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To mould her mind; to gaze in her young

Confiding face。



For ever may roses divinely blow;

And wine…dark pansies charm

By that prim box path where I felt the glow

Of her dimpled; trusting arm;

And the sweep of her silk as she turned and smiled

A smile as pure as her pearls;

The breeze was in love with the darling Child;

And coaxed her curls。



She showed me her ferns and woodbine sprays;

Foxglove and jasmine stars;

A mist of blue in the beds; a blaze

Of red in the celadon jars:

And velvety bees in convolvulus bells;

And roses of bountiful Spring。

But I said … 〃Though roses and bees have spells;

They have thorn; and sting。〃



She showed me ripe peaches behind a net

As fine as her veil; and fat

Goldfish a…gape; who lazily met

For her crumbs … I grudged them that!

A squirrel; some rabbits with long lop ears;

And guinea…pigs; tortoise…shell … wee;

And I told her that eloquent truth inheres

In all we see。



I lifted her doe by its lops; quoth I;

〃Even here deep meaning lies; …

Why have squirrels these ample tails; and why

Have rabbits these prominent eyes?〃

She smiled and said; as she twirled her veil;

〃For some nice little cause; no doubt …

If you lift a guinea…pig up by the tail

His eyes drop out!〃



Frederick Locker Lampson '1821…1895'





MRS。 SMITH



Heigh…ho! they're wed。 The cards are dealt;

Our frolic games are o'er;

I've laughed; and fooled; and loved。 I've felt …

As I shall feel no more!

Yon little thatch is where she lives;

Yon spire is where she met me; …

I think that if she quite forgives;

She cannot quite forget me。



Last year I trod these fields with Di; …

Fields fresh with clover and with rye;

They now seem arid:

Then Di was fair and single; how

Unfair it seems on me; for now

Di's fair; … and married!



A blissful swain; … I scorned the song

Which tells us though young Love is strong;

The Fates are stronger:

Then breezes blew a boon to men;

Then buttercups were bright; and then

The grass was longer。



That day I saw; and much esteemed;

Di's ankles; that the clover seemed

Inclined to smother:

It twitched; and soon untied (for fun)

The ribbons of her shoes; first one;

And then the other。



I'm told that virgins augur some

Misfortune if their shoe…strings come

To grief on Friday:

And so did Di; … and then her pride

Decreed that shoe…strings so untied;

Are 〃so untidy!〃



Of course I knelt; with fingers deft

I tied the right; and tied the left:

Says Di; 〃This stubble

Is very stupid! … as I live

I'm quite ashamed! … I'm shocked to give

You so much trouble!〃



For answer I was fain to sink

To what we all would say and think

Were Beauty present:

〃Don't mention such a simple act …

A trouble? not the least!  In fact

It's rather pleasant!〃



I trust that Love will never tease

Poor little Di; or prove that he's

A graceless rover。

She's happy now as Mrs。 Smith …

But less polite when walking with

Her chosen lover!



Heigh…ho!  Although no moral clings

To Di's blue eyes; and sandal strings;

We had our quarrels。

I think that Smith is thought an ass; …

I know that when they walk in grass

She wears balmorals。



Frederick Locker…Lampson '1821…1895'





THE SKELETON IN THE CUPBOARD



The characters of great and small

Come ready made; we can't bespeak one;

Their sides are many; too; and all

(Except ourselves) have got a weak one。

Some sanguine people love for life;

Some love their hobby till it flings them。

How many love a pretty wife

For love of the eclat she brings them! 。 。 。



A little to relieve my mind

I've thrown off this disjointed chatter;

But more because I'm disinclined

To enter on a painful matter:

Once I was bashful; I'll allow

I've blushed for words untimely spoken;

I still am rather shy; and now 。 。 。

And now the ice is fairly broken。



We all have secrets: you have one

Which may n't be quite your charming spouse's;

We all lock up a Skeleton

In some grim chamber of our houses;

Familiars who exhaust their days

And nights in probing where our smart is;

And who; for all their spiteful ways;

Are 〃silent; unassuming Parties。〃



We hug this Phantom we detest;

Rarely we let it cross our portals:

It is a most exacting guest;

And we are much afflicted mortals。

Your neighbor Gay; that jovial wight;

As Dives rich; and brave as Hector;

Poor Gay steals twenty times a night;

On shaking knees; to see his Specter。



Old Dives fears a pauper fate;

So hoarding is his ruling passion: …

Some gloomy souls anticipate

A waistcoat; straiter than the fashion!

She childless pines; that lonely wife;

And secret tears are bitter shedding;

Hector may tremble all his life;

And die; … but not of that he's dreading。 。 。 。



Ah me; the World!  How fast it spins!

The beldams dance; the caldron bubbles;

They shriek; they stir it for our sins;

And we must drain it for our troubles。

We toil; we groan; the cry for love

Mounts up from this poor seething city;

And yet I know we have above

A Father; infinite in pity。



When Beauty smiles; when Sorrow weeps;

Where sunbeams play; where shadows darken;

One inmate of our dwelling keeps

Its ghastly carnival; but hearken!

How dry the rattle of the bones!

That sound was not to make you start meant:

Stand by!  Your humble servant owns

The Tenant of this Dark Apartment。



Frederick Locker…Lampson '1821…1895'





A TERRIBLE INFANT



I recollect a nurse called Ann;

Who carried me about the grass;

And one fine day a fine young man

Came up; and kissed the pretty lass:

She did not make the least objection!

Thinks I; 〃Aha!

When I can talk I'll tell Mamma〃

… And that's my earliest recollection。



Frederick Locker…Lampson '1821…1895'





COMPANIONS

A Tale Of A Grandfather



I know not of what we pondered

Or made pretty pretence to talk;

As; her hand within mine; we wandered。

Toward the pool by the lime…tree walk;

While the dew fell in showers from the passion flowers

And the blush…rose bent on her stalk。



I cannot recall her figure: 

Was it regal as Juno's own?

Or only a trifle bigger

Than the elves who surround the throne

Of the Fairy Queen; and are seen; I ween;

By mortals in dreams alone?



What her eyes were like I know not:

Perhaps they were blurred with tears;

And perhaps in yon skies there glow not

(On the contrary) clearer spheres。

No! as to her eyes I am just as wise

As you or the cat; my dears。



Her teeth; I presume; were 〃pearly〃:

But which was she; brunette or blonde?

Her hair; was it quaintly curly;

Or as straight as a beadle's wand?

That I failed to remark: it was rather dark

And shadowy round the pond。



Then the hand that reposed so snugly

In mine; … was it plump or spare?

Was the countenance fair or ugly?

Nay; children; you have me there!

My eyes were p'haps blurred; and besides I'd heard

That it's horribly rude to stare。



And I; … was I brusque and surly?

Or oppressively bland and fond?

Was I partial to rising early?

Or why did we twain abscond;

When nobody knew; from the public view

To prowl by a misty pond?



What passed; what was felt or spoken; …

Whether anything passed at all; …

And whether the heart was broken

That beat under that sheltering shawl; …

(If shawl she had on; which I doubt); … has gone;

Yes; gone from me past recall。



Was I haply the lady's suitor?

Or her uncle?  I can't make out;

Ask your governess; dears; or tutor。

For myself; I'm in hopeless doubt

As to why we were there; who on earth we were;

And what this is all about。



Charles Stuart Calverley '1831…1884'





DOROTHY Q

A Family Portrait



Grandmother's mother: her age; I guess;

Thirteen summers; or something less:

Girlish bust; but womanly air;

Smooth; square forehead with uprolled hair;

Lips that lover has never kissed;

Taper fingers and slender wrist;

Hanging sleeves of stiff brocade;

So they painted the little maid。



On her hand a parrot green

Sits unmoving and broods serene。

Hold up the canvas full in view; …

Look! there's a rent the light shines through;

Dark with a century's fringe of dust; …

That was a Red…Coat's rapier…thrust!

Such is the tale the lady old;

Dorothy's daughter's daughter; told。



Who the painter was none may tell; …

One whose best was not over well;

Hard and dry; it must be confessed;

Flat as a rose that has long been pressed;

Yet in her cheek the hues are bright;

Dainty colors of red and white;

And in her slender shape are seen

Hint and promise of stately mien。



Look not on her with eyes of scorn; …

Dorothy Q。 was a lady born!

Ay! since the galloping Normans came;

England's annals have known her name;

And still to the three…hilled rebel town

Dear is that ancient name's renown;

For many a civic wreath they won;

The youthful sire and the gray…haired son。



O Damsel Dorothy! Dorothy Q。!

Strange is the gift that I owe to you;

Such a gift as never a king

Save to daughter or son might bring; …

All my tenure of heart and hand;

All my title to house and land;

Mother and sister and child and wife

And joy and sorrow and death and life!



What if a hundred years ago

Those close…shut lips had answered No;

When forth the tremulous question came

That cost the maiden her Norman name;

And under the folds that look so still

The bodice swelled with the bosom's thrill?

Should I be I; or would it be

One tenth another; to nine tenths me?



Soft is the breath of a maiden's YES:

Not the light gossamer stirs with less;

But never a cable that holds so fast

Through all the battles of wave and blast;

And never an echo of speech or song

That lives in the babbling air so long!

There were tones in the voice that whispered then

You may hear to…day in a hund

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