberg's The Old Soldiers Story, by James Whitcomb Riley