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The Home Book of Verse; Volume 4



by Burton Egbert Stevenson















PART IV











FAMILIAR VERSE; AND POEMS 

HUMOROUS AND SATIRIC













BALLADE OF THE PRIMITIVE JEST

〃What did the dark…haired Iberian laugh at before the tall blonde

Aryan drove him into the corners of Europe?〃 … Brander Matthews



I am an ancient Jest!

Palaeolithic man

In his arboreal nest

The sparks of fun would fan;

My outline did he plan;

And laughed like one possessed;

'Twas thus my course began;

I am a Merry Jest!



I am an early Jest!

Man delved; and built; and span;

Then wandered South and West

The peoples Aryan;

I journeyed in their van;

The Semites; too; confessed; …

From Beersheba to Dan; …

I am a Merry Jest!



I am an ancient Jest!

Through all the human clan;

Red; black; white; free; oppressed;

Hilarious I ran!

I'm found in Lucian;

In Poggio; and the rest;

I'm dear to Moll and Nan!

I am a Merry Jest!



ENVOY

Prince; you may storm and ban …

Joe Millers are a pest;

Suppress me if you can!

I am a Merry Jest!



Andrew Lang '1844…1912'















THE KINDLY MUSE







TIME TO BE WISE



Yes; I write verses now and then;

But blunt and flaccid is my pen;

No longer talked of by young men

As rather clever:

In the last quarter are my eyes;

You see it by their form and size;

Is it not time then to be wise?

Or now or never。



Fairest that ever sprang from Eve!

While Time allows the short reprieve;

Just look at me! would you believe

'Twas once a lover?

I cannot clear the five…bar gate;

But; trying first its timber's state;

Climb stiffly up; take breath; and wait

To trundle over。



Through gallopade I cannot swing

The entangling blooms of Beauty's spring:

I cannot say the tender thing;

Be't true or false;

And am beginning to opine

Those girls are only half…divine

Whose waists yon wicked boys entwine

In giddy waltz。



I fear that arm above that shoulder;

I wish them wiser; graver; older;

Sedater; and no harm if colder;

And panting less。

Ah! people were not half so wild

In former days; when; starchly mild;

Upon her high…heeled Essex smiled

The brave Queen Bess。



Walter Savage Landor '1775…1864'





UNDER THE LINDENS



Under the lindens lately sat

A couple; and no more; in chat;

I wondered what they would be at

Under the lindens。



I saw four eyes and four lips meet;

I heard the words; 〃How sweet! how sweet!〃

Had then the Fairies given a treat

Under the lindens?



I pondered long and could not tell

What dainty pleased them both so well:

Bees! bees! was it your hydromel

Under the lindens?



Walter Savage Landor '1775…1864'





ADVICE



To write as your sweet mother does

Is all you wish to do。

Play; sing; and smile for others; Rose!

Let others write for you。



Or mount again your Dartmoor gray;

And I will walk beside;

Until we reach that quiet bay

Which only hears the tide。



Then wave at me your pencil; then

At distance bid me stand;

Before the caverned cliff; again

The creature of your hand。



And bid me then go past the nook

To sketch me less in size;

There are but few content to look

So little in your eyes。



Delight us with the gifts you have;

And wish for none beyond:

To some be gay; to some be grave;

To one (blest youth!) be fond。



Pleasures there are how close to Pain

And better unpossessed!

Let poetry's too throbbing vein

Lie quiet in your breast。



Walter Savage Landor '1775…1864'





TO FANNY



Never mind how the pedagogue proses;

You want not antiquity's stamp;

The lip; that such fragrance discloses;

Oh! never should smell of the lamp。



Old Chloe; whose withering kisses

Have long set the Loves at defiance;

Now; done with the science of blisses;

May fly to the blisses of science!



Young Sappho; for want of employments;

Alone o'er her Ovid may melt;

Condemned but to read of enjoyments;

Which wiser Corinna had felt。



But for you to be buried in books …

Oh; Fanny! they're pitiful sages;

Who could not in one of your looks

Read more than in millions of pages!



Astronomy finds in your eyes

Better light than she studies above;

And Music must borrow your sighs

As the melody fittest for Love。



In Ethics … 'tis you that can check;

In a minute; their doubts and their quarrels;

Oh! show but that mole on your neck;

And 'twill soon put an end to their morals。



Your Arithmetic only can trip

When to kiss and to count you endeavor;

But eloquence glows on your lip

When you swear that you'll love me for ever。



Thus you see what a brilliant alliance

Of arts is assembled in you; …

A course of more exquisite science

Man never need wish to pursue。



And; oh! … if a Fellow like me

May confer a diploma of hearts;

With my lip thus I seal your degree;

My divine little Mistress of Arts!



Thomas Moore '1779…1852'





〃I'D BE A BUTTERFLY〃



I'd be a Butterfly born in a bower;

Where roses and lilies and violets meet;

Roving for ever from flower to flower;

And kissing all buds that are pretty and sweet!

I'd never languish for wealth; or for power;

I'd never sigh to see slaves at my feet:

I'd be a Butterfly born in a bower;

Kissing all buds that are pretty and sweet。



O could I pilfer the wand of a fairy;

I'd have a pair of those beautiful wings;

Their summer days' ramble is sportive and airy;

They sleep in a rose when the nightingale sings。

Those who have wealth must be watchful and wary;

Power; alas! naught but misery brings!

I'd be a Butterfly; sportive and airy;

Rocked in a rose when the nightingale sings!



What; though you tell me each gay little rover

Shrinks from the breath of the first autumn day:

Surely 'tis better when summer is over

To die when all fair things are fading away。

Some in life's winter may toil to discover

Means of procuring a weary delay …

I'd be a butterfly; living; a rover;

Dying when fair things are fading away!



Thomas Haynes Bayly '1797…1839'





〃I'M NOT A SINGLE MAN〃

Lines Written In A Young Lady's Album



A pretty task; Miss S…; to ask

A Benedictine pen;

That cannot quite at freedom write

Like those of other men。


No lover's plaint my Muse must paint

To fill this page's span;

But be correct and recollect

I'm not a single man。 



Pray only think; for pen and ink

How hard to get along;

That may not turn on words that burn;

Or Love; the life of song!

Nine Muses; if I chooses; I

May woo all in a clan;

But one Miss S… I daren't address …

I'm not a single man。



Scribblers unwed; with little head;

May eke it out with heart

And in their lays it often plays

A rare first…fiddle part。

They make a kiss to rhyme with bliss;

But if I so began;

I have my fears about my ears …

I'm not a single man。



Upon your cheek I may not speak;

Nor on your lip be warm;

I must be wise about your eyes;

And formal with your form;

Of all that sort of thing; in short; 

On T。 H。 Bayly's plan;

I must not twine a single line …

I'm not a single man。



A watchman's part compels my heart

To keep you off its beat;

And I might dare as soon to swear

At you; as at your feet。

I can't expire in passion's fire

As other poets can …

My life (she's by) won't let me die …

I'm not a single man。



Shut out from love; denied a dove;

Forbidden bow and dart;

Without a groan to call my own;

With neither hand nor heart;

To Hymen vowed; and not allowed

To flirt e'en with your fan;

Here end; as just a friend; I must …

I'm not a single man。



Thomas Hood '1799…1845'





TO …



We met but in one giddy dance;

Good…night joined hands with greeting;

And twenty thousand things may chance

Before our second meeting;

For oh! I have been often told

That all the world grows older;

And hearts and hopes to…day so cold;

To…morrow must be colder。



If I have never touched the string

Beneath your chamber; dear one;

And never said one civil thing

When you were by to hear one; …

If I have made no rhymes about

Those looks which conquer Stoics;

And heard those angel tones; without

One fit of fair heroics; …



Yet do not; though the world's cold school

Some bitter truths has taught me;

Oh; do not deem me quite the fool

Which wiser friends have thought me!

There is one charm I still could feel;

If no one laughed at feeling;

One dream my lute could still reveal; …

If it were worth revealing。



But Folly little cares what name

Of friend or foe she handles; 

When merriment directs the game;

And midnight dims the candles;

I know that Folly's breath is weak

And would not stir a feather;

But yet I would not have her speak

Your name and mine together。



Oh no! this life is dark and bright;

Half rapture and half sorrow;

My heart is very full to…night;

My cup shall be to…morrow!

But they shall never know from me;

On any one condition;

Whose health made bright my Burgundy;

Whose beauty was my vision!



Winthrop Mackworth Praed '1802…1839'





THE VICAR



Some years ago; ere Time and Taste

Had turned our parish topsy…turvy;

When Darnel Park was Darnel Waste;

And roads as little known as scurvy;

The man who lost his way between

St。 Mary's Hill and Sandy Thicket;

Was always shown across the Green;

And guided to the Parson's wicket。



Back flew the bolt of lissom lath;

Fair Margaret; in her tidy kirtle;

Led the lorn traveller up the path

Through clean…clipt rows of box and myrtle;

And Don and Sancho; Tramp and Tray;

Upon the parlor steps collected;

Wagged all their tails; and seemed to say;

〃Our master knows you; you're expected!〃



Up rose the Reverend Doctor Brown;

Up rose the Doctor's 〃wi

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