VI
FROM A HYPERBOLIST
WERE ALL THE WORLD LIKE YOU
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WERE all the world like you, my dear, Were all the world like you, Oh, there'd be darts in all our hearts From sunset to the dew. For life would be Love's jubilee Where all were two and two, And lovers' rhyme the only crime, Were all the world like you, my dear, Were all the world like you. Were all the world like you, my dear, Were all the world like you, There'd be no pain nor clouds nor rain, No kisses overdue; But sweetest sighs and pleading eyes, Where Cupid's arrow flew, And lovers' rhyme the only crime, Were all the world like you, my dear, Were all the world like you. |
HERE AND THERE
UNCLE JOGALONG
THE INDIFFERENT MARINER
ON A LIBRARY WALL
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WHEN faltering fingers bid me cease to write, And, laying down the pen, I seek the Night, May those, to whom the Daylight still is sweet, With loving lips my name ofttimes repeat. And should Belshazzar's spirit hither stray, And linger o'er the lines I write to-day, May he, who wept for Babylonia's fall, Look kindly at this "writing on the wall"! |
MRS. MULLIGATAWNY
EUTHANASIA
[To E. C.]
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OH, drop your eyelids down, my lady; Oh, drop your eyelids down. 'Twere well to keep your bright eyes shady For pity of the town! But should there any glances be, I pray you give them all to me; For though my life be lost thereby, It were the sweetest death to die! |
DAINTY LITTLE LOVE
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DAINTY little Love came tripping Down the hill, Smiling as he thought of sipping Sweets at will. SHE said, "No, Love must go." Dainty little Love came tripping Down the hill. Dainty little Love went sighing Up the hill, All his little hopes were dying— Love was ill. Vain he tried Tears to hide. Dainty little Love went sighing Up the hill. |
TO M.
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SWEET visions came to me in sleep, Ah! wondrous fair to see; And in my mind I strove to keep The dream to tell to thee. But morning broke with golden gleam, And shone upon thy face, And life was lovelier than a dream, And dreams had lost their grace. |
THE SONG
AT TWILIGHT TIME
CÉLESTE
THISTLE-DOWN
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THE thistle-down floats on the air, the air, Whenever the soft wind blows, And the wind can tell just where, just where The feathery thistle-down goes. And it tells the bird in a single word, Who whispers it low to the bee; And they try to keep the mystery deep, And none of them tell it to me. But I know well, though they never will tell, Where the thistle-down goes when it says "Farewell," It floats and floats away on the air, And goes where the wind goes—everywhere! |
SLUMBER SONG
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GENTLY fall the shadows gray, Daylight softly veiling; Now to Dreamland we'll away, Sailing, sailing, sailing. Little eyes were made for sleeping, Little heads were made for rest, Golden locks were made for keeping Close to mother's breast; Little hands were made for folding, Little lips should never sigh; What dear mother's arms are holding, Love alone can buy. Gently fall the shadows gray, Daylight softly veiling; Now to Dreamland we'll away, Sailing, sailing, sailing. |
THOU ART TO ME
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THOU art to me As are soft breezes to a summer sea; As stars unto the night; Or when the day is born, As sunrise to the morn; As peace unto the fading of the light. Thou art to me As one sweet flower upon a barren lea; As rest to toiling hands; As one clear spring amid the desert sands; As smiles to maidens' lips; As hope to friends that wait for absent ships; As happiness to youth; As purity to truth; As sweetest dreams to sleep; As balm to wounded hearts that weep. All, all that I would have thee be Thou art to me. |
LOVE
[Trio]
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OH, love hits all humanity, humanity, my dear; But after all it's vanity, a vanity, I fear; And sometimes 'tis insanity, insanity, so queer; Humanity, yes, a vanity, yes, insanity so queer. And love is often curious, so curious to see, And oftentimes is spurious, so spurious, ah, me! And surely 'tis injurious, injurious when free, So curious, yes, and spurious, yes, injurious when free. Oh, love brings much anxiety, anxiety and grief, But seasoned with propriety, propriety, relief, It's mixed with joy and piety, but piety is brief; Anxiety, yes, propriety, yes, but piety is brief. Oh, young love's all timidity, timidity, I'm told, Gains courage with rapidity, rapidity, so bold, With traces of acidity, acidity, when old; Timidity, yes, rapidity, yes, acidity, when old. |
THE STRANGER-MAN
THE HONEYSUCKLE VINE
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'TWAS a tender little honeysuckle vine That smiled and danced in the warm sunshine, And spied a maid as fair as all maids be, Who said, "Little honeysuckle, come up to me." So it climbed and climbed in the sun and the shade, And all summer long at her window stayed; For that is the way that honeysuckles go, And that is the way that true loves grow. Then the loving little honeysuckle vine Kissed the little maid in the warm sunshine; But the winter came with an angry frown, And the false little maid shut the window down; And the sorrowing vine on the wintry side Mourned and mourned for the love that died, And faded away in the wind and snow,— And that is the way that some loves go. |
SAINT BOTOLPH
THE GURGLING IMPS
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THE Gurgling Imps of Mummery Mum Lived in the Land of the Crimson Plum, And a language very strange had they, 'Twas merely a chattering ricochet. The Gurgling Imps of Mummery Mum Caught hummingbirds for the sake of the hum, Their cheeks were flushed with a sable tinge, Their eyelids hung on a silver hinge. The Gurgling Imps of Mummery Mum Called each other "My charming chum," And floated in tears of joy to see Their relatives hung in a cranberry tree. The Gurgling Imps of Mummery Mum Stole the whole of a half of a crumb, And a wind arose and blew the Imps Way off to the Land of the Lazy Limps. |
THE WORM WILL TURN
THE BOSTON CATS
THE JONQUIL MAID
THE ROLLICKING MASTODON
THE FIVE SENSES
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OH, why do men their glasses clink When good old honest wine they drink? Wine is so excellent a thing To lowest subject, or to highest king, That every sense alike should share The pleasure that can banish care. Thus may each merry eye behold The sparkle of the red or gold. Our lips may feel the goblet's edge And taste the loving cup we pledge. While from each foaming glass escape The precious perfumes of the grape. But ah, we hear it not, and so We give the touch that all men know. And thus do all the senses share The pleasure that can banish care. And that is why the glasses clink When good old honest wine we drink. |
ECONOMY
[A Valentine]
IDYLETTES OF THE QUEEN
I.—SHE
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I FAIN would write on pleasant themes; So let me prate Awhile of Kate; And if my rhyming effort seems Uncouth or rough, At any rate, She's Kate, And that's enough. |
II.—HER EYES
III.—HER GOWN
IV.—HER KNOWLEDGE
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How much she knows no one can tell; But she can read and write and spell, Divide and multiply and add, And name the apples Thomas had When John enticed him five to sell. For "jelly" she does not say "jell," Nor horrify us with "umbrell," For all of which we're very glad— How much she knows! She knows the oyster by his shell, Detects the newsboy by his yell, Enumerates the bones in shad, And thinks my poetry is bad. Well! well! well! well! well! well! well! well! How much she knows! |
V.—HER SIGH
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When she utters a sigh 'Tis a breath from the roses, And a-hovering nigh, When she utters a sigh, The bees wonder why No garden discloses. When she utters a sigh 'Tis a breath from the roses. |
VI.—HER RING
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Her ring goes round her finger. Oh, foolish thing! Were I a ring, I'd not "go round"—I'd linger! |
VII.—HER FAULTS
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Of faults she has but one, And that is, she has none. |
VIII.—HER VOICE
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Sweet and soothing, rhythmic, tuneful, Dulcet, mellow, unbassoonful, Zither, 'cello, lute, guitar, And there you are! |
IX.—HER LOVE
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Do you love me? R. S. V. P. |
TO M. E.
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WE keep in step as years roll by; You march behind and I before:— The path is new to you; but I Have passed the ground you're walking o'er. Yet I march on with measured tread, And looking back, I smile and greet you:— I fear the order, "Halt!" Instead, Would I might countermarch and meet you. |
BON VOYAGE
[To O. R.]
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OUT from the Land of the Future, into the Land of the Past A comrade sails to the East, the sport of the wave and the blast. Oh, billow and breeze, be kind, and temper your strength to your guest, Kind for the sake of the friend,—for the sake of the hands he pressed. Oh, tenderest billow and breeze, welcome him even as we Would welcome if you were the friend and we were the wind and the sea! Welcome, protect him, and waft him westward and homeward at last Into the Land of the Future, out from the Land of the Past! |
THE BOOK OF LIFE
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WHOSO his book of life doth con From title-leaf to colophon May read, if he but wrongly look, Some sorry pages in his book. But if he read aright each line, Interpreting the scheme divine, 'Twill be most fair to look upon From title-leaf to colophon. |
The Riverside Press
Electrotyped and printed by H. O. Houghton & Co.
Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A.