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Class_B-P)?>F?^S 
Book,,  .  E  3  5  5 1- 

COFXRIGHT  DEPOSIT. 


STARDUST 

AND 

DANDELIONS 


Stardust 

AND 

Dandelions 


BY 

FREDERIC  ZEIGEN 

Author  of  "Breezes  from  the  Pines,"  "Therold 
Archer  Knowlton,"  etc.,  etc. 


NEW  YORK 
THOMAS  Y.  CROWELL  COMPANY 

PUBLISHERS 


^54^^ 


COPTEIGHT,    1922, 

Bt  THOMAS  Y.   CROWELL  COMPANY 


ICI.A681961 


PEIXTED    IN    THE    TTNITED    STATES    OT    AMEEICA 


SEP  27  1922 . 


Whose  faith  in  my  ability  to  do  this 
work  has  been  my  greatest  inspiration, 
is  this    volume   affectionately    dedicated. 


CONTENTS 

PAGB 

Introduction  by  James  Oliver  Curwood xi 

Stardust  and  Dandelions xiii 

The  Friend— To  J.  O.  C xiy 

BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES 

The  Sale  of  Old  Dobbin 3 

Growing  Old 7 

The    Reader 8 

To  THE  Trailing  Arbutus 9 

A  November  Day ii 

The   Singing   School 12 

The  Cobbler 16 

The   Holland   Mother 19 

By  Gar,  Dat  Tony  Man 20 

The  Broken  Violet 22 

Our  Clock-Golf  Days 23 

In   Chains 24 

Politics        26 

Prohibition 27 

Despair        30 

The  Whisperers       33 

Reverie         34 

Spring 36 

October        37 

The  Face  in  the  Car  Window 38 

Hope        39 

The  Weaver 42 

Ship  Ahoy! 50 

Ode  to  the   Saginaw 55 

CHILDREN'S  POEMS 

Good    Night 61 

When  I  Come  Home  at  Night 64 

How   Baby   Phyllis   Came 66 

"FsE  Dest  a  Little  Dirl,  Daddy" 67 

Sir  Blue  Bottle  Fly 69 

Ouwoocheegaroo         70 

My  Little  Baby  Bruwer 72 

The  Oogilithump •     •  73 

vii 


viii  CONTENTS 

PAGB 

The  Bells  of  Santa 76 

"I   Expect" 'j'j 

Johnny   Sees  the  Courtin' 80 

Robin    Red   Breast 83 

Leetle  Peter  Oopdyke 85 

TooDLUMS   Is   Gone 86 

Evening   Prayer 88 

A  Bushel  of  Snow 89 

Goin'   to  Meet  Gran'ma 99 

PATRIOTIC  POEMS 

The  God  of  War 105 

My   Native  Land 107 

No   Cov^ards   Here 108 

Seeking  the  Bean r 109 

Taps        in 

The  Deserter 113 

Bullets,  Bullets,  Bullets  I 115 

PEP  POEMS 

Just  Keep  A-Goin* 123 

Smilin'  Through 124 

Success        126 

The  Peptomaniac 127 

What,  Not  Who 129 

Soak  Him! 131 

Fine  Day 132 

Little  Dogs  Yap  at  the  Big  Dog's  Heels   .     .     .     .133 

The  Man   with  the  Dish-Rag  Heart 135 

Buck  Up! 136 

Hit  Hard  if  You  Hit  at  All 137 

I'll  not  Be  a  Slacker 139 

The  Hearty  Hand-Shake 141 

Looking  for  Trouble ...     .     .143 

IN  LIGHTER  VEIN 

My  Daily  Task 147 

A  "Furrin"'  Trip i49 

When  Daisy  Cow  Went  Dry 153 

The  Simple  Life 154 

The  Strenuous  Life 155 

Weeds 156 

Secrets 158 

Elaine,  I  Would  Like  to  Bite  Thee 160 

A  Spring  Toast 163 

Death 170 

Seabreeze  Beach  in  the  Moonlight  .    .     .     .     .     .172 


CONTENTS  ix 

PAOB 

LYRICS  OF  LOVE 

Lines  to  Love ....,,.  179 

To    MY   Wonder-Girl ,.:    .     .  180 

Gone  So  Soon 182 

A  Plea  . 183 

To  the  Girl  with  the  Olive-Tinted  Eyes  ....  184 

Alack  a  Day 185 

Georgia 186 

But   One 188 

To  Thee 189 

It  Might  Have  Been 190 

Heartache        192 

When   I   Meet  Her  Again 194 

"Thoughts,  Idle  Thoughts'* 195 

The  Knight's  Reply 197 

Wipe  Away  Your  Tears,  Dear 199 

Longing , 200 

MEDITATIVJE  POEMS 

My  Silent  Friends  of  the  Library   ......  203 

The  Chimes 205 

Stedman ,.     .  207 

To  Edgar  Allan   Poe 208 

To-day  Is  the  To-morrow  of  Yesterday 209 

The  Storm 231 

Misunderstood , 234 

After  All 236 

The  Birth 238 

In  Excelsis 240 

The  Suicide 242 

To  Know  Thy  God 243 

The    Criminal 244 

The  Tragedy  of  Life 247 

Soliloquy 250 

The  Past 252 

The  Mystery  of  the  Sphinx ,  253 

The   Cosmic   Urge 255 

The   Doom 261 

Graduation  Ode ;. 274 

L'Envoi       .,......,.,.     .,    ,.,    .,     .     .     .     .281 


INTRODUCTION 

In  giving  this  little  book  of  verse  to  the  public,  I  feel 
that  Frederic  Zeigen,  its  author,  is  in  a  way  doing  more 
than  many  men  and  women  who  have  achieved  their  niche 
in  that  hall  of  fame  to  which  all  poets  aspire.  For,  born 
of  literary  and  musical  stock,  and  being,  above  all  else,  a 
dreamer,  and  idealist  and  a  visionary,  the  force  of  circum- 
stances, instead  of  directing  him  into  the  creative  channels 
for  which  he  was  so  eminently  fitted,  made  of  him  a  busi- 
ness man — and  a  good  business  man  at  that,  a  construc- 
tionist of  the  highest  type  in  physical  things,  a  man  of 
finance,  and  of  cold,  deliberate  business  brains. 

Yet  this  force  of  circumstance  could  not,  and  has  not 
destroyed  the  other  side  of  him,  so  that  to  me — regarding 
him  as  a  friend — ^he  is  an  amazing  combination  of  the 
poetic  and  the  practical ;  the  practical  side  of  him  wrought 
by  necessity,  the  poetic  by  birth  and  temperament.  For 
this  reason,  I  say,  he  has  achieved  what  some  poets  of 
great  reputation  have  not,  for  he  has  shown  that  the  man 
buried  deep  in  the  every-day  necessities  of  a  hard  practical 
life  need  not  lose  the  finer  things  born  in  him,  but  may, 
indeed,  rise  to  high  inspiration  because  of  this  pitiless 
strife  among  men  in  the  building  of  physical  things. 
Because  I  have  found  many  things  in  his  writings  that 
are  worth  while,  I  feel  somewhat  responsible  for  the  ap- 
pearance of  this  book,  and  believe  that  it  presents  to  the 

reader  more  of  the  man  than  I,  even  though  a  friend,  can 

xi 


xii  INTRODUCTION 

describe.  And  not  only  as  a  friend,  but  as  a  critic,  I 
have  very  great  faith  in  what  Hes  between  the  two  covers 
of  this  book. 

James  Oliver  Curwood. 
Owosso,  December  21,  1921. 


STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Stardust  and  dandelions — 

A  hope  of  nobler  things, 
A  hint  of  flowers  in  the  dale, 

A  thought  caught  on  fleet  wings; 
An  earnest  of  the  breath  of  Spring, 

A  fantasy  of  mirth, 
A  flight  above  the  vaulted  skies. 

An  arrow  dropped  to  earth. 

A  star  exploded  in  vast  space 

Its  diamond  dust  scattered  round, 
Each  speck  has  made  another  soul, 

Or  formed  a  flower  on  the  ground; 
Some  dust-mites  shaped  the  best  in  life, 

While  some  proved  not  so  fine, 
Some  shaped  the  hearts,  the  souls  of  babeSs 

And  some  the  lowly  dandelion. 


Xlll 


THE  FRIEND 

TO  J.  O.  C. 

Mighty  few  men  you  can  call  a  good  friend, 
Who  will  stick  thru  thick  and  thin; 
Mighty  few  fellows  can  be  a  true  pal, 
Right  there  when  the  troubles  begin ; 
Mighty  few  hands  that  will  hold  you  up 
When  the  footsteps  have  started  to  lag; 
And  less  than  a  twain  will  ask  you  to  sup 
His  last  crust  or  share  his  last  rag. 

Yes,  mighty  few  friends  in  this  envious  world. 

Who  will  back  you  when  all  others  fail, 

Who  will  give  you  a  boost,  and  grasp  your  weak  hand 

When  your  spirit  begins  to  quail. 

And  mighty  few  friends — ^yes,  almighty  few — 

Will  believe  you  when  slanders  abound, 

When  the  Hounds  of  Malice  have  bayed  at  your  heels 

And  almost  have  run  you  to  ground. 

But  sometimes  you  find,  just  once  in  an  age, 

That  a  friend — a  good  friend  and  true — 

Will  spring  to  your  side  and  fight  for  your  hide. 

Because  he's  a  friend  to  just  you; 

And  tho  modest  and  quiet,  nor  vaunting  his  love, 

In  the  grasp  of  his  hand  we  can  see 

What  his  brave  even  eye  can  never  deny, — 

That  faith  for  just  you,  or  for  me. 

xiv 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES 


BALLADS   AND    SKETCHES 


THE  SALE  OF  OLD  DOBBIN 

"How  much  am  I  bid  for  Old  Dobbin?" 
The  raucous  voice  droned  the  sound 
As  a  smile  lumed  the  face  of  the  knockers, 
And  a  gathering  grin  went  round. 
"How  much  is  he  bid  for  Old  Dobbin? 
Just  look  at  his  skinny  old  side ! 
Just  glance  at  the  film-crusted  eyelids, 
And  the  hair  as  it  hangs  from  his  hide !" 

"How  much  am  I  bid  for  Old  Dobbin?" 
Persisted  the  auctioneer  bold, 
"He's  the  smartest  old  boss  in  eight  counties, 
And  runs  like  a  streak,  IVe  been  told. 
How  much  am  I  bid  for  Old  Dobbin? 
Why,  men,  don't  you  know  what  is  up? 
Come !     Squint  at  his  teeth  and  his  fore  hoof, 
(Here,  boy,  just  a  swig  from  that  cup.) 

"How  much  am  I  bid  for  Old  Dobbin? 
Run  it  high  if  a  bid  you  can  make. 
That's  the  nag  which  won  our  big  Derby, 
And  captured  Death's  handicap  stake. 
Bid  up,  bid  up  on  Old  Dobbin ! 
Hi  there !  you  long-whiskered  lout ! 
Start  the  price  on  this  last  of  the  reindeer, 
Once  the  boast  of  every  old  tout. 


STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

"Ten,  do  I  hear  on  Old  Dobbin? 
Why,  why,  men,  that's  almost  a  shame ! 
Best  stock  of  sire  Vixen  of  Norway; 
Good  blood !     And  Eagle  his  dame. 
Lifd!  folks,  just  glance  at  old  Grandpa, — 
He's  sobbing  there  almost  alone; 
He's  lost  his  every  last  penny 
And  even  Old  Dobbin  is  goin'! 

"Oh,  well  I  remember  the  story 

How  Dobbin,  that  shambling  nag  there, 

Made  a  wonderful  race  one  winter 

And  busted  the  record  for  fair. 

'Twas  the  year  of  the  great  black  blizzard; 

Whole  sections  lay  deep  'neath  the  pall, 

And  everywhere  piled  high  like  mountains 

The  snow-pack  had  drift  like  a  wall; 

"And  fever  and  death  crushed  our  valley, 

With  the  Doctor  miles  away; 

All  the  babes  in  the  village  were  dying. 

And  no  one  to  save  them  that  day. 

Not  one  of  you  dared  brave  that  tempest, 

Till  Grandpa  there  put  on  his  hat 

And  hitched  to  his  sled  this  poor  Dobbin, — 

Why  neighbors, — have  you  forgot  that? 

"And  every  one  said  'couldn't  do  it,* 
And  mothers  gave  up  in  despair. 
But  mountains  of  ice  had  no  terrors 
For  Grandpa  and  Old  Dobbin  there. 
Over  the  snow  they  went  plunging, 
Deep  into  the  swirling  storm's  gloom, 
And  it  seemed  that  now  came  the  death  blow, 
For  Old  Dobbin  must  sure  meet  his  doom. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  [5; 

**Oh,  the  struggle,  the  fight  they  made  of  it! 
Oh,  despair  hung  oft  on  his  brow, 
But  the  babies  they  needed  the  Doctor, — 
Men,  don't  you  remember  it  now? 
Up  to  their  neck  then  they  waded ! 
Inch  by  inch  fought  through  the  snow! 
And  all  that  they  thought  of  was  Rescue, 
For  the  Doctor  to  cheer  our  sad  woe. 

"And  he  sobbed  at  the  still  little  bodies 

Of  our  babies  gasping  their  last, 

And  his  eyes  brimmed  with  tears  of  great  sorrow, 

At  the  woe  of  the  mothers  he  passed. 

So  he  fought  through  the  storm  with  grim  fervor 

To  get  to  that  Doctor  some  way. 

Why!  'twas  all  his  life  was  worth,  men 

To  be  out  through  that  long  cold  day. 

"The  cold  was  way  below  zero. 
You  could  hardly  see  'cross  the  road, 
And  even  to  look  out  the  window 
Would  freeze  your  over-chilled  blood. 
But  Old  Dobbin  and  Grandpa  persisted! 
They  struggled,  they  clashed  'gainst  Grim  Death 
Till  after  nine  hours  of  hard  battle 
They  reached  the  Doctor's  warm  hearth. 

"So,  how  much  am  I  bid  for  Old  Dobbin? 

Twenty-five,  did  I  hear  from  that  gent? 

Just  wait  till  I  tell  all  my  story 

Of  Old  Dobbin  and  Grandpa  Kent. 

Doc  wouldn't  come  in  the  blizzard. 

But  Grandpa  with  fingers  of  ice 

Just  grabbed  him  and  bound  him  together 

And  held  him  in  like  a  steel  vise. 


STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

"Then  bundled  him  into  the  lap-robe, 
And  off  they  flew  on  the  home  trail — 
On,  on  through  the  fiends  of  the  blizzard, 
Far  on,  through  the  death-dealing  gale. 
They  fought  for  the  trail  in  the  darkness, 
And  filled  with  the  frenzy  of  strife 
Fighting  their  way  through  the  snowdrifts, 
They  battled  for  your  babies'  Hfe! 

"As  the  first  break  of  dawn  tinged  the  sky-line, 

*Bout  frozen  and  near  in  despair, 

They  came  to  your  house,  old  John  Roger, 

And  saved  your  little  one  there. 

And  then  to  yours,  grizzly  Tom  Bowin, 

They  brought  your  baby  to  live, — 

Come,  boys,  I  think  it  about  time  that 

Some  fellows  had  learned  how  to  give. 

"All  through  the  village  went  Grandpa 
With  the  Doctor  who  alone  could  save, 
And  only  one  or  two  of  the  toddlers 
Were  finally  laid  deep  in  their  grave. 
Tom  Smith,  and  you  Jacob  Saunders, 
And  you  Tilly  Squires,  and  the  Frys, — 
Oh,  yes,  just  cry  there  a  little, — 
Ah, — tears  in  every  one's  eyes? 

"For  Grandpa  was  so  frozen  that  blizzard 
That  he  could  never  work  from  that  day; 
And  there  he  sits  in  his  sorrow. 
While  YOU  take  his  old  home  away! 
How  much  am  I  bid  there,  you  fellows. 
One  Hundred?  is  that  what  I  hear? 
One  Thousand?    Let's  take  a  collection, — 
God  bless  you!     Now  every  one  cheer!" 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  7 


GROWING  OLD 

We  may  be  growing  old,  Dear, 
The  sands  are  sinking  fast; 
But  still  our  love  we  hold,  Dear, 
Our  faith  unto  the  last. 

Throughout  the  struggling  years.  Dear, 
We  faced  the  angry  Fates, 
We  fought  the  wolf  who  howled  in  vain 
And  rattled  at  our  gates. 

And  through  it  all  we  held  our  love. 
We  cherished  well  our  oath; 
For  all  our  joy  came  from  above. 
And  God  has  blessed  us  both. 

Yes,  we  may  be  growing  old,  Dear, 
But  God  has  loved  us  well, 
Our  children  live  a  life  of  trust. 
And  in  "His  Name"  we  dwell 


3         STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  READER 

In  she  came  from  the  market, 
Eyes    full-Hquid,   glowing   proud, 
For  his  dinner  she  had  purchased 
From   the   huckster,   blatting   loud, — 
New-dressed  pullet,  onions,   fish, 
Lettuce,  celery,  spuds,  and  meal, 
Figs,  and  prunes, — a  royal  dish. 
And  good  things  for  the  stomach's  weal. 

But  now  she  pauses  at  the  door, 
And  hesitates  before  the  shelf. 
Her  basket  drops  upon  the  floor, 
And  she  forgets  her  housewife  self ; 
For  there  a  book  with  charmed  page 
Smiles  up  and  beckons  for  a  peek, — 
Ah,  just  one  moment,  just  an  age. 
Might  as  well  just  take  a  week; 
Forgotten  is  her  morning  hour, 
Unthought  her  liege  lord's  soon  return. 
For  her.  Knighthood  was  still  in  flower. 
Nor  recks  she  of  his  anger  stern. 
For  deep  she  reads  and  on  and  on 
Until  the  time  for  work  is  gone. 

Ah,  what  doth  she  read? 

Aristotle?  Curwood?  Hume?  McGrath? 

Some  love-tale  of  the  distant  past? 

Some  honeyed  poem  of  gay  today? 

I  hope  it  is  my  book, — I   pray, — 
I  wonder,  ah,  what  doth  she  read? 


I 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES 


TO  THE  TRAILING  ARBUTUS 

Hidden  from  view,  covered  with  dew, 

Shy  as  the  breeze  on  a  cool  summer  morn; 
Under  the  soft  cHnging  sod  are  you  born, 

Close  to  the  clasp  of  fond  mother  earth; 
Born  from  the  gloom  into  fragrant  mirth, 

Bashful  and  shy  with  down-looking  eye. 
Hidden  from  gaze  to  conceal  your  pure  worth, 

You  trail,  sweet  arbutus,  a  redolent  birth 
From  the  bed  of  the  fairies  to  the  babe  of  the  sky. 

Pink  be  your  buds,  shrouded  with  hoods 

That  screen  you  from  sight  of  the  merry-elf  child ; 
But  the  tenderest  step  of  the  undefiled 

Will  crush  you  and  turn  you  to  yellow  sear. 
And  make  the  poor  fairy  to  shed  its  sad  tear ; 

Yet  th'  aroma  of  death  gives  a  far  sweeter  breath, 
And  fills  with  its  soul  the  perfumed  still  air 

That  steals  to  the  moon  and  everywhere, 
Like  the  incense  that  rises  from  the  altar  of  Lethe. 

Far  in  yon  vale  you  breathe  your  low  tale 

To  the  spring  that  soft  murmurs  and  trickles  about ; 
While  down  yon  green  mound  you  trellis  without 

One  finger  of  mortal  to  guide  your  blind  way, 
Yet  gently  you  creep  from  Life's  glaring  day 

In  the  soft  swaying  grasses,  beneath  the  full  masses 
Of  wintergreen  berries  and  sweet-smelling  vines. 

Of  clustering  violets  and  far  purpled  pines, 
And  love,  then,  to  dream  in  the  green  silken  mosses. 


lo        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Trailing  your  way  from  the  bright  fervid  day, 

Too  gentle  to  meet  the  bold  stare  of  fierce  noon, 
Or  the  passion  of  Apollo,  or  the  kiss  of  pale  Moon; 

If  you  have  a  path  'neath  the  damp  of  the  gloom. 
And  can  give  forth  your  fragrance  in  pink-blossomed 
bloom. 

Then  strive  my  Soul,  too ;  live  purer  and  true. 
That  my  low-bowered  path  with  laughter  and  song 

Will  make  the  weak  strong,  tho  far  from  the  throng ; 
And  do  in  my  gloom  what  'tis  noblest  to  do. 


i 


« 


J 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  ii 


A  NOVEMBER  DAY 

MORNING 

The  morn  is  cold  and  dank  and  dreary, 
And  a  fog  hangs  over  the  town; 
And  the  wind,  it  mourns  and  moans  so  eerie 
That  the  sky  has  put  on  a  frown 
And  the  ice-bound  Hmbs  on  the  naked  trees 
FHng  out  their  arms,  and  sob,  and  freeze; 
And  the  sleet  keeps  driving  down. 

NOO'N 

The  noon  is  wet  and  cold  and  dreary, 
And  the  clouds  are  hovering  low, 
Like  the  mists  of  death  that  were  never  weary 
From  the  pits  of  Infernus  to  flow: 
And  the  dull  grey  gloom  of  the  distant  hill 
Seems  to  shudder  and  shake  with  an  ague  chill — 
And  the  world  is  full  of  woe. 

NIGHT 

The  night  is  wet  and  chill  and  dreary, 
And  the  sky  is  dark  as  the  tomb; 
And  even  the  swallows  have  "fled  from  their  eyry, 
While  the  flowers  have  met  their  sad  doom ; 
But  the  scurrying  clouds  in  yon  vaulted  sky 
Reflect  the  lights  that  guide  us  on  high, 
And  a  star  pierces  the  gloom. 

PRAYER 

O,  Star!  O  light  of  another  world, 

Teach  us  thy  sacred  story, 

Teach  us  to  hope  e*en  through  the  gloom, 

Lift  us  above  our  lesser  doom, — 

Ah!    Let  us  reflect  thy  glory! 


12        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  SINGING  SCHOOL 

Wednesday  night,  and  down  the  winding,  ice-bound  road, 
From  every  farm  and  cottage  by  the  way. 

Many  laughing  maids  in  cutters,  load  on  load, 
Come  jingling  past,  and   shout   full  merrily. 

And  bashful,  awkward  swains   in  new-pressed   Sunday 
best. 

Guide  the  prancing  teams,  and  answer  to  the  jest. 

Cold  the  air,  and  clear  as  crystal.     Far  o'er  head. 
Like  chilly  diamonds  strewn  with  lavish  hand 

On  a  ground  of  priceless  velvet,  black,  there  sped 
The  sparkling  stars — fast  driven  by  the  wand 

Of  night.     While  pale  Aurora,  flashing  grandly  high. 

Spreads  a  fan  of  glory  'cross  the  northern  sky. 

Ruddy  cheeks  glow  with  the  fire  of  pulsing  life. 

Thrice-kissed  by  the  frosty  winter  air; 
Sparkling  eyes  are  dancing  fast,  with  mischief  rife. 

And  vie  the  deep-set  stars  their  task  to  share : 
While  through  the  dark  comes  merry  sound  of  bells — 
Bounded  by  exuberant  girlish  chorus  swells. 

Like  a  phantom  grim  the  schoolhouse  through  the  night 
Looms  hazily,  with  white  the  shivering  eaves 

Where  the  silver  moonbeams  play  with  icy  light. 
And  freeze  upon  the  panes  in  feathery  leaves. 

But  soon  within  a  ruddy  glow  fills  up  the  room. 

Banishing  the  winter  chill  and  arctic  gloom. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  13, 

Fast  they  come,  with  merry  shout  and  stamp  of  foot, 
With  cheery  voice  and  red,  half-frozen  faces; 

Pounding  knuckles,  pinching  nose,  and  kicking  boot 
To  force  their  chilled  blood  into  its  tingling  places; 

And  stand  around  the  crackling  pile  of  burning  pines 

In  the  caverned  grate,  to  heat  their  icy  spines. 

Cheery  voices  hail  each  new-appearing  swain. 
And  boisterous  laughter  sounds  upon  the  air 

As  some  merry  jest  or  joke  is  told  again 
About  some  bashful  beau  or  luckless  pair ; 

Recounting  how  the  boom  has  broken  in  the  flood. 

Smashing  bridge  and  raging  wild  through  gloom-lit  wood. 


How  the  blood-mouthed  wolf  was  pursued  to  his  lair. 
Or  how  the  red-man  fierce  betrayed  his  tribe. 

Listening,  bold-eyed  maidens  puff  their  krinkled  hair 
And  give  a  tart  reply  to  every  sly-sent  gibe; 

While  shrill  above  this  babble,  like  the  clash  of  gongs. 

Rises  the  discord  of  the  new-learnt  backwoods  songs. 


Heavy  bassos  gruffly  mumble  o'er  the  air. 
And  tripling  trebles  catch  the  rude  refrain. 

Shrilly  mingling  with  the  fire's  sullen  roar, 
Until  the  backwoods  tales  are  told  again: 

When  soon  a  chuckling  voice  is  heard  above  the  rest, 

And  the  "Master"  taps  to  put  their  lungs  to  test. 

Like  a  pack  of  playful  clowns,  the  burly  boys, 
With  many  awkward  strides  and  curt  grimaces. 

Take  their  separate  books  with  boisterous  noise. 
And  then  pretend  that  they've  forgot  their  places. 

The  master,  jolly,  full  of  nature's  broader  fun. 

Banters  with  his  class  to  urge  them  quickly  on. 


14       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Giggling  low,  with  half-bold  look  from  brightened  eye, 
Or  some  with  timid  step  and  sly  restraint. 

Trip  the  maidens  to  their  seats, — the  gallants  sigh — 
And  there  they  pucker  up  their  lips  in  dimples  quaint. 

The  master  nods  his  shining  head  in  bursting  pride ; 

Here  are  lasses  worth  many  a  zero  ride. 

Dominie,  dressed  in  costume  'couth  and  passing  strange, 
With  home-spun  gray,  and  cravat  broadly  white, 

Tries  to  curb  the  riotous  spirits  of  the  range 
By  rapping  with  the  emblem  of  his  might. 

His  shadow,  silhouetted  dark  against  the  wall, 

Like  a  floundering  eagle  from  the  rafters  pall. 

Calmly  glancing  round  upon  the  buoyant  school, 

He  selects  a  song,  a  relic  of  the  war. 
Lifting  high  his  wand,  a  three- foot  blackboard  rule, 

He  would  begin.     They're  wilder  than  before. 
It  seems  as  though  the  chill  of  this  crisp  night 

Has  filled  their  veins  with  bubbling  nectars  of  delight. 
Protests  are  vain;  and  with  the  license  of  the  strong, 
The  master  berates  the  singers  loud  and  long: 

"Quit  yer  chaffinM 

Stop  your  laughin' ! 
Don't  you  see  I'm  almost  mad? 

Johnny  Eckers, 

Stop  those  snickers ! 
Or,  be'gosh,  I'll  tell  yer  dad! 

Molly  Bowder, 

Yew  sing  louder ! 
People  like  tew  hear  yer  voice. 

And  a  bumpkin. 

Like  a  pumpkin, 
Thinks  that  yew  air  purty  nice. 

Now,  Joe  Haskel, 

You  sly  rascal, 
Put  away  thet  pipe  at  once ! 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  15 

Hi  there,  Billy ! 

Don't  hug   Tilly! 
Folks'll  thiiJc  thet  you're  a  dunce! 

Now,  together ! 

Let'er  sliver ! 
Make  a  noise,  and  yell  right  stout! 

Look  at  me ! 

Now!    One!    Two!    Three!"— 
And  all  too  soon  the  school  was  out. 


i6       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  COBBLER 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  the  busy  hammer  goes. 
Tapping  here  and  tapping  there,  the  tiny  pegs  in  double 
rows. 

Busily  the  fingers  fly, 

Following  the  glance  of  eye; 

Turning  seam  and  riveting, 

Smoothing  clean  and  beveling; 

Honest,  careful,  noble,  true. 

His  wrinkled  fingers  work  away 

Like  busy  elfins,  all  the  day. 

And  do  whatever  they  find  to  do. 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  the  busy  hammer  goes, 
Happy   is   the   cobbler   there, — he   does   not   brood   o'er 
rankling  woes. 

How  I  love  to  watch  him  work ! 

Not  a  toe  nor  heel  he'd  shirk; 

True  as  steel,  with  heart  of  gold, 

As  full  of  love  as  life  will  hold. 

His  leather  apron  light  is  furled, 

Like  rope  around  the  capstan  bar; 

He  pleads  for  peace,  he  loves  not  war. 

And  is  at  rest  with  all  the  world. 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  the  busy  hammer  goes ; 
How  the  children  crowd  around,  as  they  hear  the 
thudding  blows. 

They  love  to  see  the  nimble  stroke, 

They  love  that  ancient  hat  and  cloak; 

And  round  his  littered  bench  they  stand 

An  eager,  youthful,  happy  band. 

One  chubby  child  climbs  on  his  knee 


I 

i 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  17 

With  confident  and  sunny  smile, 
And  then  he  tells  them  stories,  while 
They  listen  in  their  childish  glee. 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  the  busy  hammer  goes; 
His   furrowed    forehead,   wrinkled   cheek,   with  worthy 
labor  glows. 

A  quiet  man  the  cobbler  is ; 

A  lowly  life,  yet  noble,  his ; 

Working  there  and  laboring, 

Each  task  an  honest  close  to  bring. 

His  rough  exterior,  lowly  mien. 

In  dingy  shop,  and  littered  floor, 

Like  diamond-clay  with  glittering  core, 

Has  hidden  deep  a  soul  within. 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  the  busy  hammer  goes. 
While  from  the  trembling,  aged  lips  the  song  of  boyhood 
flows. 

He  forward  looks  to  future  grace, 

And  hopes  to  see  Him  face  to  face. 

At  night  he  hears  the  angels  sing. 

Lists  to  the  rustling  of  their  wing. 

Like  zephyrs  soft  from  Italy's  shore. 

The  harp-songs  make  his  heart  rejoice ; 

He  thrills  to  hear  one  souUfiUed  voice. 

And  fain  would  hearken  evermore. 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  his  busy  hammer  goes, 

The  frosts  of  winter  on  his  face  and  in  his  hair  the  snows. 

He  sees  again  that  dreary  day 

His  second  soul  did  pass  away; 

And  following  slowly,  one  by  one, 

His  loving  children  all  have  gone 

Like  wilting  flowers  in  the  blast. 

Yet  cheerful  does  he  ply  his  trade. 

While  memory-faces  rise  and  fade 

Like  phantoms  from  a  happy  past. 


1 8        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Tap,  tap,  tap,  tap,  the  busy  heart-beats  go, 
Tapping  off  the  hours  of  man,  be  he  high  or  low. 

Thank  thee,  thank  thee,  aged  man! 

Thy  face  is  sear,  thine  eyes  are  wan. 

But  through  thy  gentle  Hfe  thou'st  wove 

Patience,  calmness,  hope  and  love; 

And  thus  should  we,  both  old  and  young, 

Perform  our  duties  hopefully. 

And  nobly  toil  from  day  to  day 

Contented,  honest,  tho  unsung. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  19 


THE  HOLLAND  MOTHER 

She  breathed  a  prayer,  a  sigh  of  hope, 

A  wishful  sob  that  with  fear  did  cope, 

And  through  her  future-turned  prophet  eyes 

She  visioned  for  her  child  the  myriad  of  joys 

That  she  fain  would  endow  the  sleeping  babe 

That  snuggled  and  cuddled  in  the  tufted  glebe. 

A  prayer  rose  straight  from  that  mother's  breast 

And  lodged  on  high  where  the  angels  rest, 

For  her  voice  was  sweet  and  soft  and  low. 

And  thrilled  with  its  yearnings  in  the  firelight's  glow; 

"Oh  God,"  she  whispered,  "I  ne'er  would  shirk 

The  deeper  pains, — just  bless  my  work, 

And  help  me  to  fashion  this  unbruised  soul 

So  soon  it  may  reach  the  noblest  goal. 

And  humbly,  earnestly,  God,  I  pray. 

Grant  me  strength  to  lead  him  each  day, 

Meekly,  gently  at  thy  behest, 

Till  he  finds  peace  on  Jesus'  breast." 

And  if  there  is  a  God  that  looks  down  from  above, 

A  Being  that  blesses  a  sweet  mother's  love. 

Then  he  paused  in  his  toil  on  that  summer's  day 

And  smiled  a  divine  smile  as  He  heard  her  pray. 

And  Oh,  I  know  that  He  blessed  her  then. 

And  left  a  charm  till  He  should  come  again ; 

For  in  all  the  world  there  is  nought  so  mild 

As  the  prayer  of  a  mother  o'er  her  sleeping  child. 

And  nought  in  the  world  can  such  power  impart 

As  the  Love  that  is  couched  in  a  good  mother's  heart. 


20        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


BY  GAR,  DAT  TONY  MAN 

By  Gar!  dat  Tony  Man, — 
He  get  my  goat  for  sure ! 
He  talk  just  like  a  pelican 
And  sleep  upon  de  floor. 
He  naiver  buy  one  leet  Sheroot, 
And  give  his  friend  no  treat, 
But  just  he  take  his  leetle  mon 
And  gwan  right  down  de  street. 

By  Gar,  dat  Tony  Man, 

He  naiver  buy  de  beer ! 

But  only  drink  his  sugar  wine 

When  no  one  else  is  near. 

And  when  he  eat  da  noonday  lunch, 

My,  wat  a  stingy  bloke! 

A  pinch  of  garlic  on  his  bread, 

And  macaron  to  choke. 

By  Gar,  dat  Tony  Man, 

He  make  me  good  and  mad! 

He  sing  and  yell  like  awful  hell. 

And  say  he  pretty  glad. 

So  when  I  ask  what  it's  about 

He  grins  like  mulliken  ape, 

And  says  he  soon  will  have  his  wife, 

And  see  his  leetle  bape. 

By  Gar,  dat  Tony  Man, 

I'd  like  to  wring  his  neck! 

He  wears  old  clothes  like  thirty  cents. 

And  looks  worse  than  a  Mick. 

Some  day  I  get  my  dander  up, 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  21 

And  hit  him  with  a  brick 

He  make  me  boil  all  through  and  through; 

Just  watch  me  when  I  kick! 

By  Gar!  dat  Tony  Man, — 

What's  dat?     Man  in  de  drink? 

Oh  veil,  if  any  chump  can't  swim 

Just  let  de  ol'  fool  sink. 

Huh?    What?    It's  Tony  Man? 

And  Tony,  he  can't  swim? 

By  Gar,  get  out,  you  bunch  of  waps,— 

You  bet,  we  got  save  him! 

By  Gar !  Save  Tony  Man, — 

Why  he  my  only  friend. 

He  shout  and  sing  mos'  every  day. 

My  pal — ^you  understand? 

So  here  I  go,  jump  in  de  flume. 

What  care  I   for  de  death; 

You  bet  I  save  dat  Tony  Man — 

If  he  still  got  his  breath! 


22       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  BROKEN  VIOLET 

Two  little  violets,  dainty  and  sweet, 
Royal  their  color,  and  odor  divine; 
Blossomed  and  grew,  all  hidden,  secure. 
The  happiest  of  flowers,  most  perfect  design. 

Soon  came  two  fond  lovers,  strolling  in  joy; 
He  plucked  one  blossom,  heaving  a  sigh; 
"  'Tis  sweet  as  thy  nature,  soft  as  thy  hair, 
Thy  emblem,   my  playmate,  as  blue  as  thy  eye." 

But  the  flower  was  broken  at  handling  so  rude, 
And  the  maid  stooped  and  plucked  the  other  bud  there; 
The  one  she  cherished,  a  token  of  love. 
The  broken  she  placed  with  a  pin  in  her  hair. 

When  at  last  she  came  to  her  dainty  boudoir, 
The  fair  one  was  placed  in  the  violet  tray. 
While  the  other  was  plucked  from  out  of  her  hair, 
And  wilted,  and  broken,  was  soon  cast  away. 

Wilted  and   broken,   with   beauty   all   gone. 
Unnoticed   and   battered,    its    fragrance   robbed; 
When  the   fair  flower  beheld  it,  a  wreck  of  the  past, 
Then   its  agony  doubled,   its   flower-heart  throbbed. 

And,  alas !  all  too  quickly  it  too  passed  away, 

Its   spirit  vanished,   its   color   soon  fled ; 

For  it  loved  its  companion,  its  heart  had  been  broken, 

Both  souls  were  united, — both  flowers  were  dead. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  23 


OUR  CLOCK  GOLF  DAYS 
In  memory  of  Seabreeze,  Florida 

iSweet  days  of  yore,  of  peace  and  happiness. 

Days  of  joy  and  rapt  content, 

I  love  you  for  your  memories. 

Your  friendships,  pals,  and  loves  that  bless; 

And  dreams  that  must  be  heaven-sent. 

I  love  your  nooks  beside  the  stream, 
Your  Clock  Golf  course  upon  the  green, 
Your  skies  that  shrive  me  in  my  dream. 
Your  shores  that  with  tall  palm  trees  teem 
Sunkissed   through   the    river's    sheen. 

Ah,  could  I  wafted  be  again, 
And  hear  the  yrords  of  friendly  praise, 
The  echoing  cheer  adown  the  main. 
The  saunter  through  the  shaded  lane. 
And  live  again  those  happy  days! 


24       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


IN  CHAINS 

Italian  Skies  and  Italian  Seas 

Locked  are  the  chains,   the  bands  applied, 

And  bound  and  manacled  and  tied. 

Yes,  bound  the  minds,  the  heart,  the  soul. 

For  here  'tis  nought  but  grind  and  toil, — 

But  grind!     Shy  art  is  crucified! 

And  Hope — Ah,  Lethe  is  but  its  goal! 

My  spirit  soars  above  the  skies. 

Above  the  trees,  above  the  spires 

Of  gloom-filled  churches,  canting  squires. 

And  world-weary  knowledge,  which  is  never  wise. 

Away  the  dare  of  gross  to-day. 

The  torrid  strife  for  petty  pelf. 

The  scandal-tongue,  serpents  who  prey. 

And  scorpions  who  sting  all  else  save  self! 

I  lothe  the  touch  of  the  hypocrite, 

The  smile  of  Satan  in  the  eye. 

The  maudlin  chant  of  the  Holy  Writ 

That  turns  and  sneers  at  the  fine  Soul's  cry; 

The  rose  that  blooms  with  a  worm  in  its  heart, 

The  flaring  lily  with  death  in  its  cup, — 

I  hate  them  all.    These  bonds  must  part 

And  time  must  give  its  memories  up; 

For  my  heart  has  flown,  ah,  far  away, 

Far,  far  beyond  the  threatening  sea, 

Where  dwells   the  hopes   of   yesterday, 

That  ne'er  can  filter  back  to  me. 

But  the   Italian   air  and   Italian  trees. 

With  their  quaint  black  shapes  'gainst  the  cobalt  sky! 

The  Italian  birds  on  the  Italian  breeze. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  25 

And  the  scents  of  elysium  from  on  high! 

The  mirrored  seas  and  the  hidden  bays 

Where  dreamers  spend  their  aircastle  days, 

Where  lovers  dwell  in  blest  content 

And  treasured  faith  is  heaven-sent! 

A  cottage  'neath  a  rustic  arch, 

A  batteau  waiting  on  the  shore, — 

Here  seasons  lag  their  onward  march 

And  ships  return — ah,  nevermore. 

Ah,  nevermore  do  ships  return 

To  steal  away  love's  paradise ; 

For  here,  in  sooth,  the  love-fires  bum 

Deep  down  in  heart's  true  sacrifice. 

A  vision  think  you  of  a  dream? 

A  poet's  dream  of  heart's  ideal? 

Ah,  no ;  'tis  there,  both  true  and  real ; 

All  things  are  real  if  but  they  seem. 

I   fain  would  thrust  these  bonds  away. 

And  tear  apart  this  chafing  band — 

Dear  God  in  Heaven ! — 'Tis  but  a  day 

Then  Dream-souls  fly  to  poet's  land. 


26       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


POLITICS 

You  call  me  vile — 

And  yet,  and  yet,  my  face  is  wreathed  in  a  win- 
some smile. 
While   my  heart   is   hung 
With  a  wreath,  wide  flung, 
Which  flaunts  and  flutters  on  the  barren  soil. 

You  call  me  sad — 

And  yet,  and  yet,  m}'  vote  has  made  the  pauper 

glad; 
With  a  lavish  hand 
I  move  the  wand 
Of  spoils, — and,  lo,  the  world  goes  mad! 

You   call  me  gross — 

And  yet,  and  yet,  my  nature  soars  above  the  dross 

Like  a  flower  of  worth 

O'er   the   reeking   earth. 

Is  the  seed  and  earth  a  gruesome  loss? 

You  call  me  "graft"— 

And  yet,  and  yet,  perfume  of  pleasure  on  breezes 

waft. 
I  undertake  where  others  cower. 
Nor   wait    I    for   the   opportune    hour. 
What  boots  it  clings  Tribute- to  my  pirate  craft? 

Time  calls  me  "good," 

And   sees  the  heart  deep   in  my  wood; 

Through   the   radial   lines 

True  nature  shines. 

And  the   future   world  partakes   the  *food. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  27 


PROHIBITION 

I  heard  the  wail  of  the  starving  child, 

And  came  to  give  it  bread ; 
I  heard  the  sob  of  a  mother's  voice, 

Who  crouched  on  the  floor  in  dread, 
While  the  beer-filled  brain  of  the  sodden  man 

Caused  sorrow  in  that  hut, 
As  he  wrecked  the  beds  of  the  shivering  babes, 

And  struck  his  wife  his  ire  to  glut. 
And  I  halted  the  terrors  of  that  night. 

And  restored  the  hope  to  that  eye, 
I  gave  back  the  brain  that  had  taken  its  flight. 

Gave  back  the  soul  that  had  begun  to  die. 

For  years   I   stood   outside  the  gate 

Awaiting  the  entering  call, 
Until  God's  woman  ^  heard  my  voice, 

And  foresaw  the  Nation's  fall, 
Then  she  girded  the  armor  of  mother  love 

Upon  that  form  divine. 
And  struck  the  battle-note  to  prove 

That  the  better  way  is  mine. 
She  raised  the  Cross  of  Jesus  high. 

And  caused  foul  drink  to  flee, 
And  Satan's  host  shall  ne'er  return 

As  long  as  you  have  me. 

I  chose  the  Nation  sent  by  God 

To  free  the  human  slaves; 
I  chose  the  land  that  had  felt  the  rod 

Of  Thieves,  and  shame,  and  Knaves; 
I  chose  the  Country  founded  by  folk 

Who  lived  the  life  of  Faith, 

1  Frances  E.  Willard. 


28       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Who  first  stepped  out  upon  the  Rock 

And   trod   ReHgion's   path; 
America  !     The  land  of  hope, 

Where  we  laud  its  better  men, 
I  took  that  land  and  made  it  clean, — 

Dare  ye  make  it  dirt  again? 

I  gave  back  the  brain  that  wine  had  stolen, 

The  brain  that  beer  had  robbed; 
I  gave  back  the  home  that  alcohol 

Had  wrecked, — where  mothers  sobbed; 
I  broke  the  bands  of  Demon  Rum, 

And  cracked  the  bowl  on  the  bar, 
I  set  up  Faith  upon  yon  hearth 

That  it  would  return  no  more. 
I  broke  the  cup  that  steals  man's  brain. 

That  weakens  your  daughter's  will. 
That  brings  Her  shame  upon  Your  name, — 

And  can  you  love  it  still? 

Away,  Oh  puny  lust  of  man! 

Oh   selfish,   misguided   soul! 
When  you  lead  me  back  to  the  outer  gate 

The  grave  is  but  your  goal. 
Bring  back  the  wine  upon  the   stand, 

The  tankards  upon  the  plates. 
And  the  Nation  trembles  in  its  path 

For  the  enemy  within  your  gates. 
Already  has  it  robbed  you  of  your  power 

To  do  the  things  for  God; 
And  God  has  placed  within  your  grasp 

The  one  great  ruling  rod. 

Throw  me  away — ^you  turn  your  face 
Back  towards   the  early   dawn; 

And  soon  you  wade  again  in  crime — 
Your  early  vision  gone; 

Turn  me  away  and  all  the  hopes 
Of  future  gain  have  fled; 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  29 

The  Nation's  fame  will  be  its  shame, 

And  its  morals  will  be  dead. 
But  hold  me  tight  enshrined  in  your  heart, 

And  I  lift  you  to  the  skies, 
For  the  love  of  all  the  unborn  Souls, 

I  alone  can   make  you  rise! 


30       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


DESPAIR 

'^Prohibition  Must  not  be  Repealed'^ 
Words  of  a  desperate  mother 

What  ?     End    Prohibition  ? 

May  God  prevent  that  day 
When  the  evil  appetites  of  men 

Will  steal  my  home  away, 
When  the  comforts  of  my  declining  years 

Are  torn  from  out  my  grasp, 
And  leave  me  poor  and  weak,  alone. 

With  the  sting  of  a  poison  asp. 
Oh,  must  my  dreams  of  a  happy  hearth 

All  vanish  in  thin  air? 
You  steal  the  bread  from  my  baby's  mouth, — • 

Don't  drive  me  to  despair! 

In  the  name  of   Christ,   O,   drinking  man, 

I  pray  you  pause  awhile; 
This  morning  when  I  saw  the  sun 

My  lips  had  formed  a  smile, 
My  heart  had  sung  the  song  of  love 

That  welled  up  in  my  heart, 
And    the   love   of   All,   both   great  and   small. 

Was  of  my  Hfe  a  part. 
But  by  your  attempt  to  bring  back  rum 

You  dim  my  vision  fair. 
You  burn  the  altar  I  have  raised, — 

You  drive  me  to  despair. 

For  years  in  rags  I  walked  the  streets 
And  begged  my  man  to  come; 

For  years  he  drank  his  weekly  wage 
And  wrecked  our  hovel  home; 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  31 

My  babies  cried  with  frightened  eye, 

When  they  heard  his  drunken  walk, 
No  clothes  had  they,  but  rags  and  filth, 

And   life   was   but   a   mock. 
Then  came  the  law  which  brought  the  light, 

That  raised  us  from  wan  care; 
Then  came  the  Hope  from  out  the  night, — 

Can  you  bring  back  Despair? 

I  drained  the  ocean  of  its  gall, 

I  combed  of  bitterness  the  sky. 
And  from  it  all  I  wrought  the  chain 

Of  Faith  that  can  not  die; 
And  on  the  brow  of   future  babes 

I  poured  the  incense  pure 
Of  chastity  and  soberness — 

The  Race  that  must  endure. 
My   trembling   hands   but   grasp   the   brink 

Of  the  Future  everywhere, — 

You  DARE  not  drive  me  back  again 

To  the  pit  of  deep  despair! 

Oh,  victim  of  low  profit's  greed, 

Oh  baser  lust  for  gain. 
Would  you  thrust  back  the  hands  of   Time, 

And  break  the  golden  chain 
That  holds  the  minds  of  man  in  leash 

And  spurs  them  on  to  higher 
Ground  than  e'er  were  trod  by  foot, 

Their   Soul's  growth  to  inspire? 
Would  you  then  halt  the  urge  of  man 

Unto  the  nobler  goal 
That  poets  vision  in  the  dawn, 

And  thoughts  that  raise  the  Soul? 

You  can  not  turn  the  hands  of  Time 

Back  to  the  years  far  gone; 
You  can  not  break  the  things  god  made 

Because  they  please  yq^  none; 


32       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

The  Wheel  of  Time  breaks  down  old  things 

And  ever  brings  the  New, 
The  crime  of  Drink  is  forever  dead; 

The  Grace  of  Soberness  view. 
A  craven  soul  pretends  to  stand 

Upon  the  brink  of  care, — 
But  you  are  Men,  so  stand  like  Men, 

We  must   not   now   despair. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  33 


THE  WHISPERERS 

Ah,  the  Whisperers !  The  skulking  snakes 
That  infest  the  places  of  public  pride, 
The  knowing  looks  of  sarcastic  makes. 
The  false-face  smirks  with  pus  inside; 
The  scandal-mongers  in  the  church 
Who  plunge  the  daggers  in  the  back, 
Fawn  in  your  face,  but  your  name  be- 
smirch,— 
Unchristian,  unholy,  vile,  the  lack 
Of  any  Soul  within  the  crackling  shell 
They  call  the  heart,  but  in  its  place 
Most  loathsome  evil,  nauseous  smell 
Exudes  each  pore  and  smears  the  face. 
The  whisperers!     Why  were  they 

made 
To  poison  the  world  with  their  horrid 

tongue  ? 
For  they  thrust  their  venom  in  every  glade, 
And  mingle  the  most  honest  men  among, 
God ! — How  we  abhor  when  once  we  find 
The  secret  envy  of  the  spell; 
Would  to  Heaven  all  Whisperers 
Were  sent  below  where  Lucifer  fell! 


34       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


REVERIE 

I  wish  I  were  a  swallow  swift, 
And  had  the  swallow's  wings, 

I'd  fly  far  out  toward  heaven's  blue  arch, 
And  trill  my  morning  songs. 

A  nightingale  I  wish  I  were. 

Or  yet  a  heavenly  dove; 
Oh,  rapturous  songs  would  fill  the  air, — 

I'd  fly  toward  heaven's  love. 

Oh,  would  I  were  a  tiny  fish. 

And  swam  the  briny  deep. 
To  delve  in  ocean's  mysteries 

And  God's  great  secrets  keep. 

Were  I  an  odorous,  fragile  flower 

Of  grace  divinely  blest, 
I'd  scent  the  ways  of  weary  souls, 

Caress  the  ones  that  rest. 

And  if  I  were  an  angel  white. 

With  harp  of  gold  in  hand, 
I'd  soar  toward  God's  Eternal  Throne, 

Tuning  chords  sublimely  grand. 

Then  the  thought  came  like  a  vision, 
Sweet  peace  then  entered  my  mind; 

I  felt  the  presence  of  my  own  dear  Savior 
And  these  words  of  tr^uth  I  retained: 

Why  long  for  that  which  we  can  not? 
Why  desire? — we  can  not  attain! 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  35 

God  placed  us  here  for  a  purpose, 
And  Christ  will  come  again. 

Look,  look,  oh  mortal,  about  thee; 

Take  heed  of  stranger  and  friend ; 
Thy  purpose  in  life  far  grander  is 

Than  the  desires  thou  hast  named. 

Man  was  made  in  God's  image, 

A  worker  for  Heavenly  fame; 
Low  earthly  pleasures  but  shadows  are 

Scarce  known  in  Heaven  by  name. 

Though  thy  life  may  be  scorched  by  Life's 
lightnings, 

And  thunders  resounding  may  move, 
Fierce  wild  winds  and  fiends  may  threaten, — 

Yet  all  will  be  peace  Above. 

Do  thy  noblest  on  earth  here,  Oh  mortal ! 

Nor  long  for  other  vain  bliss ; 
For  thy  duty  will  bring  thee  glory 

Of  God's  Eternal  Peace. 


36       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SPRING 

"Awake !  the  warbling  robin  said, 
And  gave  his  cry,  and  bobbed  his  head, 
As  though  his  tiny  heart  within 
Contained  all  the  balm  of  spring. 

"Awake!     Awake!"  was  echoed  far; 
Came  trembling  back  from  Spring-time's  star, 
Arousing  bud  and  branch  and  tree, 
And  made  the  heavenly  hollows  ring. 

"Awake !"  the  crows  cawed,  flying  high, 
Like  floating  dots  far  in  the  sky; 
And  flapped  with  glee  from  south  to  north. 
With  scent  of  summer  on  their  wing. 

"Awake!"  the  balmy  south  wind  sighed, 
And  kissed  the  slumbering  earth,  its  bride; 
When  soon  the  chill  of  winter  broke, 
And  love,   and  joy,  and  life  awoke. 
Then  Spring  was  here. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  37 


OCTOBER 

The  golden  sun  is  fading  fast, 
Its  pervert  rays  that,  slanting  slow, 
Have  lost  their  kiss,  now  coldly  touch 
The  withered  trellis  dropping  low. 

The  clambering  vine  is  tinged  with  red, 

And  all  about  the  distant  wood 

A  haze  has  settled  on  the  trees, 

As  though  the  days  had  donned  a  shroud. 

The  crimson  flash  of  trembling  leaves, 
And  flecks  of  gold  are  here  and  there; 
With  brown  and  green  on  every  shrub, 
And  misty  grey  high  in  the  air. 

The  flowers  are  withering,  one  by  one; 
The  birds  are  homeward  flying; 
And  e'en  the  dew-flecked  meadow-land 
Turns  seer  and  dry  and  dying. 

But  the  barns  are  full,  and  the  hay  is  pressed, 
The  silo  is  filled  o'er-flowing; 
All  wheat  is  threshed,  and  garnered  the  corn, 
And  the  pumpkins  look  so  knowing. 

A  dreamy  haze  spreads  o'er  the  land. 
While  a  rest  spreads  o'er  the  mind; 
'Tis  October  time;  'tis  peace  for  all, 
For  Dame  Nature  has  been  kind. 

And  so  in  our  life  the  autumn  comes 
With  its  memories  of  cherished  store. 
While  a  lingering  haze  spreads  o'er  our  age, 
And  our  hopes  are  forgotten  lore. 


38       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  FACE  IN  THE  CAR  WINDOW 

She  nodded  and  smiled  and  a  light  filled  her  eye, 

And  a  message  was  flashed  which  throttled  my  sigh; 

And  that  message  will  remain  a  sweet  mystery, 

As  I  wonder  what  she  meant  when  the  car  went  by. 

A  strange  little  mischief,  with  twinkles  in  the  deep, 

A  dancing  and  lurking  of  wide,  sunny  wiles. 

With  flash  of  her  teeth,  and  a  toss  of  her  head 

She  saw  my  quick  gaze,  and  she  returned  it  with  smiles. 

And  that  glance  from  her  eyes,  and  the  sunny  "Good 

Day,'' 
Tho  flashed  fnom  a  window  as  the  car  rolled  away. 
Will  lighten  my  work  and  brighten  my  play 
For  weeks  and  for  months,  and  will  bless  me  for  aye. 

Ah,  how  oft  just  a  smile  can  thrdttle  a  sigh, 
A  stranger's  broad  laughter  can  make  our  pains  fly; 
I  have  learned  a  deep  lesson — which  the  world  can  try — 
From  the  face  in  the  window  as  the  car  passed  by. 


I 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  39 


HOPE 

I  stood  at  my  low  western  window 
And  gazed  o*er  the  slime-covered  sea 
Of  waste  and  mouldering-  swamp-lands 
Which  covered  the  wind-blown  lee. 

I  noted  the  morbid  dry  rice  grass, 
Low-trampled  by  wind  and  by  rain; 
And  beheld  the  rotting  black  carrion, 
As  though  a  rank  drift  from  the  main. 

Afar,  through  the  hazy  grey  mistings, 
A  dot  in  the  malarial  sea, 
Were  the  faint  and  but  shadowy  outlines 
Of  a  lonely  and  scraggy  pine  tree; 

And  it  looked  like  a  spectre  of  midnight, 
A  spectre  with  ghastly  black  arms, 
Which  was  beckoning  frantic  wild  gestures, 
And  waving  its  gruesome  alarms. 

The  dank  smells  of  the  misty  low  swamp-lands. 
The  odors  of  age  and  decay, 
Were  like  catacombs  of  the  far  Rome-land, 
Or  the  fetor  of  Maleboge. 

Thus  I  stood  as  I  gazed  o'er  the  waste  land. 
With  my  spirits  both  saddened  and  low, 
For  my  heart  was  sore  pained  and  weary 
By  the  despair  of  my  terrible  woe; 


40       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

By  the  loss  of  my  dearly  beloved, 

The  loss  of  my  pretty  young  bride, 

Who  this  morning  looked  happy  and  smiling,  j 

Stood  clinging  with  love  to  my  side.  1 

But  e'er  Solus  had  journeyed  his  distance, 
Half  passing  rash  Phaeton's  zone. 
By  the  Fates  she  was  snatched  from  the  daylight, 
And  sank  senseless  with  agonized   groan; 

Sank  calling  my  name  in  her  terror. 
Sank  praying  for  heavenly  aid 
That  the  blessing  of  wifehood  might  save  her 
From  Hera's  most  envious  blade. 

But  denied  was  her  fervid  complaining. 
Death  struck  her  with  icy  cold  hand; 
And  her  pure  clinging  angel-like  spirit 
Took  flight  to  a  holier  land. 

And  now  vainly  there  stood  I  and  watching, 
Stood  watching  the  far,  far  away; 
And  dreaming  of  Beatrice  in  heaven, 
Who  was  torn  from  my  side  this  sad  day; 

And  I  prayed  then  aloud  for  the  courage ; 
And  agonized  tears  were  fast  shed ; 
For  my  heart  lay  crushed  in  that  coffin 
Which  covered  my  loved  one,  dead. 

When  sudden  the  heavens  were  brightened, 
The  lowering  clouds  were  quick  blessed. 
And  a  ray  of  the  soft  western  sunlight 
Lay  molten  like  gold  on  my  breast. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  41 

For  a  moment  the  heavens  seemed  doubting, 
For  an  instant  the  misting  pressed  low, 
But  the  powers  of  gloom  were  soon  vanquished, 
And  the  distance  all  flamed  with  a  glow 

Like  the  glory  of  the  transfiguration 
When  the  light  of  the  heavens  met  earth, 
And  bestowed  on  its  drivelling  low  dwellers 
A  halo  of  Eternity's  worth. 

And  bathed  in  that  light  was  my  body ; 
My  soul  absorbed  its  warm  ray ; 
For  the  omen  I  knew  was  from  Beatrice 
Returning  from  glorified  way; 

Returning  to  strengthen  her  mourner. 
Returning  to  whisper  sweet  cheer; 
And  ennoble  his  life  by  her  presence — 
A  presence  unseen  but  yet  near. 

Then  a  rest  came  soft  o'er  my  heart-beats; 
My  spirit  within  me  grew  calm; 
Soft  tinklings  of  angel's  sweet  music 
Upon  my  sad  soul  gave  its  balm; 

And  from  out  of  that  glad  golden  sunlight, 
From  out  of  that  flaming  bright  ray 
Shall  my  soul  lift  up  to  my  God-head 
And  trusting  strive  onward  for  aye. 


42       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  WEAVER 

Wearily  the  weaver  whirled  his  wheel, 

Slowly  the  heavy  shuttles  flew, 
Dully  the  staff  clanked  on  the  reel, 

Which  growled  and  squeaked  as  though  it  knew 
That  the  light  had  gone 
With  the  early  dawn, 
The  light  of  his  life,  his  Prue. 

All  day  he  sat  with  a  hardened  heart, 

Not  a  word  or  look  gave  he. 
While  now  and  then  rose  a  groan  or  a  start, 
And  a  wrench  of  the  trembling  knee; 
And  not  a  hum 
Came  from  the  drum 
Of  the  lagging,  languid,  clanking  tree. 

Slowly  sank  the  lurid  sun. 

And  slowly  the  twilight  came, 
The  shadows  lengthened  one  by  one. 
Yet  he  would  not  breathe  her  name; 
But  his  aged  eyes 
Were  dimmed  with  sighs 
That  convulsed  his   shrinking   death-touched   frame. 

*'Curse  thee !  no  longer  my  daughter  Prue !" 

The  heart  would  burst  its  bound. 
And  he  raised  his  hand  toward  the  fading  blue 
Of  the  homespun  scattered  round; 
While  the  creaking  loom, 
Dull  thing  of  Doom, 
Gave  out  its  rumbling,  grinding  sound. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  43 

But  Time  doth  press  with  a  softening  palm 

Upon  the  heart  of  stone, 
And  through  his  breast  there  shot  a  qualm, 
And  through  his  throat  a  moan; 
He  thought  of  the  days 
Of  her  winning  ways, 
While  to-day  he  drudged  alone. 

"Go  to  the  window,  good  wife,  go, 

And  see  if  she  doth  return; 
My  head  is  heavy,  my  hand  is  slow, 
And  the  drum  doth  slowly  turn"; 
His  voice  is  weak, 
And  furrowed  his  cheek. 
But  his  eyes  with  restless  fevers  burn. 

He  wot  not  that  his  bride,  long  dead, 
Knew  nought  of  his  hapless  plight; 
His  mind  was  dim,  and  reason  fled. 
But  he  muttered  through  the  night; 
For  his  child's  return 
A  dip  did  burn 
Her  returning  path  to  light. 

"No,  father,  no,"  a  ghost-wraith  calls, 

"Not  a  sign  'gainst  the  darkening  sky, 
Naught  but  the  gloom  of  forest  walls, 
And  the  tongues  of  the  glow  on  high." 
Lower  his  head, 
As  though  it  were  lead. 
Droops  to  his  work,  and  he  stifles  a  cry. 

The  wind  without  gives  a  moaning  sound, 

Like  the  sob  of  a  sleeping  child; 
And  the  tall  dark  pines  press  swaying  round 
As  the  wood  wails  its  dirges  wild; 
And  in  the  deep 
Where  wolf-dogs  creep. 
Haunt  the  owls,  from  hope  exiled. 


44       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Within  'tis  cold,  for  the  sun  has  set, 

And  the  sky  is  a  darkening  gray, 
Painfully  the  weaver  is  weaving  yet, 
And  his  loom  still  clanks  away; 
But  his  work  is  pain 
As  he  strikes  again 
The  shuttle  slow,  on  its  grumbling  way. 

His  gray-stringed  head  he  lifts  again 
And  in  vain  he  pierces  the  gloom 
Which  is  closing  in  at  the  window  pane. 
And  is  filling  the  barren  room; 
But  his  eyes  are  weak, 
So  he  tries  to  speak 
As  he  drops  the  bar  of  his  tired  loom. 

"Again  to  the  window,  good  sprite,  go. 

And  see  if  she  doth  not  come, 
My  dying  heart  is  filled  with  woe; 
I  would  that  she  were  at  home." 
With  anguished  cry 
He  pressed  his  eye. 
And  gazed  o'er  the  endless  wood- fringed  loam. 

"No,  father,  no,"  his  fears  respond, 
"But  hope, — she  will  soon  return; 
The  Iroquois'  camp  is  just  beyond. 
And  their  feast  fires  lowly  burn. 
At  the  dawn  of  day 
She  will  come  away 
To  the  home  that  she  yet  doth  yearn. 

Darker  and  darker  the  falling  night ; 

Fierce  puffs  the  rushing  breeze; 
But  all  is  dead  to  his  ageing  sight, 
For  his  blood  has  begun  to  freeze; 
And  a  dirge  is  sung 
By  the  forest  tongue, — 
A  dirge  by  the  shivering  trees. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  45 

The  silence  of  death  hovers  o^er  the  place. 
For  though  hard  and  stern  is  the  mind 
The  love  of  a  life  will  show  on  a  face, 
And  the  pulse  will  throb  for  its  kind. 
And  the  struggle  was  long 
For  he  quivered  at  wrong, 
But  the  heart  will  melt  when  'tis  blind. 

As  red  as  the  blood  of  the  Iriquois, 

As  lurid  as  fires  of  hell, 
A  threatening  cloud  drives  o'er  the  sky 
And  rests  where  the  Iroquois  dwell; 
Then  melted  his  heart 
And  with  fear  doth  he  start, 
And  a  sob,^he  pleads   for  her  well. 

With  the  darksome  night  the  fiends  let  loose, 

And  the  ghosts  of  Evil  throng 
Adown  the  path  that  the  legend  moose 

Doth  stalk  the  caverns  of  the  graves  among. 
The  storm-swept  trees 
Bend  to  their  knees, 
And  even  the  hills  their  hearts  have  wrung. 

The  sound  of  the  raging  strikes  his  ear. 
And  with  eager  hand  he  brushes  the  tear, 
And  bends  his  head  as  though  to  hear 
The  tramp  of  the  winds  on  their  way. 

"Hark,  is  not  that  she  who  rides   so  wild, 
Like  the  rush  of  the  fiends  across  the  plain? 
My  daughter,  Prue,  Oh  daughter,  my  child ! 
Return  to  your  father,  your  father,  again!" 
With  the  sweat  of  death  upon  his  brow 
He  cries  for  his  child,  forgets  his  vow, 
But  the  wild  dashing  branches  but  scream  and  i&way 
And  he  totters,  stunned  with  his  pain. 

And  swift  as  the  frown  'cross  a  somber  face 
The  wind  ishifts  to  the  north : 


46       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  cold  and  grim, — to  sleet, — to  ice. 
The  blizzard  breath  pours  icily  forth: 
While  keen  the  night; 
From  black  to  white 
The  crystal  gnomes  have  proved  their  worth. 


Adown  the  bristling  forest  trail 
A  stumbling  form  doth  creep; 
An  anguished  moan  of  small  avail 
As  she  totters  in  a  heap; 
A  shivering   form, 
A  trembling  worm, 
Bare  crawling  through  the  snow  knee-deep. 

*'Oh,  God,  I  pray  to  lead  me  on 

Until  I  reach  his  door." 
She  staggers  up,  sunk  cheeks  and  wan, 
And  stumbles  as  before, 
Till  by  degrees 
Upon  her  knees 
Her  will  can  drag  no  more. 

And  as  she  drops  low  on  the  snow 
With  one  despairing  sigh. 
Her  hopeless  eye  she  lifts, — then  lo! 
She  sees  a  candle  light  is  nigh; 

New  life  is  thrust. 

To  move  she  must. 
For  her  frozen  limbs  are  filled  with  joy. 

''My  home !"  she  cries  in  thrilled  alarm, 

"My  father's  house  is  near. 
And  he  awaits  with  open  arm 

To  give  his  wayward  daughter  cheer." 
With  deep  agony 
She  forces  her  way, 
Her  heart  half -cursed  with  fear. 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  47 

By  ruse  had  she  slunk  from  the  Indian  camp 

Where  a  bride  that  month  she  had  come 
To  mate  the  chief  'gainst  her  father's  will, 
And  to  make  his  tent  her  home; 
But  her  daughter-love 
Too  strong  did  prove, 
So  by  stealth  by  night  had  she  dared  her  doom. 

But  her  failing  strength  had  suffered  much, 

And  like  a  stricken  dove  on  wing 
That  at  the  arrow's  piercing  touch 

Falls  low,  revives,  shocked,  trembling. 
Still  vainly  tries 
In  its  agonies 
Still  farther  on  its  form  to  fling, 

So  thrust  she  on  in  frenzy  blind. 

The  candle  glow  a  beacon  before. 
The  raging  snows  beside,  behind, 
A  sad  spent  form  she  reached  the  door 
And  fell  there  prone 
Unsought,  alone, 
From  thence  to  rise  no  more. 

A  shivering  sigh  escaped  her  lip, 

A  sigh  of  heaven  lost; 
In  the  frozen  air  her  finger  tip 

Bare  touched  the  latchstring,  tossed 
By  the  frenzied  wind 
In  its  blast  unkind. 
Just  out  of  reach, — ^Ah,  Lord,  the  cost! 

Just  out  of  reach,  the  haven  home 

Of  one  who  would  return; 
Just  out  of  reach,  the  cheerful  room 
Where  love  fires  for  us  burn. 
Yet  oft  doth  life 
Place  one  thin  knife 
'Twixt  them  that  laugh  and  them  that  mourn. 


48       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  oft  indeed  we  would  repent 
When  repentance  comes  too  late, 
And  love  that  once  with  compassion  blent, 
Has  later  turned  to  hate; 
While  we  dallied  slow 
Soon  must  we  go, 
And  we  crawl  unsaved  to  the  steps  of  fate. 

At  our  father's  house  the  light  still  shines 

For  the  wayward  prodigal, 
But  our  lagging  strength  oft  dies  betimes 
And  e'er  we  return  we  fall 
Like  a  fluttering  leaf 
From  out  the  sheaf 
Of  times,' — and  we're  lost  beyond  recall; 

So  on  that  porch  the  thin  form  lay 

Soon  covered  by  swirling  snow 
Which  piled  its  mantle  lavishly 
Upon  the  dying  girl  as  though 
It  fain  would  hide 
The  fallen  bride 
Of  the  Iroquois,  and  her  woe. 

■  •  «  •  •  C«l 

'Tis  near  the  dawn,  and  all  is  black. 

Not  a  flicker  breaks  through  the  cloud; 
On  the  steps  a  form  cold  in  her  track, — 
In  the  cottage  a  gathering  shroud ; 
All  night  he  had  spun 
But  his  task  is  done. 
And  the  specters  of  death  around  him  crowd. 

A  quavering  groan  sounds  through  the  gloom 

At  the  dawn  of  that  dismal  day, 
And  a  gurgling  sob  palls  on  the  room 
As  the  weaver  tries  to  pray. 
But  his  parched  throat 
Re-echoes  the  note 
Of  the  loom  that  has  died  away — for  aye. 


i 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  49 

Morning  gray  bespeaks  the  day; 
The  loom  has  ceased  its  sound; 
No  woof  upon  the  treadbar  lay, 
And  the  warp  is  scattered  round; 
While  the  storm  has  died 
Like  the  weaver's  pride, 
And  the  winds  kiss  the  shrouded  ground. 

The  stick  rests  dead  in  the  bloodless  hand. 

And  the  drum  has  groaned  its  wo, 
And  the  weaver  stares  with  desert  mind, 
He  has  dropped  the  bobbintoe; 
For  his  soul  has  fled. 
And  o'er  his  head 
Hang  the  wraiths  of  his  hopeless  woe; 

While  the  candle  stick  on  the  window  sill 

Is  black  and  dead  and  cold, 
For  the  waning  spark  had  sucked  its  will 
And  would  be  dark  for  years  untold; 
The  frosted  glass 
Let  no  light  pass 
For  the  specters  of  Death  doth  the  place  enfold. 

While  the  dead  within  and  the  dead  without 

Await  the  sun  of  day. 
The  Soul's  last  flight  into  the  night 
Must  mingle  on  the  way. 
And  up  through  space 
In  that  higher  place 
Together  come, — ^yes,  come  for  aye. 

God  pity  them  both,  and  guard  the  ones 

We  fain  would  amply  prove ; 
Protect  our  daughters  and  our  sons 
Through  all  the  paths  they  move; 
And  in  the  end. 
Oh  God,  unbend. 
And  bless  with  thy  Eternal  love. 


50       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SHIP  AHOY! 

'Tis  night  on  the  Atlantic  and  far  out  at  sea 
The  smooth-rolling  billows  sigh  musically, 
And  the  calm  of  the  air,  with  silence  serene, 
Gives  hope  to  the  pilot  who  w^histles  away ; 
While  the  staunch  little  craft  responds  to  the  swell, 
Like  the  dip  of  the  daisy  to  the  wind  in  the  dell. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

But  obscured  is  the  moon  by  a  driving  dark  cloud, 
And  the  tiny  bright  stars  in  the  velvet-black  sk\- 
Seem  to  glitter  and  twinkle  and  put  on  a  shroud, — 
For  the  demon  of  darkness  is  swift  drawing  nigh; 
And  the  skipper  is  worried,   the  vessel   sails  slow, 
For  the  calm  is  intense,  and  the  mercury  low. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

Now  sudden  the  skipper  ascends  to  the  bridge, 
For  the  drop  of  the  glass  betokens  a  storm, 
Then  the  tones  of  command  sound  harsh  down  the  ridge, 
And  the  clang  of  the  bell  screams  out  the  alarm : 
Now   frantic   it   rises,   now   sobbing  and  soft, 
While  the  startled  mid-deckmen  climb  frightened  aloft. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

The  moan  of  the  ocean  has  doubled  its  power. 
But  the  woe  of  the  winds  has  stifled  its  sighs, 
And  portentous  banks  of  driven  clouds  lower. 
While  the  low-flying  albatross  hushes  its  cries; 
When  quick,  with  the  shriek  of  a  million  lost  souls, 
The  storm-king  is  on  them.     The  storm-bell  tolls, 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  151 

In  the  trough  of  old  ocean  the  Petrel  is  sent 
Midst  creaking  of  hawser  and  thundering  of  sail, 
And  the  masts  in  the  center  like  whip-cords  are  bent 
And  groan  in  a  frenzy  at  the  rush  of  the  gale; 
While  above  and  around  it,  more  furious  and  faster, 
Howl  the  imps  of  the  darkness  and  wraiths  of  disaster, 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

High  heavens  are  falling  with  deafening  roar; 
With  sharp,  jagged  fires  asunder  they  spread; 
And  tumultuous  torrents  up  skyward  now  bore 
To  crush  the  small  vessel  in  its  turbulent  bed; 
When  quickly  with  terror  it  rights  from  behind. 
And  the  ship  is  now  dashing  before  the  wild  wind. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

With  shrieks  and  with  screams  and  with  demoniac  laughter 
The  hurricane  tumbles  the  vessel  about; 
With  flapping  of  canvas  and  ripping  of  rafter 
To  the  ears  of  the  shipmen  an  agonized  shout 
Is  borne  from  the  leeward.     A  cry  of  dismay 
Comes  down  through  the  darkness  and  then  dies  away, 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

Superstitious   the  sailors,   with   frightened  white   faces, 
Some  rush  to  the  pilot,  and  trembling  they  stare : 
"  'Tis  the  Wanderer"  they  stutter,  and  cling  to  their  places. 
For  the  chill  is  upon  them,  and  death  in  the  air; 
When  again  the  wild  shriek  down  the  winds  of  the  sea, — 
'Twas  a  cry  of  despair  and  mad  agony, — 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

With  awed  faces  and  ghastly,  weird  voices  they  hear; 
They  remember  the  tales  of  the  "Dutchman"  who  flies ; 
And  in  the  dread  of  the  sailors  they  cower  in  fear, — 
For  'tis  death  to  the  shipman  who  hears  those  wild  cries. 
And  the  rigging  still  rattles,  and  furious  the  sound 
Of  the  dull  grinding  crashing  of  the  billows  around. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 


52       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

On  the  wings  of  tornadoes  the  mad  waves  rave  past, 
And  the  scud  on  the  masthead  gives  ominous  sign ; 
With  the  roar  of  a  cannon  the  sail  parts  the  mast, 
And  the  hull  plunges  deep  in  the  harsh-swirling  brine. 
Like  a  straw  it  is  tossed,  while  the  mountains  crowd  high, 
O'er-topped  by  the  foam  which  they  scrape  from  the  sky. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

Up  shoots  the  hull  swiftly,  with  shiver  and  groan. 
At  the  moment  when  weirdly  there  echoes  that  cry, 
Now  near  and  now  distant,  a  screech  and  a  moan. 
The  sound  of  the  doomed  which  pierces  the  sky. 
And  the  sailors  are  staring  with  atrophied  fear 
To  behold  that  dread  phantom  which  is  hovering  near. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

To  the  lee  they  are  gazing,  and  tense  are  their  faces; 
The  green  dizzy  billows  roll  up  like  a  wall. 
(Black  Death  is  most  bitter  In  horrible  places) 
Like  a  monster  they  follow,  they  hang  like  a  pall 
Above  and  around, — a  green  demon  of  doom, 
And  dismal  the  depths,  and  yawning  the  tomb. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

Fast  and  still  faster  the  gale  blows  the  vessel; 
Harsh  and  still  harsher  rise  terrified  cries; 
Black  and  still  blacker  the  night  which  they  wrestle ; 
High  and  still  higher  the  seething  foam  flies ; 
Near  and  still  nearer  comes  the  shuddering  wail, 
'Till  they  behold  in  their  terror  a  wraith  at  their  rail ! 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

And  the  darkness  Is  lit  by  a  flash  from  a  cloud 
Which  illumines  the  frenzy  of  the  tempest-tossed  sea: 
The  rough  rigging  rattles,  the  thunders   roll  loud, 
While  the  maddened,  churned  waters  rush  over  the  lee; 
And  the  men  gaze  in  fear  at  the  ghastly  chill  sight 
Of  the  face  in  the  abyss  as  it  cries  in  its  fright, 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  53 

"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!"     They  shake  off  their  terror 
Which  had  chained  up  their  limbs,  and  had  frozen  their 

blood. 
Some  spring  to  the  rail  to  redeem  their  sad  error, 
For  a  mortal  is  struggling  with  the  Fiend  of  the  Flood. 
"Man  overboard !    Man  overboard !"    With  frantic  dismay 
They  throw  out  a  buoy,  but  it  dashes  away! 

"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

"Out  with  the  lines!"  and,  "Out  with  the  life-boat!" 
With  the  strength  of  distraction  they  would  brave  those 

fierce  waves; 
But  o'er  the  roar  of  the  tempest  the  captain  gives  orders, 
"  'Twould  be  madness !     The  seeking  of  watery  graves !" 
And  the  cry  is  now  fainter,  and  vanished  the  face. 
Displaced  by  the  storm-howls,  the  hurricane's  race. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

On  rushes  the  vessel  on  the  wings  of  the  gale. 
But  that  glimpse  of  the  face,  disheveled  with  spume, 
Will  e'er  be  remembered,  and  a  last  sobbing  wail 
Like  the  sound  of  a  soul  thrust  out  to  his  doom 
Comes  down  on  the  wind  and  hovers  above — 
Despairing  and  hideous,  a  voice  from  the  grave, — 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

'Tis  heard  for  a  moment,  that  gasp  of  despair; 
'Tis  mixed  with  the  screech  of  the  demon's  dread  shout, 
It  rests  on  the  masthead  and  hovers  in  air, 
Then  is  swallowed  in  the  crash  of  the  avalanch  about. 
And  the  shipmen,  they  stagger  with  wide-staring  eyes. 
For  each  shriek  is  the  echo  of  those  heart-rending  cries. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 


54       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

'Twas  morn  on  the  Atlantic  and  far  out  at  sea 
The^  undulating  billows  roll  musically, 
And  the  calm  of  the  air,  with  silence  serene, 
Gave  courage  to  the  shipmen  who  beheld  the  bright  day ; 
While  the  dismantled  Petrel  responds  to  the  swell 
Like  the  roll  of  the  clapper  in  an  iron-tongued  bell. 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy!" 

And  stretched  on  old  ocean's  abysmal  bed, 
Having  struggled   with  death,   crying  "Ship  ahoy!" 
Is  the  form  of  a  being,  cold,  ghastly  and  dead. 
A  sad  mother  is  lonely,  and  weeps  for  her  boy. 
While  the  melancholy  muse  seems  to  hover  in  air, 
And  the  sobbing  sea  murmurs  that  threne  of  despair, 
"Ship  ahoy!     Ship  ahoy  I" 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  SS 


ODE  TO  THE  SAGINAW 

Flow  on,  thou  muddy  stream  with  melancholy  gloom, 

And   haunted  by  the  spirits  of  thy  strife! 

On  and  on  thy  broadening  waters  flow, 

Even  far  unto  the  wraith  of  the  waters  blue  beyond, 

Where,  like  the  soul  of  man,  the  life 

Of  mortals  merging  into  the  flow  of  Time  Eternal, 

Thou  art  merged,  and  faded,  and  lost. 

And  swallowed  up  in  the  pure  cold  floods 

Of  the  calm  and  soothing  lake. 

On  and  on  flow,  until  the  gods 
Of  storms  bend  low  and  lift  thy  misty  form 
Unto  the  quiet  skies,  to  be  there  driven 
In  the  maddened  presence  of  long-gone  warriors. 
Who  bivouaced  on  thy  murmuring  banks,  and,  filled 
Complete  with  restless  spirit  of  the  tribe, 
Rush  hence  in  chaos,  rumbling  fiery  paths 
Across  the  desolate  heavens,  until  the  burst 
Of  fiends  awake  the  earth  in  fierce 
And  drenching  displays  upon  the  seething  pines, 
And  strike  the  awed  living  with  thy  terrors ; 
Or,  perchance,  drop  like  gentle  blessings 
From  the  hand  of  the  Eternal  One 
Upon  the  sere  and  thirsting  fields  below, — 
The  curled  corn,  the  drooping  rye,  and  crackling  wheat,- 
All  dry  and  parched  for  thy  gentle  kiss, — 
And  make  them  green  and  succulent  again. 
While  the  tiny  phoebe  gives   its  plaintive  cry 
In  tender  ministerings  to  its  peeping  young. 
And,  in  peace  the  kine  go  full-fed  to  pastured  glen; 
While  the  rustic  home,  long-dead  to  strife 
And  weirdly-chanted  warriors  songs, 


56        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Becomes  again  the  lasting  bode  of  joy, 
Revived  and  blessed  thrice  by  thy  imperial  gift. 

Steadily,  silently,  slowly  thou  movest,  O  River, 
O'er  thy  once  more  riotous,  turbulent  bed ! 
Now  thou  art  quiet,  nor  gives  the  murmuring  ripple 
One  voice  to  tell  of  the  multitudinous  early  dramas 
That  startled  thy  oozing  banks,  and  spread  thy  sides 
In  gaping  wounds,  as  o'er  thy  sullen  breasts 
The  ghostly  birch  did  glide,  and  disappear, — 
To  be  the  wraith  of  many  a  dismal  scene, 
And  angry  war-fires  gleamed  their  threatening  rays 
Between  the  spectre  trees,  while  high  above 
Most  awesome  ghouls  would  dance  and  chant 
Their  direful  dirges  in  the  dank  and  dungeon  gloom, 
To  rouse  the  ghosts  of  long  departed  warriors  from 
Their  mouldering  graves,  and  join  the  treacherous  throng. 
Ottawa  tribes  with  weird  and  loathsome  task; 
And  soon  again  the  stealthy  Iroquois; 
And  then  anon  through  dawning  of  the  trees 
The  early  settler  dared  to  press  within 
Thy  mystic  solitudes,  and  brave  thy  'stonished  wrath. 

But  now  thou  art  dumb.     Thy  waves  are  mute. 
And  even  the  mighty  walls  that  rose  with  harsh 
And  rasping  noises  on  thy  once  wild  banks, 
Are  falling  low  again,  in  mute  decay. 
While  from  the  dark  and  caverned  depths  of  some 
Sequestered  glade  I  seem  to  hear  a  wail 
Which  sobs  the  last  low  requiem  of  the  past. 
That  made  the  solitudes  alive  with  strident  man 
W^o  churned  thy  crystal  bowels  and  grandly  rode 
The  fallen  monarch  of  the  wilds  adown  thy  breast. 
All  are  dead,  and  following,  too,  the  later  tribe, 
New-bom  upon  the  ashes  of  the  old, 
And  living  through  desires  of  the  tongue ; 
And  soon,  alas,  the  newer  dawn  of  happier  hope 
Shall  pass  away,  and  fade,  and  be  no  more ; 
For  earthly  things  may  live,  may  grow,  and  rise, 


BALLADS  AND  SKETCHES  57 

But  born  of  man,  must  reach  to  death  at  last; 

While,  thou,  O  stream,  wilt  flow  ceaseless 

On  and  on,  without  an  end, 

Forever  and  forever,  making  the  trembling  grass 

Green  again  with  newer  life,  and  quench 

The  parching  thirst  of  myriad-unborn  tribes, 

Till  they  again  will  sink  into  the  cool 

Dark  earth,  and  be  like  to  the  clod 

From  whence  they  sprang — unknown,  mysterious 

Sentries  of  the  eternal  march  of  time. 

Yet  ceaseless  wilt  thou  flow,  stream  of  hope, 

Until  thy  curving  banks  and  reed-boughed  sides 

Shall,  like  a  faithful  soul,  remain  to  be 

The  emblem  of  a  life  well  spent  in  noble  toil; 

And  in  thy  dimming  age,  centuries  having  passed, 

Shalt  thou  dream  along  unconfined 

And  hoary  with  the  nobleness  of  work  well  done, 

Gliding  smooth  into  the  everlasting  calm 

Of  sanctified  rest. — 

But  not  to  die. 
For  the  trumpet-cry  of  yon  new  stars'  creation 
Shall  sound  thee  to  a  resurrection 
Far  flung  from  lethe  of  age;  for  pulse 
Shall  bound  again  within  thy  veins — 
The  pulse  of  youth  revived,  and  startled 
Into  feverish  joy  of  service  pure  which  guides 
Thee  ever  to  the  might  of  that  one  power  divine 
But  not  omnipotent,  thou  shalt  flow  on  again. 
As  of  yore,  until  the  dome  of  time  shall  sound 
No  more,  and  heaven's  arch  shall  fall. 
For,  O  mighty  stream,  as  the  soul 
Returns  to  youth  from  a  former  sphere, 
And  dying  ever  seeks  its  higher  end, 
Shalt  thou  go  and  live,  a  youth  renewed — 
A  murmuring  brook,  a  stream,  and  mighty  waters, — 
And  ever  flow — without  end. 

Flow  on  and  on,  thou  stream  of  life. 
And  never  bend  at  weaker  will. 


58       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Nor  halt  afraid,  nor  turn  nor  dwell 
Where  aught  but  duty  calls,  until 
The  eons  of  time  and  wrecks  of  strife 
Attune  thy  work  to  grandest  power — 
The  guardians  of  the  sacred  hour 
When  life  and  death  shall  meet  at  last — 
And  from  its  aged  bed  shall  spring 
Another  youthful  sparkling  stream,  which  cast 
Its  spray  of  crystal  more  and  more 
Far  out  and  far,  until  the  wing 
Of  Time  shall  fall,  and  o'er  and  o'er 
The  fartherest  space  shall  be 
Endless  life — Eternity. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS 

GOOD  NIGHT 

The  evening  breezes  are  gently  blowing; 

They  echo  the  warble  of  the  drowsy  blue-bird; 
In  pasture  and  barnyard  the  kine  are  now  lowing, 

And  the  wail  of  the  whip-poor-will  weirdly  is  heard: 
'Tis  the  hour  of  vespers,  when  all  is  still; 
When  Phoebus  resigns  to  Somnus's  will, 
And  Dreamland's   revery  in   fancies   thrill. 

Good  night,  Eola,  dear  heart,  good  night! 

The  tall  linden  is  rustling  in  a  low,  sweet  murmur, 
A  deep  sigh  for  the  dreams  of  the  days  long  past; 
It  breathes  a  prayer  with  quivering  tremor. 
And  drowsily  nods  in  the  caressing  blast: 
Its  aroma,  the  incense  of  nature's  sweet  balm, 
The  censer  of  silence,  makes  redolent  calm. 
And  as  acolyte  of  Nature  now  chants  a  low  psalm. 
Good  night,  sweet  loved  one,  Eola,  good  night! 

The  melodious  brook,  with  low  gurgle  and  bubble. 
Reflects  the  dark  leaves  of  the  aspens  above ; 

Still  gathering  the  gold  from  the  sunlight's  fair  double. 
Secretes  it  in  caskets  of  bark  in  the  grove: 

Tis  a-weary  with  dancing;  its  ripplings  now  falter; 

It  glides  calm  and  still  o'er  the  moss-hidden  altar, 

Soft-lulled  to  its  dreams  by  yon  low-whispered  psalter. 
Good  night,  my  fair  one,  Eola,  good  night! 

Now  hushed  and  silent  the  moss-greened  mill-wheel ; 

All  wrapped  in  deep  slumber  white  pond-lilies  dream  ; 
Below  foaming  mill-dam  the  brook  forms  a  f roth-weel 

To  whirl  elfin  skiffs  down  yon  silver-flecked  stream. 

01 


62       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

The  lengthening  shadows  gloom  ivy  and  gable, 
And,  purpling  the  moss-mounds,  soon  blend  into  sable ; 
And  soft  creeps  the  night  wind,  a  breath  from  a  fable. 
Good  night,  my  own  love,  Eola,  good  night ! 

Dan  Chaucer's  shy  daisies  have  closed  their  soft  petals. 

And  nod  in  their  cradles  of  velvet  and  down ; 
The   gossamer-winged    bee   has    long   buzzed    its    grave 
trentals 
For  mouldering  dead,  and  has  flown  with  its  crown. 
Loud  crickets  are  chirping  a  vespertine  lay, 
And  echoing  responses  the  kat}-dids   play 
In  the  gloom  of  the  forest.     They're  silent  by  day. 
So  good  night,  Eola,  my  dear  one,  good  night! 

Hear   the    frogs !     They   are   grumbling   in   yon    dismal 
lowland, 
The  bird-choir  of  nature  was  silent  at  eve; 
And  at  twilight  the  trombones  of  Pan's  croaking  frog- 
band 
Began  their  loud  nocturne;  awakening  the  greave 
Illumed  by  the  Stardust  that  flits  through  the  vale 
Like  sparks   from  a  comet  that  dart  green  and  pale ; 
Now  high   'mong  the  branches,  now  lowly  they   sail. 
So  rest,  my  sweet  child  .  love,  Eola,  good  night ! 

The  darkness,   fast  deepening,   spreads   gloom   o'er  the 
azure, 
And  red  throbs  Aurora  from  northerly  heights; 
Bright  Orion  glistens  for  Diana's  loved  pleasure, 

And  the  Pleiades  precede  him,  now  faintly,  now  bright. 
Milk-white   lies    Heaven's   archway,    fast   studding   with 

spheres. 
Mirrored   by   dewdrops,    sweet   Heaven-sent   tears; 
While  low  o'er  the  poplars  slim  Phoebe  appears. 

Good  night,   little   Blue-eyes;  Eola,  good  night  I 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  63 

Your  eyes  now  grow  drowsy ;  your  thoughts  fit'ly  wander ; 

The  poppies  have  wafted  their  juice  to  your  mind; 
Naive  Iris  has  opened  the  cave-doors  up  yonder, 

And  Morpheus  appears,  with  Phantasos  behind; 
So,  good  night,  chubby  child-love,  and  sweet  be  thy  sleep ! 
Seek  rest  from  thy  child-play  in  slumber's  lethe-deep! 
May  happ'ly  and  safely  thy  Mentor  thee  keep. 

Good  night,   little   dreamer;   Eola,   good   night! 


64      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


WHEN  I  COME  HO^IE  AT  NIGHT 

Oh,  I  love  to  be  away  and  work  all  day 

At  my  office  in  the  town, 
Where  the  street  cars  clang  and  the  'busses  bang, 

And  my  forehead  takes  its  frown; 
But  I  love  still  more  to  slam  the  door 

Of  that  office,  good  and  tight, 
And  rush  right  back  'long  the  railroad  track 

To  my  home  and  pals  at  night. 

It's  the  greatest  thing  to  take  the  wing 

Of  the  trains  and  hurry  home, 
Where  the  children  wait  for  me  at  the  gate, 

For  they  know  when  I  must  come. 
And  they  shout  with  glee  when  the  youngsters  see 

Me  swing  at  last  in  sight; 
Oh,  'tis  the  happiest  time,  the  hour  sublime, 

W^hen  I  come  home  at  night. 

They  rush  along  with  shout  and  song 
When  they  see  me  tramping  there. 
And  they  kick  up  their  heels  and  let  out  hard  squeals 

Of  joy  which  fills  the  air; 
While  our  Laddie  dog,  with  ears  agog 

And  grinning  his  delight. 
Wags  his  bushy  tail  in  a  hearty  hail 
When  I  come  home  at  night. 

And  the  baby  climbs  about  forty  times 

Right  up  my  arching  back 
To  hug  her  Daddy  and  then  play  paddy, 

And  give  him  a  hearty  smack ; 
While  joyous  Eola  with  glorious  aureola 

Of  hair,  and  eyes  alight. 
Gives  a  hug  and  a  kiss  of  a  sweet  young  miss, 

As  I  come  home  at  night. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  64 


Ah,  if  one  sweet  hour  lies  within  the  power 
Of  God  to  grant  all  men, 
I  pray  it  will  be  that  he  gives  to  thee 

The  joy  he  gives  me  then, 
For  my  dear,  true  wife,  with  the  peace  of  life 
Shining  through  the  eons'  flight, 
Joins  the  happy  throng,  as  we  frolic  along, 
When  I  come  home  at  night. 


66       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


HOW  BABY  PHYLLIS  CAME 

Along  the  bubbling  brook  we  walked. 

That  slumbering  day  in  lazy  fall, 
And  watched  the  lagging  clouds  above 

The  noble  poplars  straight  and  tall ; 
We  flecked  the  foam  from  dancing  waves 

That  rippled  through  our  finger  tips, 
Like  roguish  laughing  fairy  knaves 

That  rushed  away  like  fairy  ships. 

And  in  each  wave  we  saw  the  eyes 

Of  a  brown-orbed  child  with  outstretched  arni — 
A  pleading  face  of  olive  tint 
With  crinkling  hair  of  golden  charm ; 
While  through  the  whispering  oaken  trees 

We  heard  the  lilting  laughter  trill, 
A-carried  high  by  the  playful  breeze 
And  echoed  by  a  whip-poor-will. 

The  rustling  reeds  grew  lush  and  green, 

A  flame-patched  mass  where  the  woodbine  flashed, 
And  in  the  heart  of  the  dream-lined  sheen 

We  saw  a  stork  where  the  water  splashed, — 
A  God-sent  earnest  of  a  happy  love 

As  we  kissed  and  all  our  longing  fled. 
Yes,  even  the  skies  had  a  treasure-trove, 
For  its  blessing  rested  on  our  head. 

The  Spirit  of  Love  slid  down  a  beam 

That  shimmered  aslant  from  the  glinting  sun, 
And  lost  itself  in  a  fragrant  dream 

That  fell  like  a  shower  from  the  holy  one; 
Then  a  golden  leaf  rocked  in  the  breeze 

And  softly  fell  through  the  mauve-gray  air 
And  twirling  gently  as  you  please, 

It  kissed  my  bride  upon  her  hair. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  67 


"I'S  DEST  A  LITTLE  DIRL,  DADDY"  * 

"Fs  dest  a  little  dirl,  Daddy, 

So  don't  scold  me  any  more, 
I  know  I  dropped  'ur  shavin'  mug 

Upon  the  bathroom  floor 
And  busted  it  in  lots  of  pieces 

And  cut  my  little  hand, 
But  I  didn't  do  it  a  purpose,  Daddy, 

It  walked  right  off  the  stand; 
So  please,  I's  dest  a  little  dirl.  Daddy, 

Don't  scold  me  any  more. 

"Oh,  Daddy,  I  love  you  awful  much, 

More  than  my  heart  can  hold. 
And  it  hurts  right  here  if  you  look  so  cross, 

And  then  begin  to  scold. 
For  something  comes  right  in  my  throat 

And  I  choke  and  then  I  cry. 
For  I  dest  can't  stand  when  you  look  at  me 

With  that  frown  right  in  your  eye ; 
So  please,  Fs  dest  a  little  dirl.  Daddy, 

Don't  scold  me  any  more. 

"One  day  you  hurt  me  awful  hard 

When  I  stepped  upon  your  speck 
And  broke  in  two  what  belonged  to  you, 

And  you  called  it  just  a  wreck; 
But  Daddy,  I  couldn't  see  it  there 

A  lying  on  the  floor, 
And  I  didn't  try  to  make  a  hole 

In  the  pretty  dress  I  wore; 

*  Dedicated  to  all  the  little  girls  whose  daddies  do  not  under- 
stand that  they  do  not  wilfully  disobey. 


68       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

So  please,  I's  dest  a  little  dirl,  Daddy, 
Don't  scold  me  any  more/' 

Ah !  I  hear  that  lisp  of  the  childish  lips. 

The  sob  in  the  infant  throat, 
And  my  eyes  fill  up  with  burning  tears 

At  the  pain  in  the  trembling  note, 
And  I  swear  that  never  again  will  I 

Be  cross  to  that  little  elf, 
For  I  know  that  blame  rests  not  on  her 

But  more  upon  myself. 
And  I  clasp  her  high  in  my  aching  arm. 

To  prove  my  love  in  store. 
And  I  press  her  hard  against  my  breast, 

And  will  never  scold  her  more. 

For  deep  and  true  is  my  parent  love 

As  I  kiss  her  long  brown  curl; 
Yes,  I  know  she  always  means  it  well. 

For  she  is  just  my  little  girl ; 
But  through  the  years  until  the  grave 

Closes  round  my  mouldering  form, 
And  through  all  Time  and  Eternity, 

Through  sunshine  and  through  storm, 
I  will  hear  that  Hsp  of  the  childish  lips 

As  her  frightened  eyes  raise  from  the  floor, 
"I's  dest  a  little  dirl,  Daddy, 

Please  don't  scold  me  any  more." 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  69 


SIR  BLUE  BOTTLE  FLY 

Bumble-Bumble,  Buzz-a-buzz, 

I  think  I  hear  a  fly. 
It  sounds  like  the  proud  Lord  Rumble  Bottle, 

So  let  us  watch  him,  you  and  I. 
Bumble-Bumble,  Buzz-a-buzz, 

See,  my  baby,  there  he  goes. 

Look  out,  old  grumbler,  where  you  sail  to. 

There!  I  thought  you'd  bump  your  nose! 

Bumble-Bumble,  Buzz-a-buzz, 

Up  and  down  the   pane  you  crawl, 
Can't  you  see  the  door  is  open  ? 

Why  this  fuss?    Look  out,  you'll  fall! 
Hi  there,  fuzz-top,  stop  your  mumbling 

You  can't  punch  right  through  that  glass. 
Look,  there,  baby,  he's  most  angry, 

'Cause  t'wont  let  his  lordship  pass. 

Bumble-Bumble,  Buzz-a-buzz, 

Why,  I  declare  he's  quite  outrageous; 
The  way  he  strikes  that  window  casing 

'Ud  make  you  think  him  most  courageous ; 
Now,  baby,  see  him  fly  away — 

Perhaps  he's  left  us   in  a  huff. 
Well,  I  know  'tis  a  wise  blue  bottle 

When  he  knows  he  has  enough. 


70      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


OUWOOCHEEGAROO 

It  was  misty  and  damp  and  chilly  and  cold ; 

Tee- whit,  tee-hoo,  tee  hoo ! 
And  the  frogs  in  the  bogs  could  hardly  scold, 

Garoo !     Garoo !      Gwa   hoo ! 
And  the  dismal  trees  in  the  ghostly  woods 
Whispered  their  tales  beneath  their  hoods, 
And  flung  their  arms  like  ghastly  broods, 
For  they  were  growing  old,  and  felt  the  cold. 

Ouwoocheegaroo !  garoo ! 

An  ancient  owl  sat  up  in  the  tree ; 

Tee- whit,  tee-hoo,  tee  hoo ! 
And  blinked  his  goggles  so  he  could  see, 

Tee-whit,  tee-hoo,  tee  hoo-oo ! 
He  was  cold  as  the  trees  that  shivered  around, 
And  thought  'twould  be  warmer  on  the  ground ; 
So  he  flopped  and  bumped  to  a  mouldering  mound, 
Like  a  dervish  adancing  a  blind  boree. 

Garoo !    Wa  Hoo,  boo-oo ! 

But  the  frogs  groaned  out  in  hoarse  dismay, 

*'Garoo!     Garoo!     Gwa  hoo! 
Oh,  Mr.  Owl,  Better  fly  away ! 

Garoo !     Garoo !    Gwa  hoo ! 
For  a  ghost  will  come  and  catch  you  sure ! 
And  the  goblins  will  gobble,  and  the  whishties  lure, 
And  against  their  power  there  is  no  cure. 
So  you'd  better  mind  just  what  we  say  I 

Garoo!     Garoo!     Gwa  hoo!" 

Yet  that  owl  knew  better,  so  old  and  wise, 

"Tee  whit!    Tee  hoo!    What?  Who-oo!" 


4 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  71 

So  he  stuck  up  his  ears  and  opened  his  eyes, 
"Tee  whit!    What?    Whoo!    Ohnoor 
With  haughty  proud  look  and  a  knowing  sneer 
We  blinked  through  the  gloom  and  tried  to  hear 
What  the  winds  were  quarreling  about  so  near. 
But  soon  he  grew  drowsy,  and  nodded  with  sighs, 
"Tee  hoo!     Fm  sleepy,   I  knoo-o!" 

Then  he  snored  and  forgot  he  was  out  of  his  tree. 

Tee  hoo !  Garoo  I    Wha  hoo ! 
But  bre'r  fox  sniffed  around  and  saw  him  in  glee, 

"Ki  hoo !    tra  loo !    Wha  hoo ! 
Well,  here  is  my  supper !"  And  with  a  bound 
He  snatched  that  owl  from  off  that  mound, 
And  whirled  with  the  feathers  round  and  round. 
While  the  terrified  frogs  forgot  their  plea, 

Garoo!     Garoo!     Gwa  hoo-00! 

Now  the  hoot  of  the  owl  is  heard  no  more; 

Tee  whit,  tee  hoo,  tee  hoo-00 ! 
And  the  tale  is  droned  in  the  hoarse  frog  lore, 

Garoo !    Garoo  !    Gwa  hoo ! 
Much  better  had  it  been  if  that  feathered  sage 
Had  taken  th'  advice  of  the  younger  in  age 
'Bout  a  thing  they  knew,  though  he  was  a  mage. 
And  I  hope  'tis  a  lesson  not  lore, 

Ouwoocheegaroo ! — garoo ! 


72       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


MY  LITTLE  BABY  BRUVVER 

Oo,  Gramma!     I'm  so  glad  you  came 

To  see  my  mamma  'cause  she's  sick, 
But  you  can't  guess  now,  just  the  same, 

What's  laying  on  our  new  bed-tick! 
It's  got  two  eyes,  and  got  a  nose, 

And  ain't  got  hair  upon  its  head : 
An'  it's  got  two  hands  and  tiny  toes 

And,  My !    Grandma  !  its  skin  is  red ! 

And  when  I  came  up  in  the  room 

Where  mamma  called  for  me  to  see, 
I  was  so  glad  that  I  kissed  him 

Fer  he  s  just  as  cute  as  he  kin  be. 
An'  oh  I  loved  to  see  his  eyes. 

And  he  opened  wide  his  weeny  lid, 
And  my  mamma  sings  when  bab}-  cries, 

An'  it  stopped  right  oft,  my  bruvver  did. 

I  guess  it  knows  that  we  love  it, 

And  want  it  soon  to  run  around, 
For  when  Dad  comes  to  stay  a  bit, 

He  tiptoes  in,  don't  make  a  sound; 
An'  I  just  have  to  be  so  still. 

When  I  want  to  play  and  romp  and  jump, 
Fer  a  noise  wakes  bruvver — sure  it  will. 

An'  even  my  handball  gives  a  thump.  ■ 

But  just  the  same,  Gramma,  I'm  glad 

That  little  bruvver  came  to  town, 
Fer  now  v/e  bofe  belong  to  Dad. 

And  that,  you  see,  I  fink  is  boun* 
To  make  him  gladder  than  ever  before, 

And  he  will  work  so  hard  because 
That  when  we  need  lots  more  of  toys, 

Our  Dad  will  be  our  Santa  Glaus. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  73 


THE  OOGILITHUMP 

Look  out,  look  out  for  the  Oogilithump 
Or  he'll  ketch  you,  ketch  you,  sure; 
He's  prowlin'  aroun'  most  every  night 
To  ketch  ya  if  you're  thar. 
He  snoops  aroun'  and  prowls  aroun'. 
Like  old  Nick  just  come  from  hades, 
(I  couldn't  use  the  word  I  wanted 
Because  I  see  some  ladies) 
M-hm ! 

But  the  Oogilithump  is  an  orful  thing, 

An'  he  gobbles  you — just  like  that. 

An'  he  eats  you  up !    Even  your  shoes  and 

clothes. 
An'  he  foUers  it  with  yer  hat. 
An',  an',  he  prowls  aroun'  an'  he  prowls  aroun', 
When  the  night  is  orful  dark; 
An'  he  sneaks,  right  up,  behind  you  quick 
When  yer  walkin'  in  the  park. 
M-hm! 

Oo !    Look  at  thar !    What's  at  that  glass 

Appearin'  in  that  winder! 

It's  got  eyes  as  big  as  the  isteeple-house, 

An'  red  as  a  fiery  cinder! 

Oh,  golly,  look  out  fer  the  Oogilithump, 

An'  never  run  out  at  night, 

Fer  he'll  kotch  ya  sure  if  ya  fool  aroun' 

An'  give  ya  an  orful  fright ! 

M-hm! 

An'  I  know  what  I'm  talkin'  about, 
Fer  I  guess  I  ought  ter  know. 


74       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

An*  I  think  o*  it  when  I  wants  to  sneak 

Out  an'  go  where  I  oughten'  to  go ; 

Fer  I  heard  the  awful  yell  o'  that  thing 

As  he  hit  me  on  the  head, 

An'  I  thought  I  was  caught  in  a  cyclone,  bing! 

An'  was  nearly  almost  dead. 

One  night  my  ma  and  pa  went  out 
T'  attend  the  preacher's  meetin', 
An'  left  me  home  wi'  sissy  there, 
Ma  said  'twould  be  but  fleetin'; 
An'  pa  he  said  fer  me  to  stay. 
So  sis  would  not  be  sceered, 
An'  fer  me  not  to  run  away, — 
Tho'  nothing  could  be  feered. 

An'  he  said  that  if  I  went  outdoors 

I'd  hear  an  awful  screechin'. 

An'  the  Oogilithump  would  be  around 

An'  kotch  me  sure  as  preachin'. 

So  he  told  me  all  about  the  thing 

With  eyes  as  big  as  steeples, 

Which  prowled  aroun'  on  dark,  dark  nights, 

An'  et  up  all  the  peoples. 

M— hm! 

But,  huh !  ya  think  that  I  was  'f raid  ? 

Guess  not!  Fer  just  as  quick 

Ez  Ma  and  Pa  went  down  the  road 

I  scooted  lickety  click; 

An'  I  played  aroun'  for  a  long,  long  time, 

An'  I  didn't  see  that  ghost 

Thet  pa  had  called  the  Oogilithump, 

An'  had  forgotten  it  almost. 

When  all  on  a  sudden  I  heard  a  yell 
And  a  cuss-word  and  a  scream. 
An'  I  thought  I  was  hit  by  a  thousand  o'  brick 
Or  a  bull-jine  in  a  dream. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  75 

An'  a  thrashin'  machine  would  be  kinder  tame 
To  what  I  got  that  night, 
Gee  whiz,  the  noise,  and  the  bumps  I  got 
Was  just  a  holy  fright! 

An'  almost  dead  I  broke  away, 
While  the  monster  ran  right  after. 
And  the  more  I  ran,  the  more  he  ran — 
Tho  I  thought  I  heard  some  laughter; 
An'  I  broke  right  into  the  kitchen  door 
An'  slammed  it  tight  an'  quick. 
While  the  snarl  and  growl  I  heard  it  give, — 
I'll  bet  it  was  Old  Nick! 

An'  pretty  soon  my  Ma  came  home 

And  Pa  came  in  a  grinnin', 

But  I  couldn't  see  why  he  just  laf't. 

When  I  my  yarn  was  spinnin', 

For  he  sobered  quick  and  said  quite  sharp, 

"And  now,  you  little  feller. 

Just  stay  at  home,  or  he'll  get  you  yet, 

And  you'll  do  more  than  beller." 

M-hm! 

So  look  out,  look  out  fer  the  Oogilithump, 

Or  he'll  kotch  you,  kotch  you  sure; 

Fer  he's  prowlin'  aroun',  and  prowlin'  aroun* 

An'  he'll  get  you,  if  yer  thar. 

Fer  the  Oogilithump  is  an  orful  thing. 

An'  he  gobbles  you — just  like  that. 

Fer  he  loves  to  grab  little  boys  and  girls 

Who  are  bad — I  tell  you  what ! 

H— hm! 


76       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  BELLS  OF  SANTA 

Listen,  Phyllis,  do  you  hear  the  bells  of  Santa  coming 
near? 
Jingling  o'er  the  distant  hill,  tinkling  on  the  air  so  still? 
Now  they  sound  so  merrily,  tinkling  out  so  cheerily, 
At  the  window  place  your  ear,  for  Santa's  bells  are  draw- 
ing near. 

Jing-a-ling,  ting-a-ling  as  he  comes.     I  wonder  does  he 

bring  some  drums? 
Wonder  if  he  has  your  doll?    Wonder  if  he's  short  or 

tall? 
Wonder  if  he'll  leave  his  pack?     Oh,  may  I  see  him 
through  a  crack? 
Phyllis,  listen,  do  you  hear? 
Santa's  bells  are  drawing  near. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  77 


"I  EXPECT" 

I  expect  that  now  I'm  in  for  a  row; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
I'm  allers  in  trouble  anyhow! 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
I  get  licked  for  things  I  never  do, 
Get  cuffed  by  my  dad  when  teacher  gets  through. 
And  alius  get  told  I  receive  my  due. 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 

I'm  in  heaps  of  trouble  and  orful  scared; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
But  yum! — them  cookies — they  disappeared; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
Ma  made  some  jam  and  put  it  away. 
And  baked  some  cookies  the  other  day, 
And  hid  all  the  goodies  away  from  me; 

O,  I  dunno,  I  expect. 

Then  she  went  and  visited  a  neighbor  friend ; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
"Now  be  good,  Httle  Johnny,  you  understand?" 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
I  was  just  as  good  as  I  could  be. 
An'  played  with  the  cat,  an'  skinned  my  knee, 
An'  touch  that  jam? — 'm — 'm — not  me! 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 

But  that  durned  cat  must  have  eaten  the  jam; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
And  stolen  the  cookies  and  cut  the  ham; 

I  dunno,  I  expect, 
For  when  I  went  in  the  house  to  see 


78       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

If  the  preserves  was  there,  ('s  it  ort  to  be,) 
I  found  it  all  gone, — (yum  yum) — by  gee! 
Oh,  I  dunno,  I  expect. 

I  like  preserves^ — ^you  bet  I  do ! 

"I  dunno,  I  expect," 
An'  bread  an*  ham  and  cookies  too! 

"I  dunno,  I  expect," 
But  I  didn't  touch  that  jar  of  jam, 
And  I  wasn't  hungry  enough  for  ham, 
But  as  allers  the  way,  I'll  get  the  blame; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 

Oh,  looket  there  I     What's  on  my  face  ? 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
Well  I  declare!     It's  jam  and  grease, 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
That  blamed  old  cat  must  have    kissed  me  there, 
Or  how  did  it  get  on  my  face,  an'  my  hair? 
Great  Caesar,  I'm  in  for  it, — but  I  don't  care. 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 

When  ma  comes  home — gee,  won't  she  be  mad? 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
An'  I'll  get  licked,  I  suppose,  by  my  dad; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
But  if  I  ever  catch  that  cat  again 
A  stealin'  the  jam  and  a  kissin'  me,  when 
I  didn't  do  nothin' — (yum — ^yum — I'll  grin), 

O,  I  dunno,  I  expect. 

For  a  boy  is  a  boy  in  spite  of  his  faults, 

I  dunno,  I  expect, 
An'  he's  hungry  for  jam,  just  as  well  as  cats, 

I  dunno,  I  expect, 
An'  if  I'ni  to  get  licked  for  another's  doin', 
I  wanter  have  the  fun  of  doin'  the  chewing; 
But  I  didn't  do  this — 'm  'm — not  a  thing; 

O,  I  dunno,  I  expect 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  79 

Some  day  when  I  grow  up  to  be  a  man, 

I  dunno,  I  expect, 
1*11  get  the  better  of  the  old  folks  then, 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
I'll  look  back  on  the  time  of  apple  jam. 
And  laugh  with  the  folks  about  stealin'  ham, 
And  joke 'bout  that  cat  in  epigram; 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 

But  sh! — not  a  word,  for  here  comes  ma, 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
And  thundering  saints !  if  there  ain't  pa ! 

I  dunno,  I  expect. 
Gee!  where  did  that  cat  put  all  the  preserve? 
Now  I've  got  to  face  it,  and  I  ain't  got  nerve, 
"Hello,  Ma,"   (watch,  get  outer  my  curve;) 

NOW  I  dunno — but  i  expect! 


8o      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


JOHNNY  SEES  THE  COURTIN' 

Golly! 

Sis  is  all  spruced  up  tonight, 

An'  she's  mighty  fidgity  and  finicky,  too, 

Her  hair  is  curled  an'  curled  an'  curled, 

And  she's  got  pink  ribbons  on  her  shoe;  (giggle) 

An'  her  dress !  oh  Lor !  how  it  does  bunch 

Out  all  around*  her  like  a  balloon ; 

With  starch  in  the  skirt,  an'  starch  in  the  waist — 

An' — an' — she's  ironed  it  over  twice  since  noon; 

An'  her  face!  (haw)  she  warshed  it  four  or  five  times, 

And  looked  in  the  mirror  to  see  'f  it  was  clean. 

An'  she  used  a  lemon  on  her  freckled  nose — (he  he!) 

An'  I  told  her  she'd  better  use  some  benzine,    (ho  ho !) 

And  she  got  all  het  an'  furious,  she  did. 
And  chas't  me  out  and  slammed  the  door. 
An'  called  on  ma  to  keep  me  out, 

So's  I  couldn't  come  in  and  bother  no  more,     (giggle) 
And  I  just  climbed  up  on  a  barrel  in  the  yard, 
An'  peeked  right  into  her  window  then. 
So  I  seed  her  use  some  uv  ma's  flour,  I  did. 
Slopped  it  on  her  face,  and  then  rubbed  it  in, 
An'  'en  she  just  used  my  rabbit's  foot 
That  I  wondered  where  the  old  thing  had  gone. 
And  I  saw  her  pat  it  up  and  down. 
And  criss-cross  like  a  mower  *goin'  over  the  lawn, 
(he  he!) 

An'  my!  warnt  she  just  all  dolled  up? 

An'  primped  and  frizzled  just  fittin'  to  kill?     (he  he!) 

Fer  I  knew  what  she  was  a  doin'  it  f er, — 

She  expects  to  land  thet  old  fule.  Bill. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  8i 

Huh!    Bill  Eckels,  the  man  who  couldn't  sing 

Worth  a  cent  at  church — tho  he  thinks  he  can, — 

With  a  curl  in  his  hair,  an'  gold  in  his  tooth. 

Guess  I  kin  pick  out  a  lot  better  style  man.     (humph !) 

And  ma  said,  "Now  Milly,  just  see  tonight 

Ef  ya  can't  bring  thet  tarnation  simp  to  book, 

Fer  he's  been  coming  on  here  fer  nigh  on  two  year, 

An'  soon  he'll  be  getting  right  off  'en  yer  hook." 

So  Milly  is  all  goshed  and  perked  to  kill, 
An'  I'll  betch  ya  he'll  have  a  deuce  uv  a  time 
When  he  comes  an'  tries  to  call  on  my  siss. 
Without  his  nerve  is  all  set  in  hard  lime, 
Fer  Wow!  she  means  the  bizz  tonight. 
An'  Bill  hez  just  got  to  say  something 
That  means  he's  goin'  to  be  a  member 
Of  us,  and  prove  it  with  a  weddin'  ring. 
But  Gee !  here  he  comes  right  at  the  door, — • 
Just  see  that  walk — ^an'  that  smirky  grin ; 
I'll  bet  they  make  a  hull  show  fer  themselves,- 
For  siss  is  so  fat — and  Bill  is  so  thin. 

Huh!     Looket  at  that  boquet  in  his  button  hole! 

And  his  hair  is  curled,  and  doped  with  oil; 

He's  got  spats  on  his  feet,  an'  gloves  an'  things, — 

Gosh !     He's  sure  callin'  on  his  own  best  girl !  (giggle) 

Sh !     Listen !     "Oh  deary,  so  glad  you  came, 

It's  lonesome  whenever  you've  been  away. 

It's  been  a  whole  year  since  you  heve  been  here,"  (haw) 

(Slush!  the  old  fool  was  here  just  yesterday.) 

"So  glad  I  came.     You  are  looking  sweet'* 

(Huh!  she'd  orter  by  the  time  she  put  on  her  hair.) 

"Ahem!     I  want  you — er — I  want  you, — er — Milly,'* 

"Oh,  Billy,  how  sudden !    Oh,  Billy  dear !" 

Gosh !  she  snapped  him  up  most  mighty  quick. 
But  he  wasn't  quite  ready  to  be  landed  yet. 
Just  looket  there — he  has  shied  right  off — 
And  has  almost  jumped  right  out  of  the  net. 


:82      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Listen, — "But  Milly — I  want, — I  mean — hm, 

I  want  ter  take  ye  right  down  ter  my  maw." 

"Oh  Billy  boy,  you  dear,  dear  boy, — 

Of  course,  but  first  you  must  ask  my  paw," 

And  she's  smiling  and  snickering  against  his  coat, 

Till  he  just  can't  help  himself  any  more — 

So  there  it  goes — his  arm  steals  around — 

Huh — ^you  needn't  think  I'll  peek  in  that  door! 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  83 


ROBIN  RED  BREAST 

"Cheer  up,  deary ;  cheer  up,  deary ;  cheer,  cheer !" 

What  is  this  strikes  on  my  half-startled  ear? 
"Cheer  up,  deary;  cheer  up,  deary;  cheer,  cheer  I" 

Sweet  comes  the  sound  now  far  and  now  near. 
Down  from  the  trees  a  flash  of  deep  red. 
With  a  flip  of  its  tail  and  a  flirt  of  its  head, 
Perking  its  wings  and  preening  its  crest, — 
"Why,  hello,  my  fellow,  'tis  Robin  Red  Breast!" 

"Chew  it;  chew  it;  chew  it,  dear!" 

Good  morning,  my  stranger,  what's  this  I  hear? 
"Cheer  up,  cheer  up,  cheer  up,  dear." 

Well  I  do  declare!    Spring  must  be  near! 
Far  from  the  fields  of  the  soft  southern  land 
You  challenge  the  winter  in  its  last  dismal  stand; 
Avaunt  to  the  cold  and  its  icy  north  blast! 
The  blossoms  are  coming  and  winter  is  past. 

•  •  • 

"Cheer  up,  deary,  cheer  up,  deary,  cheer  up,  dear !" 

A  new  note  is  sounded,  paen  of  good  cheer. 
"Cheer  up,  deary,  cheer  up,  deary ;  cheer  up,  dear !" 
The  gloom  days  are  over,  there's  nothing  to  fear. 
Ah,  see  how  he  peeks  through  the  half -open  door, 
And  struts  on  the  porch;  and  the  crumbs  on  the  floor 
Are  almost  enough  to  turn  his  head,  quite, — 
Well,  I'll  confess,  he'll  not  starve  tonight. 

"I  want  cherries,  I  want  cherries;  cherries,  dear!" 
What's  that,  you  rascal!    Now  isn't  it  queer, 

I  give  him  the  breadcrumbs,  and  this  what  I  hear, 
"I  want  cherries;  I  want  cherries;  cherries,  dear!" 


84       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Aha,  little  beggar,  you  steal  of  my   fruit 
And  then  in  my  presence  you  tune  on  your  lute! 
How  now,  little  glutton,  will  you  leave  me  a  berry? 
Why!     He  bows  in  his  pastime,  and  drops  me  a  cherry. 

He  drops  me  a  cherry  and  then  the  sly  rogue 

Flits  off  to  the  branches  and  derides  in  this  brogue; 
"Chew  it;  chew  it;  chew  it,  dear!" 

And  he  feasts  on  the  berries  so  lusciously  near. 
And  morning  and  noon,  and  the  dewy  eve 
His  liquid  sweet  notes  their  melody  weave, 
Till  the  thrill  of  the  joy  of  each  newborn  day 
Resolves  into  peace  that  will  ne'er  pass  away. 

Eat  on,  little  stranger,  in  me  behold  a  friend ; 

And  even  your  poaching  I  fain  will  defend ; 
But  a  tithe  do  you  ask  for  the  pleasure  you  give, 

And  your  heart  has  the  answer,  to  "Live  and  Let  Live." 
Not  a  sweet  do  you  take  but  you  return  to  us  two, 
And  the  psalms  to  your  sky  each  spring  you  renew, — 
Give  hope  to  the  dreary,  and  joy  to  us  all, 
And  always  you  hearten  with  your  cheerful  wild  call, 

"Cheer  up,  deary;  cheer  up,  deary;  cheer,  cheer!" 

Editor's  Note :  The  robin's  call  in  March  is  indicated  by 
the  first  two  stanzas.  The  Robin  changes  his  call  in  June 
when  the  cherries  are  ripe.  Listen  to  his  call  this  year  and  see 
for  yourself. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  85 


LEETLE  PETER  OOPDYKE 

Leetle  Peter  Oopdyke, 
He  vos  a  funny  feller, 
Ven  his  fader  spanked  him 
He  vood  begin  to  beller, 
But  when  his  mudder  luffed  him 
He  vood  begin  to  smile; 
Ach,  leetle  Peter  Oopdyke, 
Vas  laffin'  all  the  while. 

Leetle  Peter  Oopdyke, 
He  had  such  funny  klose — 
In  all  my  life  I  never  saw 
Some  panteys  yust  like  those, 
Dey  come  way  out  like  von  balloon 
Unt  like  a  bag  dey  hung, 
His  leetle  face  vos  like  a  moon, 
Yust  fresh  from  scrubbing  brung. 

Yas,  leetle  Peter  Oopdyke, 

He  vore  big  vooden  shoes 

Unt  clattered  up  around  the  house 

Ust  ven  I  wants  to  snooze; 

Unt  ven  I  tell  him,  "Go  avay 

Unt  no  more  make  dat  noise," 

He  oops  and  kissed  me  on  der  mout ; 

My,  vat  a  funny  boys ! 

But,  ach !  I  luf  dat  little  tyke, 

Shust  so  high  as  a  chair. 

He  runs  around  the  house  all  day, 

Unt  has  such  yellow  hair. 

Unt  ven  I  look  into  his  eyes 

To  see  dem  deep  unt  blue, 

Py  golley,  it  makes  me  good  right  here,- 

Unt  you  would  luf  him  too ! 


86       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


TOODLUMS  IS  GONE 

Toodlums  is  gone, 
And  as  I  wander  about  the  house 
Searching  ever,  I  know  not  why, 
My  hand  takes  up  a  Httle  blouse 
And  I  can  bare  suppress  a  sigh. 
It  is  so  still,  so  awful  still, 
For  baby  feet  no  more  resound 
Upon  the  stairs,  upon  the  floor. 
And  baby  words  no  more  abound. 

Toodlums  is  gone, 
I  sadly  stroke  the  Teddy  bear 
Which  lonesome  stands  in  yonder  corner, 
And  wonder  when  that  little  chair 
Had  last  rested  the  little  mourner; 
Each  scattered  toy  upon  the  floor, 
The  pop-eyed  doll  with  towsled  hair, 
The  Mother  Goose  with  color  page, 
All  seemed  to  wait  for  Toodlums  there. 

Toodlums  is  gone, 
His  curly  top  will  never  bob 
Its  timid  way  through  life  again, 
For  like  the  mystic  kiss  of  heaven 
He  had  come  in  joy  and  passed  in  pain; 
And  though  the  tears  of  love  may  well 
Into  the  eye  and  salve  the  soul, 
Yet  must  we  know  that  he  has  gone, — 
While  weary  years  must  take  their  toll. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  87 

Toodlums  is  gone. 
Oh,  God  in  Heaven,  must  I  wait 
So  long  to  hear  his  childish  voice 
As  it  lisps  aloud  in  happy  joy 
A  coo  to  make  my  heart  rejoice? 
I  close  my  lids  and  in  a  mist 
I  see  his  eyes  laugh  into  mine, 
And  baby  arms  are  wide  outstretched 
For  me;  he  snuggles  soft  in  Thine. 


88       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


EVENING  PRAYER 

Father,  keep  my  babe  tonight, 

Guard  him  from  care  and  pain. 

Guide  him  aright  all  the  way, 

Keep  him  thru  every  day; 

Joy  and  sorrow  may  come,  Dear  Lord, 

But  Love  and  Hope  comes  again; 

Rest  thy  dear  hand  on  his  head  then.  Dear  Lord, 

Oh,  bless  him,  Dear  Lord,  I  pray. 

Heaven  protect  my  boy  through  life, 

Make  him  to  be  clean  and  pure; 

Make  him  a  man  of  faith  in  all  strife, 

Help  him  his  cross  to  endure. 

Rest  thy  dear  hand  on  his  head  then.  Dear  Lord, 

Oh,  bless  him,  Dear  Lord,  this  day. 

Rest  thy  dear  hand  on  his  head  then.  Dear  Lord, 

Oh,  bless  Him,  Dear  Lord,  I  pray. 


i 


J 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  89 


A  BUSHEL  OF  SNOW 

ARABESQUE 

(One  side  of  the  shield) 

A  bushel  of  snow, 
A  bushel  of  snow, 
'Twill  make  the  ground  white 
Where'er  it  may  go. 
'Twill  make  it  quite  white 
On  some  cold  windy  night. 
And  will  bring  much  delight 
To  the  children  of  wealth — 
Ah,  those  children  of  wealth ! 

'Twill  bring  much  delight. 
On  that  cold  windy  night, 
To  those  children  of  wealth 
Who  have  enzymes  of  health, 
And  bright  flashing  eyes, 
With  no  reason  for  sighs. 
With  rose-tinted  cheeks, — 
Roses  of  health, 
Roses  of  wealth, — 
Of   hygienic   living. 
Of  loving  and  giving. 
Of  a  physician's  fond  care, 
And  God's  fresh,  pure  air; 
Sleeping  porches  and  tennis. 
They  escape  the  menace 
Of  squabble  and  grime, 
Of  misery  and  sHme; 
Gruesome  tuberculosis. 
Arterial  sclerosis. 


90      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

They  live  in  the  open 

With  nurses  to  watch  them 

And  tutors  to  hopen 

And  chauffeurs  to  match  them. 

Ah,  those  children  of  wealth! 

Surely  should  have  health 

To  love  that  white  snow, 

That  bushel  of  snow, 

Which  will  swirl  and  blow. 

Blow  wildly  and  stinging. 

Like  the  banshee  a-ringing 

Its  weird,  melancholy  song 

All  through  the  night  long, 

Till  the  maids  crouch  in  terror 

As  they  hear  the  ghost-chant 

Grooge  out  its  dread  cant; 

And  the  spooks  peer  in  windows 

Of  the  superstitious  throng 

All  the  weird  night  long 

Till  the  first  break  of  day 

Drives  the  banshee  away. 

And  the  wit  frightened  maid 

Still  palely  afraid. 

Peers  out  on  the  lawn 

In  that  eerie  early  dawn, 

And  she  smiles  a  wan  smile  1| 

For  a   wee,   little   while, — 

A  wee,  sickly  smile 

For  just  a  little  while, — 

And  then  tells  of  her  terror 

With  words  full  of  error, 

What  she  saw  and  heard 

What  she  heard  and  saw, 

While  the  wind  was  a-blowing, 

And  skies  were  a-snowing. 

That  wild,   winter  night. 

And  she  peoples  her  fright 

With  the  banshee's  flight. 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  91 

And  ghosts  and  sprites, 

And  a  green  floating  light ; 

And  she  swears  that  she  saw 

With  a  child  in  its  maw 

A  werewolf  in  the  air 

As  it  howled  around  there, 

A   ^skeleton    form 

Which  still  had  the  worm 

Gnawing  at  its  cold  breast 

And  its  carrion  chest, — 

A  gruesome  specter 

A  hideous  troll 

Of    long   ages   past, 

Returned  at  last 

To  scare  this  sad  maid 

Who  stood  there  afraid 

On  that  wild,  winter's  night. 

And  she  shakes  her  head 
At  the  howls  of  delight, 
Which  the  children  of  wealth 
Call  out  as  they  roll. 
And  tumble  and  slide 
In  the  snow  outside, 
For  that  big  bushel  of  snow 
Must  bring  someone  grim  woe; 
For  the  banshee  has  cried 
So  someone  has  died 
And   is   covered   outside. 
Oh,  is  covered  out  there 
Where  the  firs  droop,  and  where 
The  mounds  of  drift  snow 
Had  been  forced  to  blow 
By  the  bitter  north  wind. 
The  soulless  north  wind. 
Which  butted  and  battled. 
And  hissed  and  rattled. 
All  through  the  night. 
The  night  of  white 


92       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Brings  forms  and  fright 

For   some,   but  pleasure   and  joy 

For  the  girl  and  boy, 

Who  has  health  and  wealth, 

And  warmth  'gainst  the  stealth 

Of  the  bitter,  bitter  cold. 

'Tis  good  to  have  gold 

To  buy  crusts  and  coal, 

To  buy  peace  for  the  soul, 

Which  is  only  sold 

If  you  have  the  gold. 

As  we  have  always  been  told. 

Yes,  we  are  always  told. 

And  if  we  haven't  the  gold, 

Then  we  must  stay  cold; 

For  the  pirates  and  ghouls,  d 

Like  devilfish  and  owls,  " 

Watch  o'er  their  hoard 

Of  million-aged  coal 

In  the  bowels  of  the  earth. 

It  belonged  to  the  God, 

Who  gave  it  to  men 

With  majestic,  soft  word, 

But  'twas  stolen  by  thieves, 

By  the  cursed  robber  chiefs. 

At  the  gracious  Son's  birth, 

Who  were  not  thrust  in  the  gaol 

Like  any  other  vile   clod. 

But,  like  Judas,  escaped 

To  do   it  all  over  again. 

And   the   children   of    men? — 
Ah,  the  children  shout. 
And  the  sleighbells  ring  out, 
For  that  white,  sifting  snow, 
That  big  bushel  of  snow. 
Has  brought  with  it  the  glow 
Of  happiness  and  joy 


J 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  93 

To  that  girl  and  that  boy, 

Who  romp  and  play 

In  the  snow  all  day; 

Romp  and  play 

And  build  their  mock  forts, 

Igloos,  and  other  sports 

In  the  big  bushels  of  snow, 

Before  it  can  go, — 

Their  dialed  fox  and  geese, 

Snow  men  with  white  fleece. 

Stomp  the  leader. 

And  in  the  drifts  they  pile. 

With  shouts  of  laughter, 

And  hoots  all  the  while. 

Angels  with  wings, 

And  many  other  things 

In  the  deep,  pure  snow. 

For  all  the  boys  know 
That  when  the  snow  packs 
You  have  to  roll  stacks 
Of  gigantic,  white  balls 
Before  the  school  calls, 
And  jack   them   in   rows 
Upon  rows  of  white  walls. 
While  from  eyes  and  nose 
Runs  the  blinding  sap. 
And  the  hands  will  chap; 
But  who  cares  for  such  woes. 
While  the  red  cheek  glows, 
And  the  boy's  heart  knows 
What   everybody   knows, 
That  the  beautiful  snows 
Were  made  just  for  fun. 
Which  has  just  begun 
When  the  old  bell  rings 
And  its  cruel  message  brings, 
*'Come  on  to  school. 
Come  on  to  school." 


94       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

"Oh,  hang  the  old  bell! 

Why,  why  in — well 

Why  can't  it  desist 

Or  drop  from  its  tower, 

'Twill  never  be  missed; 

An  extra  hour 

Out  here  in  the  snow 

Would  be  better,  I  know, 

Than  digging  in  Caesar 

Before  that  old  geezer 

Who  calls  for  the  gerund 

Or   ablative   of    motion,— 

I   wish   the   old   ocean 

Were  betvveen  her  and  school, 

Or  some  fool  errand 

Would  take  the  old  mule." 

But  insistently  calling 

With  monotonous  song, 

"Ding-a-dong — Ding-a-dong !" 

There  can  be  no  stalling 

To  break  the  rule, 

"Come  to  school,  come  to  school !" 

So  with  reluctant,  nipped  feet, 

They  wander  away 

Through  snow  and  sleet. 

But  soon  their  bright  hearts 

A  warm  glow  imparts 

To  the  snow  flurried  day; 

And  they  scamper  and  shout 

While  yodels   ring  out 

On  the  wintry  air 

And  again  all  is   fair. 

For  the  bushel  of  snow 

Has  banished  boy-woe. 

So  hail  to  the  conqueror, 

Big  bushel  of  snow ! 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  95 


A  BUSHEL  OF  SNOW 


(The  obverse  side) 

Big  bushel  of  snow, 
Big  bushel  of  snow, 
To  some  it  brings  joy 
To  others  it  brings  woe. 
Woe,  woe  stalks  on  the  path, 
The  ice- fringed  path. 
Of  big  bushels  of  snow. 
The  wild  winds  howl. 
And  the  snow  sprites  call, 
The  hyenas  of  death  yowl, 
As  the  snow  flakes  fall; 
For  that  mantle  of  white, 
Oh,  that  shroud  of  white. 
Which  is  falling  so  soft 
All   through   the   cold   night 
Is  bringing  wan  death 
And  hopeless  misery. 

Its  icy-filled  breath 

Many  a  time  and  oft 

Is  fraught  with  the  sting 

Of  death,  and  its  wing 

Of  soft  fluffy  white. 

Which  has  feathered  the  night, 

Covers  the  stark,  frozen  form 

Of  the  jetsam  of  the  storm. 

Oh,   horrible    fate 

Of  those,  who  too  late 

Discover  that  death 

Lurks  in  the  zero  breath 


96       STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Of  the  star-shaped  snow, 

The  hypocritical  snow, 

Which  comes  and  which  goes 

With  its  joys  and  its  woes; 

So  sudden,  so  terribly  sudden 

That  the  poor  can  never  prepare 

For  the  time  coming  where 

They  may  house  themselves  carefully. 

And  warmly  and  prayerfully, 

'Gainst  the  howling  winds  scudding 

From   the   Arctic   waste 

To  give  them  a  taste 

Of  the  lurking  death. 

'Tis  hid  in  the  breath 
Of  the  soft,  fluffy  snow 
Which  the  north  winds  blow. 
But  which  bites  and  stings 
When  Aurora  Borealis  brings 
Its  eerie  flashings  in  the  sky, — 
Flashings    from    space, 
A  wireless  from  eternity 
Which  bears  no  grace 
Nor  hint  of  its  enormity 
That  the  unprepared  must  die, 
Must  die!    That  the  unprepared, 
The  laggard  and  poor. 
The  wailing  at  the  door, 
The  halt  and  the  lame, 
The  weakling  and  the  game. 
The  staring  and  the  stared, 
In  squalor  and  in  grime, 
Without  reason  or  rhyme, 
Must  die. 

For  the  snow, 

With  its  slithering  fingers, 

With  icy  grasp,  feloniously  lingers 

And  grabs  the  poor  crouchant. 


i 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  97 

Huddled  and  couchant, 
In  the  dark,  freezing  shack, 
Where  all  things  lack, 
And  slowly  its  clasp, 
Like  the  sting  of  an  asp, 
Closes  about  and  about, 
Till  life  is  frozen  out, 
Ah,  the  soul  is  frozen  out! 
And   mere  hideous    forms, 
Fit  food  for  the  worms. 
Caricatures  of  being, 
Unhearing,   unseeing, 
Are  left  in  the  squalor, 
'Neath  the  moon's  ashy  pallor, 
'Neath  the  shred  of  the  rags 
Which  had  covered  that  corpse, 
Barely  covered  that  corpse. 
Barely  covered  but  no  more, 
For  no  fire  was  there. 
No  heat  in  the  air. 
No  food  on  the  shelf, 
To  strengthen  himself. 
An  outcast  forgotten. 
Now  frozen  and  rotten. 

But  once,   ah,   once  long  ago 
*Twas  a  mother's  sweet  woe, 
A  mother's  sad  pain. 
And  joy  come  again, 
A  father's  fond  hope, — 
But  now  lying  there 
In  winter's  grim  lair 
Lies  nothing  that  mortal 
Within  that  grim  portal 
Could  bring  back  again 
To  the  knowledge  of  men. 
All  the  hopeless  waste 
Of  a  life  of  distaste. 
For  big  bushels  of  snow 


98i      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

With  its  billows  of  woe 
Its  mantle  of  white, 
Through  the  cruel,  cold  night 
Has  stopped  the  heart  beat, 
The  dreary  life's  cheat. 
And  that  bushel  of  snow 
Has  called,  called  away 
To  an  icier  day 
The  cuddled,  shivering  wretch, 
'Neath  the  damp,  rotting  thatch 
Of  that  shack  in  the  vale, 
'Side  the  malignant  swale, 
To  a  cavernous  woe. 

So  hail  to  the  snow. 

Big  bushels  of  snow, — 

To  some  it  brings  joy 

But  to  some  it  spells  woe! 

Woe! 

Woe! 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  99 


GOING  TO  MEET  GRANDMA 

"I's  goin*  to  meet  my  Gran'ma," 
Said  the  maid  all  dressed  in  white, 
As  she  stood  before  the  dresser 
And  her  eyes  were  sparkling  bright. 
"I's  goin'  to  meet  my  Gran'ma, 
For  my  Mama's  sick  in  bed, 
And  Ts  got  to  go  and  meet  her, 
For  she's  coming  soon,  she  said." 

"I's  goin'  to  meet  my  Gran'ma," 
As  she  toddled  down  the  street. 
And  she  smiled  a  happy  greeting 
To  every  one  she  met; 
And  they  smiled  back  at  the  baby, 
And  looked  after  as  she  passed. 
For  the  angels  hovered  near  her. 
And  her  eyes  and  lips  they  kissed. 

"I's  goin'  to  meet  my  Gran'ma, 

And  I's  goin'  to  the  train, 

For  my  Gran'ma  couldn't  find  her 

Way  to  Mama's  house  again; 

And  I  want  my  Gran'ma  right  now, 

For  my  Mama's  orful  sick, 

So  I  just  thought  I  would  get  her, 

And  surprise  my  Mama  quick." 

Far  away  the  baby  toddled. 
And  the  nurse  there  at  her  home 
Wondered  where  the  little  youngster 
Could  have  had  the  urge  to  roam; 
Far  she  wandered  toward  the  station, 
Lisping  soft  her  glad  refrain, 
"Yes,  I's  goin'  to  get  my  Gran'ma, 
To  make  my  Mama  well  again." 


100     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Through  the  crowded  streets  she  wandered, 

Past  the  watchman  at  the  gate 

Who  was  talking  with  another, 

Noticed  not  until  too  late, — 

Then  a  shriek  rang  through  the  station, 

And  a  voice  cried  on  the  air, 

"My  God !  the  child's  in  danger ! 

Who  can  rush  to  save  her  there?" 

Frantic  sprang  the  awed  attendants. 
Wildly  cried  the  crowd  in  fear, 
Wierdly  screamed  the  engine  whistle, 
When  the  startled  engineer 
Beheld  the  baby  as  it  stumbled 
On  the  crossties  down  the  track. 
And  his  hair  turned  white  in  terror! 
Could  no  one  call  the  toddler  back? 

Quick  he  thrust  the  grinding  brakes  on, 
Tried  to  check  the  onward  rush ; 
His  face  was  furrowed  deep  in  sorrow, 
An  awful  groan  broke  through  the  hush; 
For  the  child  brooked  not  the  danger 
Rushing  toward  her,  demon-like, 
But  onward  tottered  to  her  finish 
Where  the  monster  grim  should  strike. 

With  a  moan  the  crowd  beheld  it, 
None  could  reach  her  e'er  too  late. 
With  a  cry  the  trainmen  shuddered. 
As  they  saw  her  awful  fate; 
God  in  Heaven!     Pull  the  curtain. 
As  the  bundle  gowned  in  white 
Was  mangled  by  the  car  wheels 
People  fainted  at  the  sight. 

Sadly  gathered  they  the  baby 
Crushed  and  limp — but  on  the  face 
Still  the  smile  of  girlish  daydream, 


CHILDREN'S  POEMS  loi 

Smile  of  peace  and  childish  grace; 
For  the  infant  still  seemed  toddling 
On  its  way  to  meet  her  friend, 
And  her  lips  still  seemed  to  whisper 
She  would  meet  her  in  the  end. 

Oh,  the  sadness  as  they  laid  her 
In  the  coldness  of  her  grave ! 
Oh,  the  sobs  that  shook  the  station 
As  they  saw  the  flowers  they  gave; 
Sad  the  city  mourned  in  temples, 
Ne'er  could  each  the  other  greet ; 
Yes,  she  went  to  meet  her  grandma. 
But  'twas  at  the  Mercy  seat. 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS 

THE  GOD  OF  WAR 

Tremble  nations ;  for  I  come 

With  wail  of  dirge  and  roll  of  drum; 

My  banners  flash  across  the  sky 

And  all  who  see  behold  to  die. 

Destroy  I  all  that  has  been  built 

By  sweat  of  brow  and  dreams  divine, 

And  at  my  feet  the  blood  is  spilt 

Which  throbbed  in  hearts  that  raised  my  shrine; 

For  I,  the  horrid  God  of  War, 

Stalk  gaunt  across  the  paths  of  peace, 

And  blast  and  sear  the  souls  of  men 

With  screams  of  death  and  cannon  roar; 

And  I  kill,  kill,  kill ! 

Until  I  get  my  fill; 
And  I  devour  the  pride  and  flower  of  all  the  anguished 
earth ; 

Yes,  I  kill,  kill,  kill! 

Destroy,  where'er  I  will, — 
I  take  the  small,  the  large,  the  tall, — fair  lives  of  massive 
worth. 

Tremble,  people!     Grovel  low! 

Each  gory  step  will  bring  ye  woe. 

Woe  I     Woe  1     the  Heaven's  red 

Reflects  the  slimy  rows  of  dead. 

And  all  the  trappings  of  the  arms 

Are  tarnished  tinsel,  soon  to  yield 

In  ghastly  grime  and  stricken   forms 

Its  fading  sheen  upon  the  field; 

The  best  to  pay  the  Lord  of  War 

Its  tithe  celestial  from  each  soul; 

To  drain  the  drops — the  bitter  toll 

That  blasts  the  nations  evermore. 

Fori  kill,  kill,  kill! 

105 


io6     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

All  the  day  and  night,  until 
The  very  stones  run  blood,  and  bones  are  rotting  in  the 
night; 
Aye,  I  kill,  kill,  kill! 
And  I  never  get  my  fill ; 
I   destroy  in   fiendish  joy,   and   festering  crime   is   my 
delight. 

Tremble,  Heavens !     Hear  my  voice ! 
Its  sounds  of  pain  make  fiends  rejoice. 
From  brazen  lips  belch  forth  commands. 
And  myriad  deaths  stretch  out  their  hands. 
While  the  people  worry',  worry; 
How  they  rush  and  run  and  scurry ! 
And  grow  pale  and  sickly  grope — a   fearsome  stricken 
heap! 
While  from  out  my  mouth  the  fire 
Blasts  like  Sodom  flame,  or  Tyre, 
Hell's   destructive  lavas  fill  the  trenches  millions  deep. 
For  its  War!  War!  War! 
Though  none  can  tell  just  what  it's  for; 
But  every  home  must  fill  with  gloom  because  my  hand 
is  raised  in  wrath ; 
And  it's  War  !  War !  War ! 
Such  as  never  cursed  before, 
Still  must  the  tramp  of  armies  stamp  down  progress  in 
my  murderous  path. 

l'envoi 

Ah,    God   in   Heaven, — most   Righteous    One, 
That  knowest  the  end  long  e'er  begun. 
Give  us  the  strength,  the  power  to  save 
This  trembling  earth  from  ambition's  slave. 
Impart  the  vision  that  hope  is  not  lost, 
And  Progress  be  not  in  Oblivion  tossed ; 
But  gird  our  loins  in  this  monstrous  fray 

So  that  our  homes  fade  not  away. 
Ay,  bless  our  banners  in  the  sky. 
Of  the  avenging  Army  of  the  Lord  Most  High! 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  107 


MY  NATIVE  LAND 

Ah,  my  native  land,  that  I  should  live  to  see 

Thee  plunged  again  within  the  deep  morain 

Of  War,  and  lose  thy  long  Divinity 

Which  near  hadst  won — didst  bare  by  grace  attain 

By  super  thought,  by  power  above,  by  might 

From  Heaven  lent  to  nobly  fill  thy  glorious  destiny! 

Why  didst  thou  grasp  the  will-o-wisp  of  War, 

Which  turned  to  murdering  viper  in  thy  grasp, 

And  spewing  forth  the  venom  of  the  hidden  store 

Of  evil,  lust,  did  sting  thee  like  an  asp. 

Until  thy  bowels  swelled  fat  with  pain,  and  from 

Thy  side  crawled  leprous  things  to  harm  thee  evermore? 

Thy  aching  brain  did  long  resist  the  lecherous  plot, 

Of  war-soaked  gnomes,  who  sought  the  bloody  path, 

And  now  while  horrors  grim  will  be  thy  lot. 

Yet  canst  thou  know  the  God  of  Right  in  wrath 

Will  gird  thy  sides  with  sword  and  shield; 

So  strike,  strike  hard,  my  native  land,  and  falter  not. 


io8     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


NO  COWARDS  HERE 

Did  you  ever  see  a  Sammy  flinch 

When  it  came  to  working  hard? 

Did  America  ever  spawn  a  coward? 

Is  your  pal  a  slacker,  pard? 

From  '76  to  '98  have  we  ever  thrown  down 

the  sponge? 
Not  on  your  life,  we  stand  the  gaff, 
And  are  ready  to  make  the  plunge! 

Who  says  the  spirit  of  '"j^ 
Has  died  in  the  scramble  for  wealth? 
Who  says  the  rights  of  the  world  are  lost 
In  the  search  for  pleasure  and  health? 
In  peace  we  bless  the  work  of  day, 
Enjoy  the  things  that  God  is  giving. 
But  slumbering  never!     In  our  heart 
The  love  of  justice  still  is  living. 

A  sleeping  dog  most  quiet  is. 
But  rouse  him  with  a  sudden  kick 
Upsoon  behold  his  snarl  of  rage, 
And  teeth  are  felt  a-twinkling  quick. 
And  so  beneath  the  thin  veneer 
Of  quiet,  family-loving  Yanks, 
You  find,  when  Justice  cries  aloud. 
That  every  man  will  swell  the  ranks. 

Each  man  will  boil  his  heart  in  rage. 
Each  American,   with  fearless  eye, 
Will  call  to  man  and  give  his  all 
That  Liberty  shall  never  die. 
For  with  such  souls  the  world  is  safe 
Beyond  the  schemes  of  wild  autocracy; 
God  made  this  earth  so  all  may  live; — 
We  make  it  safe  for  true  Democracy! 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  109 


SEEKING  THE  BEAN 

At  mess  one  day  the  boys  had  soup — 
That's  what  I  said,  s-o-u-p ; 
The  camp  cook  claimed  'twas  made  of  beans — 
And  beans  are  good  enough  for  me. 

I  drank  my  bowl  of  camouflage, 
And  pitched  right  into  the  coming  grub, 
But  when  we  all  were  nearly  filled, 
We  glanced  surprise  at  30's  dub. 

There  he  sat  and  sat  and  stirred, 

But  not  a  move  to  eat  made  he, 

But  stirred  he  well  and  gazed  in  gloom. 

And  he  stirred  and  glowered  on  the  pale  puree. 

"Hi  there,  dub!  what  evil  sprite 
Passes   your   warped   and   vagrant   brain? 
Why  not  get  busy  with  the  soup  ? — " 
But  he  only  stirred  that  mirage  again. 

A  dazed  look  spread  o'er  his  face, 
In  agony  he  peered  and  gazed. 
And  gradually  his  injured  voice 
In  petulant  protest  was  raised. 

"Hi  say,  my  corporal,  me  man, 
Hi  say,  this  blooming  stuff  is  thin. 
They  call  this  soup,  but  where's  the  goop 
That  made  the  stuff  or  brought  it  in  ?" 

The  corporal  came  and  eyed  the  dub, 
"Hoot  Mon!  what's  aching  ye  this  day? 
That's  soup  allricht,  just  drink  it  doon, 
The  mess  is  done,  now  come  away." 


no     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


But  the  raw  recruit  just  stirred  his  soup, 
Nor  ate  nor  drank  he  all  that  eve; 
The  flag  retreat  and  roll  call  came, 
Nor  would  he  then  his  stirring  leave. 

The  sun  went  down,  the  night  wind  blew, 
But  yet  he  stirred — persistent  chap — 
Until  the  Corporal  called  the  Sarg, 
The  Sarg  the  Lieut,  and  he  the  Cap. 

The  Captain  came  in  dudgeon  wild, 
His  face  flushed  red,  his  eyes  flashed  green, 
"Come  man !   what   freak  possesses   ye !" — 
Then  quoth  the  Rookey  with  humble  mien, 
"My  Cap,  I  merely  seek  the  bean." 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  iii 

TAPS 

AN  ELEGY  OF  THE  TRENCHES 

The  flickering  shadows  waver  fitfully 

As  the  candle  flame  dodges  bright,  now  flares,  now  dim, 

Like  the  aspen  white  and  green  in  the  scented  breeze 

Of  spring, — the  half -bowed  moon,  a  slender  pallid  rim. 

The  walled  trench  lies  silent,  threatening, 

While  now,  anon,  the  softly  suppressed  clank 

Of  some  deadly  steel  strikes  'gainst  the  rising  mound 

Of  some  foul  instrument  of  death,   reeking,  cold,  and 

dank. 
The  hushed  voice  of  twilight  has  long  sought  its  nocturnal 

couch. 
And  fleeting  time  has  softly  sunk  in  vales  of  Lethe; 
A  brooding  pause  has  shrived  the  carnage  of  the  day. 
And  somnolent  shadows  group  the  camouflage  beneath; 
The  throbbing  bugle  sounds  its  shivering  mournful  lay ; 
So,  good-night,  boys.     Lights  out! 

Across  the  dim  and  distant  vista  rasps 

The  clarion  note  of  some  hoarse-voiced  command, 

Where  the  Boche  relieves  his  wearied  mate  in  crime. 

To  take  the  post  and  watch  the  space  of  No  Man's  Land. 

Full  brothers  they,  yet  subtly  aim  in  hate  to  slay 

Their  western  friends — friends  whom  they  had  no  cause 

to  hate, 
But  urged  on  by  strident,  false-voiced  sophistries. 
And  ambition's  vaunting  appetite  to  sate; 
Too  late  will  they  discover  that  the  Gilded  High 
Are  not  their  peers  or  even  their  Saviour's  friend, — 
And  yet  they  crouch  and  watch  and  wait  and  prey 
As  we  our  own,  our  rights  and  liberties  defend. 
Ah,  well,  ^tis  night;  the  morn  may  ,see  a  better  day,' — 
So,  good-night,  boys.    Lights  out! 


112     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Far  in  the  threatening  gloom  we  see  the   shimmering 

flash 
Of  the  murdering  shell  as  it  spreads  its  fiendish  agony, 
And  to  the  flash,  like  thunder  to  the  lightning  stroke, 
We  hear  the  rumble  of  the  blast,  an  earnest  of  Eternity. 
God  save  us  all !     Behind  yon  darkling  limned  hills 
Hide  demons  wild, —  the  thoughts  malevolent  of  cursed 

mind; 
But  far  beyond,  the  creamy  milk  of  kindness  grows  not 

cold. 
For  there  the  gentle  nurses  minister  succor  to  their  kind ; 
Altho'  the  lowering  skies  hold  pendulous  tears  unwiped. 
And  'neath  our  feet  the  slime  of  Europe  holds  its  nause- 
ous sway. 
Yet  in  our  hearts  we  find  the  courage  of  the  white  crusade. 
And  still  our  God  doth  live  and  bring  a  nobler,  future 

day. 
Yes,  so  our  soul  thrills  high  with  yonder  bugle's  last  sad 

ode; 
So,  good-night,  boys.     Lights  out! 

One  moment  agone  there  passed  in  slow  and  silent  step 
Six  head-bowed   forms   with  shrouded  stretchers   borne 

between, 
And  on  those  swaying  couches  I  could  dimly  see 
Three  ghastly   shapes — that  once   had  joyed   and   raced 

upon  the  green, — 
Three  boys  from  home,  victims  of  yon  insane  dark  mon- 
ster's hate. 
The  fruits  of  war — sad  comment  of  the  Kultur  of  the  age ! 
And  so  may  I,  or  may  some  other  grieving  mother's  son 
Become  the  victim  of  the  lust  so  insensate. 
The  murmuring  voices  of  the  pallid,  gruesome  hour 
But  emphasize  the  unseen  threatenings  of  the   Stygian 

night. 
For  e'en  the  mountains  tremble  at  the  demon's  power. 
Yet   rest   we    silent, — assured    'tis    but   the   nightmare's 

palsied  fright — 
That  bugle's  last  sad  requiem  sobs  o'er  the  shrouded  bower 
Of  the  Dead.     So  good-night  bo^-s.     Lights  out! 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  113 


THE  DESERTER 

The  bugle  sounded  the  reveille, 
And  out  of  our  bunks  the  company  filed, 
While  each  one  asked  still  drowsily 
What  might  portend  this  summons  wild. 

"Awake,    arise!"    the   insistent   note 
Climbed  up  and  up  on  the  clear  night  air, 
And  sobbed  and  rose,  like  a  bobbing  boat 
Upon  the  waves  of  the  stream  Lodaire. 

With  hasty  toilet  and  heads  erect 
We  stood  ''attention"  with  raised  hands. 
While  from  mouth  to  mouth  the  whispers  flew 
That  a  deserter  must  answer  grim  War's  demands. 

We  stood  there  mute,  but  tense  our  throat, 
We  seemed  to  scent  the  grave  import. 
For  down  the  line  a  sad-faced  lad 
Was  slowly  led  with  pacings  short. 

A  lad,  I  said — some  mother's  boy 
Had  fled  the  duties  of  the  siege. 
Stampeded  by  the  vision  of  death  ahead. 
Had  chosen  the  hidden  woods  near  Liege. 

Had  chosen,  but  chosen  without  leave. 
And  at  the  summons  in  the  morn 
His  place  was  blank,   deserted  his  straw, 
For  in  his  heart  the  "fear"  was  bom. 

*Twas  not  the  cowg^rdliness  of  the  churl 
That  led  that  lad  unto  his  shame. 
But  impulsive  youth  still  loved  its  life. 
And  forgot  for  the  nonce  his  nobler  name. 


114     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

As  down  the  taut  and  expectant  line 
He  cringed  to  the  lash  of  God's  cruel  whip, 
A  groan  breathed  low  from  the  hopeless  sky, 
The  tear-stopped  eye,  the  trembling  lip. 

He  came;  full  well  he  knew  his  fate, 
For  War  is  Hell,  and  more  than  all, 
He  knew  that  mercy  is  unknown 
Where  discipline  has  heard  the  call. 

A  comrade  once  he  was  of  ours, 
A  joyous,  sparkling,   thoughtless  lad; 
Fullhearted,  sharing  his  every  crust, — 
And  now,  must  we  believe  him  bad? 

He  had  debauched  one  moment's  strength, 
But  there  are  times  in  each  man's  life 
That  all  are  cowards,  the  form  too  weak 
To  shoulder  the  sting  of  sterner  strife. 

God  pity  him  there  and  pity-  us  all 
Who  falter  along  in  faint  degree. 
For  but  for  the  accident  of  my  birth 
That  lad  out  there  might  well  be  me. 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  115 


BULLETS,  BULLETS,  BULLETS! 

(Story  of  the  Battle  of  San  Juan  Hill) 

Slow  the  tragic  day  was  breaking. 
Far  across  the  gloomy  vale 
Hung  the  misty  cloud  of  morning 
Roseate  hued,  now  gold,  now  pale. 
Sleepily  the  chirp  from  branches 
Echoed  soft  the  drowsy  plaint 
Of  the  oriole  and  the  swallow, 
While  a  song  sounds  sweet  and  faint 
Dim  beyond  the  wooded  hillside. 
And  a  stir  thrills  through  the  camp. 
Then  the  sudden  blast  of  bugle 
Pierces  keen  the  clinging  damp. 
"Up!     Awake,  ye  slumbering  soldiers! 
For  today  the  day  of  doom! 
Strike  for  right  and  right  will  triumph ! 
Drive  away  the  Stygian  gloom 
Of  oppressed  and  suffering  neighbors 
Crouching  low  in  dread  despair! 
Strike  for  freedom  of  the  masses ! 
Hear  ye  not  their  moaning  there?" 
Soon  the  roll  of  drum  and  cannon 
Trembled  o'er  the  sodden  ground, 
For  eftsoon  the  bravest  of  them 
Would  be  mouldering  in  a  mound. 

They  were  to  face  bullets,  bullets,  bullets! 

Flying  through  the  torrid  air; 
Howling  shot  and  shrieking  shrapnel. 

To  make  the  hillside  bleak  and  bare. 
Bullets,  bullets,  bullets! 

Smell  of  death  and  serpent  sting; 
Moaning  bullets !    Biting  bullets  I 


ii6     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

■Some  that  shout  and  some  that  sing. 
Wild  their  cry  as  they  strike, 

Cruel  bullets  for  the  brave, 
Crash  of  steel  and  roaring  cannon, 

Sounds  of  slaughter  and  the  grave! 

Soon  then  moves  the  mighty  army. 

Like  a  snake  it  dares  the  hill; 

Slow  uncoils  its  shining  body, 

While  above  the  guns  are  still. 

Yard  on  yard  with  threatening  rumble 

Mounts  each  column  to  its  height, 

While  behind  and  all  around  them 

Gleam  the  pennants  in  the  light. 

It  seemed  as  though  the  world  entire 

Did  move  there  slow  with  measured  tread ; 

It  seemed  that  God  in  Heaven  stood  and 

Looked  upon  the  scene  in  dread. 

Persistent,  steady,  firm  they  climb 

Until  the  cannon  on  the  brow 

Of  yonder  hill  stood  bleak  and  frowning. 

Threatening  death;  while  then  and  now 

The  bugle  sound  re-echoed  shrill 

The  hoarse  command  of  our  brave  Ted ; 

We  could  not  shirk  at  this  grand  moment, 

For  each  heart  leaped  where  'twas  led. 

When  sudden  inferno  broke  on  the  air, 

And  wild  the  scene  in  an  instant  came. 

For  from  the  heights  there  sprang  the  blow, 

And  line  on  line  of  ghastly  flame. 

There  were  bullets,  bullets,  bullets ! 

All  around  us  in  the  air ! 
Howling  bullets,  shrieking  bullets. 

Shells  and  bombs  were  bursting  there! 
"Forward  men!"  the  cry  was  carried; 

"Cut  the  fence  and  scale  the  wall  I 
Care  ye  not  for  weak  destruction, 

"Forward  men,  my  heroes  all  !'* 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  117 

Up  and  up  the  spirit  called  them ; 

Bullets !     Bullets  flying  fast ! 
"Wave  the  standard,  Color-bearer! 

Colors  LEAD,  but  never  last!" 

The  youthful  lad,  drest  in  fatigue, 

The  blood-mark  streaming  from  his  head, 

Sprang  forward  quickly  at  the  order 

E'en  though  the  soul  was  filled  with  dread. 

Ne'er  e'er  this  had  he  faced  destruction, 

Although  his  heart  had  leapt  with  fear, 

Yet  forward  pressed  he,  ever  forward. 

Knowing  his  danger,  strangling,  drear; 

For  'tis  not  he  who  runs  pell-mell 

Into  the  jaws  of  waiting  death 

Without  the  knowledge,  cause,  or  thought 

Of  what  awaits,  should  wear  the  wreath 

Of  hero's  name ;  but  he  who  knows 

Full  well  the  doom  and  sting  hid  there. 

And  still  persists,  puts  down  despair 

And  ventures  all, — for  Him  the  cheer! 

For  him  the  plaudits  of  mankind 

Should  ring  in  echoes  from  above. 

He  fronts  Grim  Death  with  smiling  face 

And  dares  the  dregs  of  Fate  for  love; 

And  so  this  lad,  when  hearts  had  quailed, 

Led  on  the  struggling,  reeking  mass ; 

Far  in  advance  his  guerdon  led  them 

Until  he  scaled  the  angry  pass. 

With  bullets,  bullets,  bullets ! 

Howling  round  his  youthful  head. 
And  bullets,  bullets,  bullets ! 

Piling  up  the  ghastly  dead. 
Did  he  waver,  shrink,  or  falter 

On  the  brink  beyond  the  wall? 
Not  a  moment  dipped  the  banner, 

But  again  we  hear  his  call ! 
"Forward,  comrades !    See  them  scatter ! 


liS     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Onward!     Onward,  to  the  fray! 
God,  I  thank  thee  for  thy  goodness ! 
Help  us  drive  the  fiends  away !'' 

Through  the  horrid  din  of  battle 
Far  and  far  they  heard  the  cry; 
His  it  was  to  lead  the  vanguard; 
His  it  was  to  do  and  die. 
Clouds  of  shrivelling,  writhing  sulphur 
Roared  around  in  angry  might; 
Fiends  incarnate,  fiends  of  slaughter. 
Waged  for  wrong,  and  fought  for  right. 
Cannon  crashing,  belched  and  bellowed, 
While  above  and  through  the  sound. 
Hoarse  commands  and  blast  of  bugle 
Urged  the  staggering  heroes  'round. 
Just  an  instant  paused  the  ensign 
As  he  sprang  within  the  wall 
With  a  cheer  of  boyish  victory, — 
Then  gave  forth  his  clarion  call : 
"Forward,  comrades !     See  them  scatter ! 

Onward!     Onward,  to  the  fray! 
God,  I  thank  thee  for  thy  goodness  I 

Help  us  drive  the  fiends  away !" 

But  in  that  moment,  with  bold  pennant 
Swinging  high  aloft  the  mound. 
Came  a  saber  on  the  temple 
And  he  sank  low  to  the  ground. 
Still  he  feebly  waved  his  banner, 
Feebly  called  he  as  he  lay, 
"Onward,  comrades,  press  ye  forward! 
See  them  run !     We've  won  the  day !" 

And  there  were  bullets,  bullets,  bullets! 

All  around  us  in  the  air ! 
How  they  howled  and  screeched  and  bellowed ! 

How  the  men  were  dying  there! 
Shrieked  the  cannister  as  it  hurtled 


PATRIOTIC  POEMS  119 

Through  the  ranks  of  wavering  men ; 
Groans  of  anguish  rose  to  heaven, 

And  the  battle  shout  again ! 
Nothing  daunts  them, — iorward — faster! 

Cheer  on  cheer  o'ertops  the  cry ! 
While  the  bitter  boom  of  bullets. 

Bullets,  bullets!  reach  the  sky. 


Gently,  soft  and  slow  we  laid  him 
On  the  grass  now  trampled  o'er; 
While  the  heavens  seemed  to  sadden 
At  the  stain  upon  her  floor. 
All  with  head  low-bent,  uncovered, 
And  sad  tears  in  many  eyes. 
For  'tis  not  the  arrant  coward, 
Alas,  'tis  oft  the  hero  dies. 
Breezes,  fragrant  perfumed  breezes, 
Lade  with  myrrh,  magnolia,  pine, 
Spread  its  hallowed  nature's  incense 
Through  the  silent  sylvan  shrine; 
While  anon  far  through  the  distant 
Hush  of  sorrow  in  the  glade 
Came  the  low  and  solemn  rolling 
Of  the  drumbeats  in  the  shade. 
"God  of  Battle,  is  it  worthy 
For  thy  bravest  men  to  die  ? 
Must  the  dismal  death  take  every 
Hero  soul  that  fain  would  try?" 
Soon  with  hectic  moan  and  eflfort 
Gently  raised  upon  his  arm. 
And  with  dying  breath  he  murmured 
And  gasped  out  his  last  alarm: 

"Never  mind  the  bullets,  bullets! 

Let  them  screech  up  in  the  air ! 
Let  them  howl  and  scream  and  bellow, 


120     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

They'll  not  harm  you  while  they're  there, 
Let  the  enemy  see  your  colors, 

Face  the  Spaniards  on  the  Hill ! 
Let  them  know  that  hearts  and  honor 

In  our  ranks  are  beating  still! 
Forward  men !     Ah !  forward,  faster ! — 

Cheer  on  cheer  raise  to  the  sky ! 
Never-mind-the-hiss-of -bullets!" — 

Then  his  soul  sought  rest  on  high. 


PEP  POEMS 


PEP  POEMS 


JUST  KEEP  AGOIN' 

If  the  world  looks  dark  to  you — keep  agoin', 
If  you  don't  know  what  to  do — ^keep  agoin', 
If  the  skies  no  more  are  blue, 
And  your  friends  no  more  are  true, 
If  the  coins  on  hand  are  few, 
Why,  don't  you  care. 
Just  keep  agoin' ! 

If  you're  tired — lost  your  way — keep  agoin', 
If  your  boss  has  said  you  nay — keep  agoin'. 
What's  the  difference  what  they  say. 
Tomorrow's  as  good  as  any  day, 
Now's  the  time  to  make  your  hay. 
Just  whet  your  scythe — 
And  keep  agoin' ! 

Some  folks  push  you  off  the  track?  keep  agoin'! 
If  in  a  boat  just  change  your  tack — keep  agoin'. 
Every  man  must  bear  his  pack. 
And  very  few  will  make  their  stack; 
Just  watch  your  turn,  and  take  your  whack. 
Oh — it  will  come — 
But  keep  agoin'! 

If  all  ideals  have  turned  thin  air — ^keep  agoin'. 
Don't  waste  your  time  in  blank  despair — keep  agoin'. 
Only  the  bold  will  win  the  fair, 
There's  many  a  bird  up  in  the  air. 
There's  fun  in  life,  forget  your  care, — 
Just  take  a  hold — 
And  keep  agoin' ! 

Reprinted  from  College  News,  1899. 

123 


124     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SMILIN'  THROUGH 

You  can  boast  all  you  want  to  'bout  the  man  who's  made 

his  pile. 
And  can  say  that  he  is  jolly  and  he  always  has  a  smile ; 
He  may  even  be  good-natured  and  may  have  a  mighty 

laugh, 
And  the  people  may  all  love  him  'cause  he  shares  his 

good  things  half, 
Giving  to  the  poor  and   needy,   to  the  trodden  down 

and  blue, 
But  his   measure   is  his  power  to   just  keep  a-smilin' 

through. 

Can  he  keep  that  smile  agoin*  when  his  fortune's  swept 

away? 
Can  he  share  his  daily  pittance,  and  do  it  every  day? 
When   his   million   bone?   have   shrunken  until   they're 

down  to  pan, 
Can  he  shrug  his  drooping  shoulders  and  be  a  smiling 

man? 
Can  he  do  down  'mong  the  many  what  he  did  when 

among  the  few? 
Can  he  take  the  kicks  of  fortune  and  keep  a-smilin' 

through  ? 

Ah,  'tis  easy  to  give  a  pittance,  when  you've  more  than 
you  can  spend; 

And  its  fun  to  scatter  largess,  when  your  fortune's  with- 
out end ; 

It  is  nought  to  smile  and  carol  when  the  wolves  are 
far  away. 

But  it  is  a  different  story  when  at  your  door  they  bay. 

It's  hard  to   share  your  meager  wage  when  it  nearly 
beggars  you; 

It's  hard  to  face  the  ugly  world  an'  keep  a-smilin' 
through. 


PEP  POEMS  125 

The  man  I  think  a  hero  is  the  one  who  takes  his  blows, 
The  one  who  mutters  grimly  that  he's  goin'  to  face  his 

foes, 
And  facing  his  tormentors  still  has  a  moment  free 
To  share  his  crust  and  bowl  of   soup  with  one  more 

poor  than  he, — 
One  who  can  keep  his  head  up  high  and  to  his  faith  be 

true, — 
The  man  who  never  slinks  nor  whines,  but  keeps  a-smilin* 

through. 


126     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SUCCESS 

Success  is  not  jist  cash  and  rents, 
Nor  is  it  jist  yer  dollars  and  cents, 
It'  s  more  than  last  will  and  testaments, 

For  it's  the  stuff  yer  made  uv,  old  man. 
Ye  may  have  yer  gold  and  silver  bills, 
And  may  pile  up  yer  coin  in  yer  creaking  tills. 
But  Success  isn't  turned  out  by  the  paper  mills, 

It's  a  heapin'  lot  more  than  that,  old  man. 

To  hear  some  men  ye'd  mostly  feel 
That  Success  is  puttin'  across  a  deal 
That's  big,  no  matter  how  big  the  steal, 

But  it  ain't,  old  boy,  and  ye  know  it. 
Some  books  would  diagram  Success, 
And  see  it  like  a  game  of  chess. 
But  follow  it  through — it's  but  a  mess, 

For  it's  in  the  heart,  and  good  eyes  show  it. 

No,  no,  my  boy,  it's  more  than  gold. 
Just  gettin'  of  money  is  awful  old. 
The  pirate  gets  his,  but  cash  is  cold. 

And  success  means  more  than  that. 
You  may  have  yer  bonds  and  yer  ill-got  wealth, 
And  yer  precious  stones  which  ye  stole  by  stealth, 
But  ye've  ruined  yer  soul,  and  ye've  lost  yer  health, 

And  yer  Faith  has  left  ye  flat. 


PEP  POEMS  127 


THE  PEPTOMANIAC 

I Ve  heard  more  freaks  and  seen  more  freaks, 

Than  you  can  find  the  space 

In  many  homes  for  luny  domes 

Or  any  other  place. 

But  the  wooziest  one  allowed  to  run 

The  city  streets  alone 

Is  the  maniac  who  is  off  his  track 

About  the  supertone. 

The  supertone?     Just  telephone 

The  nut-house   in  your   town; 

They'll  quick  explain  with  cold  disdain 

That  many  have  come  down. 

It  is  the  gink  who  tries  to  think 

That  he  alone  has  knack 

To  run  the  nation,  or  all  creation, — 

The  Peptomaniac. 

His  mind  is  dim,  but  he  has  the  vim 

To  make  a  ponderous  noise. 

All  things  are  slow,  they  have  no  go ; 

"Speed  up,  there,  all  you  boys!" 

Now  just  get  hep  and  put  some  pep 

Into  the  work  in  hand. 

Just  as  I  said,  you  men  are  dead. 

Come  on  and  start  the  bandT' 

No  matter  how  fast  the  train  has  passed. 
He  calls  it  mighty  slow; 
And  a  far-flung  brick  may  travel  quick. 
But  to  him  it  has  no  go. 


128     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

All  men  but  him  are  on  the  rim 

Of  the  grave  and  falling  in, 

But  he,  good  Lord !    To  hear  his  word — 

He  only  knows  how  to  win. 

Our  college  yell  is  always  hell, 

When  that  man  is  around, 

For  he  says  we  are  dead  or  poorly  fed, — 

A  babe  could  make  more  sound. 

It  makes  him  weep — we  are  asleep — 

We  have  a  fearful  rep; 

He  calls  us  bumps,  he  has  the  jumps. 

And  shouts  to  "git  more  pep." 

Oh  yas,  oh  yas,  we  take  his  sass. 

And  obediently  we  raise 

Our  weakly  wails  in  languid  hails 

Against  our  easy  days; 

For  that  pest  has  come,  and  things 

must  hum 
Until  we  jamb  him  back. 
He'll  wake  us  up,  like  a  boisterous  pup. 
Hang  the  Peptomaniac! 


PEP  POEMS  129 


WHAT,  NOT  WHO 

The  world  has  changed  since  long  ago, 
Has  changed,  and  tho  it's  funny, 
A  man's  known  not  by  his  graceful  bow. 
Nor  alone  for  his  pater's  money. 
The  world  loves  not  the  baser  view. 
It  looks  for  actions,  noble  true. 
We  ask  to-day  not  "Who  are  you  ?" 
But  just,  my  boy,  "What  can  you  do?'* 

Bold  youth  strikes  out  with  vaunting  air 
And  makes  wide  proclamation. 
"Behold,"  he  cries,  "my  record  fair, 
I  come  from  ancient  nation; 
My  family  tree  contained  the  glow 
Of  a  crown  and  cross  in  the  long  ago; 
My  blood  is  blue,— "    "But  hold  !    E'en  so," 
We  cry,  "my  boy  what  can  you  do?" 

Sweet  maid  looks  wide  upon  the  world 
And  sighs   for  the  conquest's  admiration; 
For  her  the  joys,  but  slow  unfurled. 
Breaks  forth  in  eager  contemplation. 
She,  too,  descends  from  ancient  blue. 
The  Pilgrim  Fathers,  and  Generals,  too, — 
But  soft.     My  child,  the  times  are  new. 
Not  what  They  were, — ^What  can  you  do? 

Worship  not  the  titles  of  long  ago. 

Nor  the  dead  in  the  far-gone  past; 

Worship  not  the  blood  that  used  to  glow. 

Nor  the  legends  of  domains  vast ; 

All  that  in  song  may  softly  play. 

Or  tales  and  rhymes  may  beauty  show. 

But  in  the  strife  of  stern  to-day 

'Tis  not  dead  past. — What  can  you  do? 


I30     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

So  in  this  fray  gird  armor  on, 

Nor  fail  to  know  the  mandate  stern 

That  Life  means  Strife;  when  once  begun 

We  from  our  folHes  soon  must  turn, 

And  with  deep  faith  and  highest  vow 

Turn  face  to  Heaven  and  Forward  go; 

Forget  the  past  and  live  in  now; 

And  show  the  World  what  you  can  do. 


PEP  POEMS  131 


SOAK  HIM ! 

If  you  meet  a  cur  today; 

Soak  him! 

If  a  skunk  gets  in  your  way; 

Soak  him! 
This  is  no  time  to  stop  and  say, 
"If  you  please,  just  run  away!" 
Poke  the  slanderer  where'er  you  may. 

Soak  him! 

Nail  the  gossip's  sneaking  lie; 
Soak  him! 
Kick  his  bunk  into  the  sky; 

Soak  him! 
You  can  beat  him  if  you  try 
For  each  calumny  you  decry 
Bangs  the  groucher  in  the  eye. 
Soak  him! 

Boy's,  you  hear  that  tramp  of  men? 

They'll  soak  him. 
Two  million  strong  will  soon  be  ten 

To   soak  him. 
We're  going  to  win,  it  will  be  fun 
This  war  for  work  is  just  begun 
You'll  have  a  job  when  it  is  done. 
Soak  him! 


132     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


FINE  DAY 

Half  of  the  world  needs  a  word  of  cheer, 
They  have  eyes  to  see  and  ears  to  hear, 
But  their  hearts  are  dead  and  full  of  pain, 
Or  their  minds  are  seared,  or  their  souls  are  islain, 
But  a  word  of  joy  may  their  sorrows  allay. 
Jist  grasp  their  hands  and  full-voiced  say — 
**Fine  day,  old  man,  fine  day !" 

You  see  a  cripple  drag  along  the  drive, 
All  twisted  and  doubled  and  half  alive, 
Jist  a  word  of  pep,  a  hearty  hail 
Will  alway  hearten ;  'twill  never  fail ; 
It  will  drive  most  any  old  trouble  away, 
Jist  stick  out  your  paw  and  smiling  say, 
"Fine  day,  old  man,  fine  day!" 

Perhaps  the  brokers  have  double-crossed 
Your  friend,  he's  down,  his  pile  is  lost. 
Or  the  banks  foreclosed  on  his  bungalow. 
And  his  heart  and  life  are  filled  with  woe. 
If  all  is  dark,  you  can  set  him  aright 
By  a  word  of  confidence;  turn  on  the  light, 
Grab  his  old  hand,  and  with  firm  clasp  say, 
"I  believe  in  you,  lad,  fine  day,  fine  day !" 


PEP  POEMS  133 


LITTLE  DOGS  YAP  AT  THE  BIG  DOG'S  HEELS 

The  little  dogs  yap  at  the  big  dog's  heels, 

Look  at  that,  lad,  and  ponder; 
They  snarl  at  the  bones  that  the  big  dog  steals; 

See  how  their  eyes  gape  in  wonder! 
The  little  dogs  grumble  when  the  big  makes  good, 
They  howl  and  they  sneer  while  the  big  saws  wood, 
And  they  mine  his  trenches  while  the  big  sweats 
blood, 

For  little  dogs  know  their  blunder. 

The  coyotes  snarl  at  the  grizzly's  heel; 

A  weasel's  mind  thinks  weasel; 
The  rats  will  filch  from  a  lion's  meal. 

For  a  measly  skunk  acts  measel. 
No  matter  how  big  may  the  big  bear  be. 
The  coyotes  and  skunks  will  have  jealousy. 
And  instead  of  climbing  themselves,  they  try 

To  make  the  big  bear  foozle. 

And  so  do  we  find  it  in  human  life, 

The  do-noughts  snap  at  the  worker. 
The  little  warped  mind  sneers  at  the  big  mind's 

strife, 
And  the  doer  is  slandered  by  the  shirker. 
The  big  man  labors  the  full  day  through, 
Nor  seeks  he  his  rest  but  to  self  is  true. 
He  achieves,  and  does  what  God  made  him  to  do, 

But  is  maligned  by  the  lurker. 


134     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

So  the  little  dogs  yap  at  the  big  dog's  heels, — 

A  lesson,  lad,  and  a  warning; 
No  matter  how  fine  or  how  clean  he  feels, 

In  small  hearts  rage  is  burning. 
There  is  always  the  sneer  and  the  snarl  for  fame, 
And  the  muck  and  the  slime  to  smear  a  fair  name, 
For  the  little  dog  thinks  that  is  part  of  the  game, 

So  the  little  dog  snarls  all  morning. 

But  what  if  the  little  pups  do  snarl  and  snap, 

Will  that  stop  a  man  from  winning? 
Why,  the  big  man  makes  good  and  he  don't  give  a  rap 

For  the  howls  that  the  small  fry  are  dinning. 
There  are  bigger  things  in  his  great  broad  path. 
And  he  has  no  time  for  spite  and  wrath; 
To  him  will  be  added  much  to  what  he  hath. 

And  his  true  work  is  but  beginning. 


PEP  POEMS  135 


THE  MAN  WITH  THE  DISH-RAG  HEART 

Here's  verses  to  the  man  with  the  dish-rag  heart; 
To  the  world  he  is  great,  to  his  friends  he  is  smart ; 
But  to  the  elect  who  know  his  true  game, 
He's  a  rotter  and  quitter  and  filled  with  shame. 
He  has  climbed  by  stealth  to  a  place  of  high  rank, 
He  juggles  the  funds  in  a  gold-plated  bank, 
But  a  sham  is  his  honor,  he's  his  smile  but  a  part. 
For  he  is  that  half  man 

With  a  dish-rag  heart. 

To  his  friends  in  success  he  has  always  a  smile. 
And  you'd  think  that  his  heart  was  clean  without  guile; 
But  if  the  hook  gouges  in  the  back  of  a  man, 
'Tis  a  mark  for  the  door — dirty  water  in  the  pan; 
With  a  smirk  he  will  size  you  to  see  if  you  prove 
To  have  a  big  pull  with  the  powers  above. 
But  if  storms  of  disaster  e'er  become  your  part 
It's  "Get  out,  sir,"  by  the  man 
With  the  dish-rag  heart. 

How  we  loath  such  a  man  who  has  a  veneer 

Upon  his  good  face  but  is  filled  with  fear 

That  his  august  acquaintance  will  prove  but  a  beggar. 

And  his  closest  of  friends  turn  out  but  a  pegger. 

For  his  measure  of  man  to  kowtow  and  to  salam 

Is  the  sign  of  the  dollar  though  bought  by  his  shame, 

And  he  smirks  to  the  monied,  but  his  frowns  are  an  art. — ■ 

That's  the  style  of  the  goof 

With  the  dish-rag  heart. 


136     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


BUCK  UP! 

Buck  up  there,  man,  and  raise  your  head, 
And  look  the  world  right  in  the  eye; 
What  if  your  plans  have  all  gone  dead. 
What  if  your  friends  have  each  one  fled, 
You  still  have  brawn  to  earn  your  bread, 
And  there  are  other  plans  you  can  try; 
So  buck  up ! 

Buck  up  there,  man,  and  strike  out  strong, 
Nor  flinch  at  all  if  the  wollop  is  hard ; 
You  can  start  again,  for  the  day  is  long, 
No  matter  who  may  have  done  you  wrong 
You  can  meet  it  fair  with  a  lilt  of  song ; 
You  had  no  cinch  on  the  world's  regard; 
So  buck  up! 

Buck  up  there,  man!    There  are  better  days 
Than  ever  the  sun  has  shone  upon ; 
There  are  fairer  flowers,  and  smoother  ways. 
Clearer  skies  and  bluer  bays. 
And  Life  holds  more  in  its  mystic  maze 
Than  was  ever  lost  in  the  yester-gone; 
So  buck  up! 

The  world  takes  off  its  hat  to  all 
Who  meet  it  bold,  uncowed  and  true, 
It  spurns  the  cur  who  fears  to  fall. 
And  gleefully  bumps  the  tottering  wall; 
But  it  vaunts  the  man  who  braves  its  call. 
And  that  man,  my  friend,  may  well  be  you; 
So  buck  up,  old  man,  buck  up! 


PEP  POEMS  137 


HIT  HARD  IF  YOU  HIT  AT  ALL 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 
If  you  don't  you  are  working  for  a  fall, 
For  the  other  fellow  is  going  to  do  the  same, 
And  pretty  soon  that  man  will  have  the  name 
That  you  have  sought, — of  being  the  best 
Man  in  your  line;  and  the  rest 
Of  the  world  will  laud  him  to  the  skies. 
While  for  you  there  will  be  just  nought  but  sighs,: — 
So 
Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 
You  may  be  short  and  your  opponent  tall, 
But  get  a  ladder  if  you  reach  his  nose, 
Or  a  pair  of  stilts,  or  step  on  his  toes. 
Don't  whine  and  stand  there  half  afraid. 
No  better  man  than  you  was  ever  made. 
The  other  fellow  is  just  as  scared  as  you, 
And  wonders  just  what  you  will  do ; 
So 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 

But  first  be  sure  that  hitting  is  your  call. 

Don't  hit  a  man,  if  hitting  may  be  wrong 

For  decent  words  have  carried  lots  of  good  along. 

You  may  be  the  one  who  may  have  erred. 

While  the  other  man  can  prove  it  with  a  word; 

But  if  you  are  right,  and  know  you  are  right 

Then  hit  first  in  a  big  whopping  fight. 

And 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all 


138     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 

A  puny  bunt  has  never  carried  a  three-bag  ball; 

A  gentle  love-pat  never  gets  you  anywhere 

Except  a  cushioned  seat  in  an  invalid's  chair. 

No  man  with  red  blood  in  his  pounding  vain 

Will  sneak  around  the  ring  to  welch  again, 

But  force  the  gaff  and  step  up  like  a  man ; 

They  will  know  you  were  there  when  the  fight  began. 

So 

Hit  hard  if  you  hit  at  all. 


PEP  POEMS  139 


I'LL  NOT  BE  A  SLACKER 

The  other  day  a  wise  man  said 

He'd  rather  be  aHve  than  dead,  — 

A  Hving  beast  of  the  unploughed  field 
Than  any  dead  prince  with  a  mitered  shield, 
A  living  lecherous  lustful  fly, 
Than  a  dead  king  Cyrus  with  glassy  eye, 
A  living  snake  curled  in  the  grass 
Than  a  mouldering  Czar  with  a  casque  of  brass, 
A  living  anything  upon  the  earth. 
Than  a  long-dead  prophet  in  his  land  of  birth. 

The  glow  of  his  apostrophe 

Was  in  the  thought  of  "just  to  be," 

To  feel  the  sun  in  its  golden  splendor, 

To  feel  the  breezes  warm  and  tender. 

To  know  that  he  on  earth  was  one, 

And  that  his  life  was  just  begun, — 

No  matter  how  low  or  high  estate 

He'd  rather  be  that  than  intestate. 

But  to  me  "just  living"  means  more  than  life, 
It  means  a  doer  in  this  world  of  strife, 

A  Doer  a  Be-er,  a  Thinker,  a  man^ 
A  king  of  all  beasts  since  the  world  began, 

A  Liver,  a  Fighter,  and  not  just  exist. 

For  a  clod  on  the  sod  the  best  things  has  missed. 

I'll  not  be  a  slacker  and  slink  through  time. 

For  I  believe  that  my  objective  is  much  more  isublime. 

I  believe  that  God  put  me  here  to  do 

The  best  that  my  brain  and  my  brawn  can  put  through; 

The  best  that  my  heart  and  my  soul  can  command ; 

The  bestj  so  that  few  in  the  strife  can  withstand. 


140     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Let  that  wise  (?)  man  on  his  belly  crawl 

Let  him  slink  in  the  grass  or  the  rushes  tall, 

Let  him  blink  at  the  sun  on  a  warmed-up  stone, 

Or  ooze  deep  in  the  slime,  abhorrent,  alone; 

As  for  me,  I  would  live  each  fast-passing  day. 

So  that  the  morrow  will  come  more  joyously; 

I  will  smile  and  I'll  sing,  and  work  mighty  hard 

To  be  better  and  strike  harder  with  my  pen  or  my 

sword, 
I'll  live  cleaner,  think  purer,  and  hdp  on  my  way, 
Till  God  will  summon  me  to  him  and  will  say: 
"Well  done,  faithful  servant,  so  enter  thou  in. 
For  thy  moments  were  too  busy  to  pander  to  sin, 
Thy  hours  were  spent  in  thy  talent's  just  use. 
And  wastage  had  no  portion,  and  sloth  no  abuse; 
Thy  hands  are  clean,  tho  hardened  by  toil. 
But,  thy  Soul  hath  grown  greatly  in  earth's  wild  turmoil, 
Enter  thou  in,  for  death  ends  not  all. 
It  is  but  the  beginning, — await  thou  my  call." 
And  I  know  I  would  rather  be  a  long  time  dead. 
And  still  throb  to  the  sobs  of  the  poor  o'er  my  head 
Than  be  a  living  scorpion  or  object  of  scorn, 
And  slink  sullenly,  abhorrent,  ea^h  morn  unto  morn. 


PEP  POEMS  141 


THE  HEARTY  HAND-SHAKE 

Did  you  ever,  in  walking  along  the  street, 
Shake  hands  with  a  friend  you  chanced  to  meet, 
And  in  shaking  discover,  with  a  weary  sigh, 

That  the  palm  which  you  grasp 

Had  the  insipid  clasp 
Of  a  weakling — so  listless  and  dry? 

Did  you  ever  in  seeming  friendly  array. 
Bring  a  smile  on  your  face  into  active  play. 
And  with  gusto  becoming  a  hearty  good  fellow 

Attempt  to  inspire  then 

Some  kindred  fire  in — 
To  the  hand  which  is  weak  and  so  shallow  ? 

While  out  to  a  function  and  having  a  time. 
Were  you  ever  introduced  to  one  *'Oh,  so  prime," 
And  in  shaking  her  dainty  flabby  white  paw. 
Press  it  hard  then  drop  it. 
Like  a  rag  or  a  puppet. 
For  so  weak  it  would  flipflap  and  saw? 

If  you've  ever  been  subject  to  this  class  of  being 
Who  insipidly  shake,  ne'er  acknowledging  or 
seeing. 
Who  have  no  power  in  their  dainty  white  hand 
And  wince  when  you  shake  it  with  a  little  sand. 
Then  you  I  address ;  to  you  I  am  speaking ; 
For  I  know  that,  like  I,  for  revenge  you  are 

seeking. 
We'll  put  up  a  job — just  lend  me  your  ear; 
(Press  nearer  my  friend,  so  well  you  may  hear) 
If  any  such  another  comes  e'er  o'er  your  path. 


142     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  insipidly  shaking  arouses  your  wrath, 

Simply  shake  his  rag  palm  till  he's  .shook  out  of 

breath, 
And  squeeze  his  insipidness  until  he  chatters  his 

teeth ; 
Bow  low,  and  in  mockery  obeisance  then  make, 
And  teach  him  the  language  of 
A  Hearty  Hand-Shake. 


PEP  POEMS  143 


LOOKING  FOR  TROUBLE 

In  my  ambling  through  this  valley 

Of  not  unalloyed  ddight, 
I  have  very  often  wondered 
At  the  very  funny  sight 
Of  some  people  who  are  ever 

On  the  watch  to  make  a  kick, 
And  when  they  see  a  head  out 
Have  the  itch  to  heave  a  brick. 
They're  the  folks  who  talk  molasses, 
When  they're  not  behind  your  back. 
But  as  soon  as  you're  not  looking 
They  will  steal  your  little  stack. 
And  when  you  have  won  the  corn-cob 

They  will  cheer  you  around  the  town, 
But  when  once  you  get  the  hatchet 

They  will  kick  you  while  you're  down. 
For  I  know  this  type  of  blue  jay 
Will  soon  meet  his  Waterloo, 
So  don't  ever  trouble  trouble, 
Till  that  trouble 
Troubles 
You. 

Now,  I  know  that  in  this  hamlet 

There  are  many  of  this  ilk, 
Who  are  all  the  time  pretending 

They  are  fine  as  finest  silk, 
But  just  once  give  them  the  token 

That  they  have  a  coming  kick, 
And  you'll  see  enough  of  trouble 

Then  to  fairly  make  you  sick. 
Why,  just  open  up  the  doorway 


144     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

So's  to  let  the  knockers  in, 
And  you'll  very  soon  be  floating 
In  the  kicks  up  to  your  chin ; 
Oh,  they'll  flock  around  your  office. 

And  they'll  stack  about  your  room. 
Until  you  think  the  brightest  sunshine 
Was  no  more  than  midnight  gloom. 
Yes,  they'll  wrangle  there  and  jangle, 
And  the  air  will  grow  dark  blue. 
So  I  say,  don't  trouble  trouble, 
Till  that  trouble 
Troubles 
You. 

I  have  seen  some  mighty  funny 

Things  that's  kept  me  young  and  green. 
I  have  watched  the  cunning  capers 

Of  the  three-shell  pea  or  bean. 
Yes, — I've  had  the  laugh  in  thousands 

At  the  freaks  who  daily  pass. 
And  have  sometimes  stood  in  terror 

Of  the  meter  to  my  gas. 
But  I've  never  seen  the  day  when 

I'd  invite  the  crowd  to  kick, 
For  I  know  most  awful  quickly 

They  would  come  almighty  thick. 
And  it  seems  to  me  just  crazy 

For  a  man  to  heave  a  club 
Right  into  a  hanging  hornet's  nest, 

To  see  the  bunch  of  troub'. 
For  most  certainly  he'll  get  it — 

In  a  place  that's  private,  too; 
So,  never  trouble  trouble. 
Till  that  trouble 
Troubles 
You. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN 


MY  DAILY  TASK 

I  sit  at  my  desk  and  ponder, 
What  shall  I  write  to-day  ? 
I'd  rather  be  way  out  yonder 
A-fishin'  in  Miami  Bay; 
I'd  rather  be  tramping  the  hillside 
Or  pounding  the  pill  o'er  the  lea; 
I'd  rather  take  off  my  garments, 
And  take  a  cool  dip  in  the  sea. 

I  know  that  I  ought  to  be  working, 
My  pencil  should  be  flying  fast ; 
But  I  feel  just  like  a  shirking, 
And  I'd  skip  if  I'd  ever  dast; 
But  the  editor  up  there  is  waiting 
For  my  daily  effort  in  rhyme. 
So  there  is  no  use  in  debating. 
It's  got  to  be  done  on  time. 

But  what  to  write  I  just  can't  guess 
Because  I'm  not  right  in  the  mood, 
And  what  I'd  write  I  must  confess 
Would  to-day  be  not  of  much  good. 
So  here  I  sit  with  my  waiting  pad, 
And  chew  the  stub  of  my  slothful  pen, 
I  can't  be  gay,  and  I  can't  be  sad, 
So  I  guess  I'll  go  out  and  talk  with  men. 

I'll  go  and  ask  the  boys  on  the  links 

What  they  think  of  the  dimate,  the  birdu, 

the  sky, 
And  I'll  whack  at  the  ball  and  settle  this  jinx, 
And  then  come  back  for  another  try. 

147 


148     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

I'll  take  a  dip  in  the  pounding  surf, 

And  a  race  on  the  sands  of  the  sloping  shore, 

I'll  watch  the  games  on  the  smooth-rolled 

turf 
And  return  to  scribble  some  more. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  149 


A  "FURRIN'^  TRIP 
Nonsense  rhymes  of  a  European  trip  in   191 1 

It's  lots  of  fun  to  make  a  run, 

And  fills  you  full  of  laughter, 

For  you're  a  honey  if  you've  got  money, 

And  you're  the  bloke  they're  after. 

So  one  fair  day  we  hied  away 

And  snuck  off  to  the  landing. 

And  blamed  if  there,  near  my  steam  chair, 

There  wasn't  a  toady  standing. 

So  round  about  we  tried  to  get  out, 

But  the  boat  began  its  meanness; 

'Twas  lucky,  too,  that  foreign  crew 

Left  even  a  sou  between  us. 

A  storm  came  on  and  almost  gone 

We  fed  thQ  hungry  fishes ; 

Oh  what  a  head!     We  laid  in  bed 

And  wouldn't  look  at  dishes. 

But  pretty  soon  the  lovely  moon 

Shone  down  upon  the  breakers, 

And  off  to  shore,  to  sail  no  more. 

But  wander  on  God's  acres. 

From  Rome  to  Nice,  and  wet  Venice 

We  tumbled  in  the  water. 

The  gondolier  let  out  a  cheer 

And  asked  us,  what's  the  matter. 

So  to  the  north  to  hills  of  worth 

The  Alps  and  to  Geneva; 

My,  what  a  game  with  some  sweet  dame! 

I  hated  much  to  leave  her. 

Through  Skagarack  and  Cattegat 
From  North  Sea  to  the  Baltic, 
JJp  Finland  Gulf  down  Adriat, 


150      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  jerk  away  to  Leipzig, 

And  when  the  thick-skulled  German  guard 

Insists  on  seeing  your  passport 

You  slip  a  cog  and  take  a  jog 

And  pike  right  off  to  Stuttgart. 

It  is  no  sin  to  view  Berlin 

Until  the  Kaiser  passes, 

Then  take  a  jerk,  for  he's  a  "turk" 

And  slide  off  to  Manasses. 

Down  into  Spain  we  flew  again 

And  jollied  Don  Quixote, 

But  he  got  mad,  and  so  begad, 

We  left  his  table  d'hote. 

We  took  a  snoop  at  Monsieur  Bupe, 

Who  bellowed  out  his  orders. 

His  beef  was  rare,  he  tore  his  hair, 

And  we  slid  o'er  the  borders, 

You'd  think  it  strange  to  know  the  change 

It  took  most  every  day,  there. 

To  pay  the  tips  to  all  those  dips 

Who  stood  behind  your  rest  chair; 

They'd  rob  you  blind  much  like  their  kind, 

In  most  delightful  manner. 

And  if  you  kick,  it's  done  so  slick 

As  the  skin  of  a  bananner. 

Off  then  to  see  the  Zuyder  Zee 

Where  they  make  red  ball  cheeses, 

And  straight  across  the  Ring-a-loss, 

And  feel  the  northern  breezes. 

To  Edam  then  and  to  Marken, 

The  quaintest  place  in  Holland, 

And  so  by  night  to  that  dam  site 

Just  over  in  the  lowland. 

To  Vollendam  and  Ellendam — 

Let  other  dams  befall  them; 

It  sounds  Hke  swearing,  but  I'm  declaring 

It's  just  what  people  call  them. 

To  Brussels  Sprout  to  eat  some  trout 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  151 

And  drink  a  glass  of  liquor 

With  Leopold  there,  then  with  a  glare 

The  customs  flunks  will  dicker. 

Ha,  to  Paree  where  we  may  see 

The  Moulin  Rouge  at  midnight, 

And  climb  Montmart^^e  which  like  a  star 

Will  razzle-dazzle  you,  quite. 

Then  down  the  Seine  you  float  again 

Off  to  the  Latin  Quarter, 

The  models  view,  quite  naughty  too, 

Till  you're  caught  by  the  Porter, 

A  sadder  man  but  wiser  than 

You  were  when  you  had  entered; 

But  you  have  seen  the  red  and  green 

Where  many  steps  have  ventured. 

In  merry  France  we'll  lead  the  dance 

And  stop  off  at  old  Rouen, 

But  don't  you  go  to  red  Bordeaux 

If  you  know  what  you  are  doin'. 

Your  pants   Toulouse?     Well  then,  you 

goose, 
Just  run  on  to  Calais 
And  when  you  come  back  just  leave  your 

stack 
Before  you  get  away. 

Now  to  the  fogs  and  through  the  bogs 

Of  England  we  have  wandered. 

And  stubbed  our  toes  and  bumped  our  nose 

Where  George  Third  once  had  blundered; 

And  like  a  dream  we  had  to  scheme 

To  get  into  Westminster, 

To  Buckingham  we  took  a  slam 

And  saw  some  silly  spinster, 

Won't  tell  her  name,  but  you  can't  blame 

Us  for  not  seeing  the  Tower, 

For  when  we  went  to  see  a  gent, 

We  were  caught  in  an  awful  shower. 

And  when  we  dried,  you  would  have  died 


152      STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

To  see  our  draggled  trousers, 

So  to  the  Hotel  we  rode  like — ^vell 

We  didn't  like  such  sousers. 

The  Thames  was  bright  in  the  sunlight 

As  we  rode  on  down  to  Greenwich, 

But  we  couldn't  find  the  man  behind, 

Who  ate  that  cold  bean  porridge. 

To  Stratford  thus  we  took  the  'bus — 

To  see  the  home  of  Shakespeare, 

But  when  we  got  there,  I  must  declare. 

They  gave  us  ale  for  brown  beer. 

So  we  gave  up  and  dropped  the  cup 

And  off  on  our  journeys — 

Soon  landed  quite  about  midnight 

Right  underneath  Old  Furness. 

Now  take  the  boat,  they've  got  my  goat. 

And  hike  right  off  to  Queenstown, 

Well  I  declare,  see  my  grey  hair ! 

I  leave  this  place  at  sundown. 

So  to  the  west,  the  land  of  rest 

And  peace  and  sweet  contentment, 

\ye'll  soon  return  with  brown  sunburn 

And  lost  is  all  resentment. 

Ah,  native  land,  you  beat  the  band 

Much  better  than  the  foreigner. 

If  I  go  'way  again  to  stay, 

Just  you  call  in  the  coroner. 

When  we  get  home,  no  more  we'll  roam, 

Because  our  *'mon"  is  gone,  Sir ; 

And  now  we'll  fight  from  morn  till  night 

And  then  on  till  dawn,  sir, 

To  get  the  cash  to  buy  our  hash 

And  live  a  humble  life,  sir. 

With  meat  and  bread,  and  no  swelled  head, 

And  a  quiet  little  wife,  sir. 

For  we  have  learned  that  we'll  get  burned 

If  we  do  "furrin  meathing," 

Where  it  will  take  all  dough  we  rake 

To  pay  for  simple  breathing. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  153 


WHEN  DAISY  COW  WENT  DRY 

The  breakfast  food  tastes  awful  flat, 
With  the  cream  I  have  to  use, 
And  mud  is  easier  to  digest, 
Than  the  coffee  with  that  ooze 
Which  dainty  Isabelle  brings  in, 
And  with  apologetic  sigh 
Sets  softly  near  my  steaming  cup, — 
Since  gentle  Daisy  cow  went  dry. 

The  children's  meals  stand  lone  and  cold ; 
Untouched  their  bread  and  scorned  their 

food, 
While  tears  will  glisten  in  their  eye, 
And  mother  croons  in  gentler  mood; 
The  watery  milk  the  milkman  brought 
Would  hardly  feed  a  starving  fly. 
And  so  we  dawdle  at  the  meal, 
Since  gentle  Daisy  cow  went  dry. 

One  never  knows  how  much  he  loves 
The  common  things  of  every  day 
Until  he  has  to  do  without, — 
And  someone  has  to  say  him  nay. 
He  takes  the  nectar  with  his  food, 
Ambrosia  with  his  meal  supply; 
But  we  never  miss  the  milk  in  life, 
Until  the  Daisy  cow  goes  dry. 


154     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  SIMPLE  LIFE 

Oh,  I  wanta'  be  a  farmer 

And  lead  a  simple  life, 
A  life  o*  just  plain  living. 
Far  off  from  crime  an  strife. 
Oh,  I  wanta'  creep  to  nature. 
And  lay  my  tired  ear 
Down  close  to  the  soft,  damp  furrow, 

The  throbs  o'  the  earth  to  hear. 

Oh,  I  wanta'  be  a  farmer — 

Not  one  o'  the  scheming  kind 
Who  drives  a  sharp  hard  hoss-trade, 

And  has  an  ax  to  grind; 
But  the  lazy  kind  o'  farmer 

Who  was  not  born — ^but  grew; 
Who  just'll  work  when  nature 

Demands  a  meal  or  two. 

Oh,  I  wanta'  be  a  farmer, 

Way  out  in  the  hush  of  the  gray. 
Where  the  stars  at  night  are  sleepy  eyes. 

An'  the  world  is  a  million  miles  away; 
An'  there  in  the  languid  green  o'  the  grass. 

And  the  scent  o'  the  sweet  an'  dew-kissed 
rose, 
I  wanta'  do  nothing  but  dream  an'  dream, — 

Just  nothing  but  doze — an'  doze — an'  doze. 


IN  LIGHTER  YEIN  155 


THE  STRENUOUS  LIFE 

Oh,  I  wanta'  be  a  banker 

And  lead  a  strenuous  life, 
A  life  that's  real  exciting, 

That  fairly  reeks  with  strife; 
I  wanta'  chase  the  grizzlies 

Adown  the  howling  lane 
That's  paved,  they  say,  with  golden  bricks. 

An'   diamonds   strewn  between. 

Oh,  I  wanta'  be  a  banker, 

For  I  can  skin  a  bull. 
An'  act  just  like  a  broker, — 

They  say  he  clips  the  wool. 
I  wanta'  own  a  railroad 

And  break  a  Trust  or  two, — •. 
For  that  is  what  a  banker 

Is  always  'sposed  to  do. 

Oh,  I  wanta'  be  a  banker 

An'  run  this  universe. 
An'  have  my  little  finger 

In  everybody's  purse; 
I  wanta'  wear  the  diamonds. 

When  everyone  else  is  broke. 
And  sit  in  my  rolled  gold  office — 

'N  just  smoke, — ^an'  smoke — an'  smoke. 


156     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


WEEDS 

Would  I  like  to  plant  a  flower 

Twined  about  a  woodsy  bower? 

Fanned  by  breezes  from  the  west, 

'Cozzied  like  an  oriole's  nest? 

Ah,  yes  I  would,  of  course  I  would, 

I  love  fair  nature  in  lazy  mood, 

The  waving  trees  with  graceful  branches 

Reflected  in  pools  where  sweet  grass 

dances, 
Humming  bees  that  drone  their  prayers 
For  more  nectar  than  in  truth  is  theirs; 
Bluebirds  a  flashing  on  the  wing, 
And  yellow  breasted  goldfinch  sing. 
Yes,  oh  yes,  I  want  to  grow 
A  garden  full  of  goldenglow. 
Gladiolus,  roses  and  sweet  pea. 
And  pansy  faces  that  smile  at  me; 

But  oh,  my  hack!  just  think,  the  work 
To  keep  it  clean  and  must  not  shirk, 
The  spade,  the  hoe  and  f  ulltined  rake, 
And  ne'er  a  moment's  pleasure  take 
Until  the  sun  hath  gone  to  rest 
Adown  the  hills  in  the  glowing  west. 
And  the  weeds !     How  they  grow ! 
Tho  you  club  them  with  a  hoe, 
Pull  them  out  with  might  and  main 
And  pish,  they  come  right  up  again. 
Sure,  they  are  a  true  back-breaker, — 
Think  I'll  call  an  undertaker. 


IN  OGHTER  VEIN  157 

Every  farmer  has  his  garden, 
Like  state's  prison,  needs  a  warden, 
Work   from  early  gray  of  dawn 
Till  last  streak  of  light  is  gone; 
Then  gets  ready  for  the  morrow, 
Such  ducks  have  no  time  for  sorrow. 
Yes,  I'd  like  to  plant  a  flower. 
But  guess  I'll  wait  and  "get  the  power." 


158     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SECRETS 

She  had  a  secret  she  would  tell, 

A  secret  for  her  dearest  friend, 

And  in  her  breast  her  heart  would  swell 

And  swell  and  swell  until  the  trend 

Of  her  whole  work  by  day,  by  night, 

Would  halt  and  pause,  and  in  its  flight 

Time  did  drag  and  heavy  hang, 

Until  her  heart's  blood  tingling  rang 

In  ears  and  voice  and  flushed  her  throat 

And  pulsed  her  breast,  and  flashed  her  eye, 

And  one  most  marvelled  at  the  thought 

That  one  small  crypt  could  bring  such  joy. 

For 

She  had  a  secret  she  fain  must  tell — 

And  a  secret  told  must  be  told  well. 

She  had  a  secret,  and  all  day  long 

Her  heart  had  burst  her  lips  in  song; 

Her  head  had  swum  above  the  cloud, 

And  she  dared  not  breathe  one  word  aloud, 

For  she  had  a  secret, — mark  it  well; 

For  often  secrets   are  forged  in  hell. 

She  had  a  secret,  with  changing  mien 

She  wondered  if  her  thoughts  were  seen. 

And  she  furtive  gazed  in  dread  about 

To  see  if  her  secret  had  'hap  leaked  out; 

But  no.     The  world  was  slow,  and  she 

Was  busy  at  her  work;  and  we 

Who  stayed  about  the  self-conscious  maid 

Had  never  guessed  she  was  afraid; 

For 

She  had  a  secret,  had  the  minx, 

That  would  have  flushed  the  brow  of  Sphinx. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  159 

She  had  a  secret,  and  bare  could  wait 
Until  the  gong  had  clanged  eight, 
When  her  dear  friend  across  the  way 
Would  return  from  work  and  run  in  to  play 
And  gossip,  and  tell  the  choicest  bits 
Of  news  of  George,  and  who  gave  fits 
To  whom  adown  in  the  peaceful  shop 
Where  the  girls  were  models,  with  hats  atop 
Their  coiffs,  that  petted  wives  would  wear 
On  ravished  wigs  or  frizzled  hair. 

And  when  she  came,  ah,  how  she  blushed, 
And  how  the  blood  to  her  cheeks  rushed. 
And  how  she  gasped  with  a  gladdened  cry, 
And  how  the  sparkles  flashed  into  her  eye! 
For  she  had  a  secret — for  bad  or  good — 
But  I  won't  tell  it — I  never  would — 
For  she  had  a  secret, — it  is  her  own; 
So  the  secret  secret  shall  not  be  blown 
To  the  winds. 

SHE  had  a  secret. 


i6o     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


ELAINE,  I  WOULD  LIKE  TO  BITE  THEE 

OR   PERHAPS 

(THE  VAMP  DREAM  GIRL) 

A  travesty  on  the  drivel  published  in  some  of  our  highbrow 

magazines 

Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee. 

Bite  thee,  Elaine,  and  see  the  look  of  surprise 

Spring  from  out  of  the  air  into  thine  eyes. 

For  I  know  thou  carest  nought  for  me, 

But  prefer  to  live  a  life,  unchained  and  free. 

But  still  Elaine,  I  fain  would  bite  thee, 

If  that  would  only  affright  thee. 

And  for  that,  the  King  of  the  Imps  would  Knight  me. 

For  ah !  the  very  devil  is  in  thy  eyes,  Elaine. 

The  imp-spirit-urge  in  thy  heart,  EJaine; 

So  there,  Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee. 

Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee; 

Bite  thy  red  lips  when  I  draw  the  honey  dew 

From  thy  lost  soul  that  I  would  woo; 

Thy  red  lips  that  mocked  and  teased  and  scorned 

me, 
When  I  fain  sought  to  press  and  caress  thee. 
Altho  such  thoughts  harass  me, 
lYet,  Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee. 
Bite  thee  until  it  would  near  delight  me. 
To  see  thy  eyes  open  wide  just  once. 
And  know  that  thy  barriers  are  down. 
Thy  ever-ready  arrow  of  scorn  has  flown, 
Thy  demure  bewitching  reserve  has  blown, — 
Ah,  Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee! 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  i6i 

Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee 

Upon  thy  velvety  cheek  where  the  flush 

Of  demure  modesty  might  steal,  or  blush 

Of  innocence  return  to  rape  the  hush 

Of  the  beating  of  thy  heart.     Oh,  Elaine, 

I  would  truly  like  to  bite  thee 

Upon  thy  soft  neck,  where  pulses  the  fairy  blood 

Which  I  would  drink  from  out  thy  cup 

Of  centuried  love.     For  thou  art  mine, 

Altho,  alas,  I  can  never  be  all  thine. 

I  thrill  to  touch  thy  amorous  breasts, 

Thy  mound-tipped  breasts  with  promise  o'erfull 

Of  heart's  delight,  of  mother-nectar  for  thy  child. 

And  blush,  my  dear,  I  true  would  have  wild 

Visioned  passion  compass  thee  within  our  nest, 

That  no  moment  shall  of  Time  be  dull, 

And  have  thee  all  alone,  alone  forever, 

Until  e'en  ages  forgets  'tis  never. 

Ah,  Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee! 

Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee. 

That  brow !  those  eyes !  those  lips,  and  neck 

Those  arms  whitened  and  soft,  and  ankle  slender, 

Shoulders  drooped,  and  breasts  so  tender 

That  all  the  desires  of  a  century  would  wreck 

Itself  could  men  obtain  one  glance. 

Forgotten  would  be  sense,  the  heart  would  dance, — 

And  still  I  fain  would  like  to  bite  thee. 

Just  to  see,  ah,  to  see  most  joyfully 

Whether  in  all  this  iris  eyeful 

I  have  had  of  thee,  thru  day,  thru  night. 

Yes,  whether  thou  art  real,  art  truly  flesh 

That  by  some  charm  might  vanish  from  my  sight. 

With  all  thy  art  thy  "come  hither"  look 

And  "stay  there"  decree,  enticing  eyes  that  mock, 

But  stern  reserve  when  almost  thawed, — 

And  ways  that  make  me  think  of  my  mother's 

God; 
I  still  would  try  to  test  thee  to  find, 


1 62     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Altho  the  heart  of  mortal  man  be  blind, 

To  find  if  any  mite  of  human  flesh 

Or  bone  or  earthly  substance  would  within  you 

mesh, — 
Could  lie  hidden  within  that  soft  pearly  casket 
Of  thy  skin,  whether  within  that  basket 
Of  precious  stones  one  spark  is  true, — 
Whether  thou  art  Human,  old  or  new. 
Human,  Superhuman,  Divine, 

Or  just  Plain  Devil! 
Elaine,  I  would  like  to  bite  thee. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  163 


A  SPRING  TOAST 

(A  sadly-rhymed  bit  of  nonsense  written  to  interest  my, 

little   folks) 


Far  down  in  the  southern  peninsula 
Where  brightly  shines  the  sun, 

Where  orange  trees  bloom  continually, 
And  trickling  rivulets  run; 

Where  the  perfume  of  the  magnolia 
Mingles  fragrance  in  the  air. 

And  the  warbles  of  the  orioles 
Show  Nature  free  from  care; 

Where  flowers  bud  and  blossom 

All  seasons  of  the  year. 
Where  love  is  ever  rampant. 

And  Nature  knows  no  tear; 

Far  down,  where  beauty  aboundeth. 
And  foliage  thick  and  green 

Complete  a  perfect  picture 
Of  softened  Raphael  sheen; 

Where  harmony  of  happy  friendship 

Mingle  in  thoughts  of  love, 
And  symphony  of  forest-warblers 

In  inspiring  rhythm  move; 

Where  ambrosial  cups  of  happiness 

Are  ever  to  the  lips. 
And  Cupid  touches  gently 

All  hearts  with  arrow  tips; 


1 64     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

There,  there  is  Life's  Elysium, 

There  is  the  haven  of  joy; 
There,   there   resided  a   fairy, 

And  also  a  bashful  boy. 

Full  many  a  time  had  they  wandered 

'Neath  skies  of  azure  hue, 
With  twinkling  stars  above  them, — 

Had  sworn  there  to  be  true. 

Full  of  times  idly  dreaming 

In  paths  secluded,  still. 
This  lad  and  fairy  strolled 

Discussing  her  father's  will. 

Of  ambition  had  he  a  plenty, 

Imbued  with  passion's  fire. 
But  as  for  asking  her  papa, 

He  couldn't  face  his  ire. 

For  the  old  man  thought  him  youthful, 
('Tween  you  and  me,  he  was  right) 

And  he  thought  his  one  little  daughter 
A  midget  fairy,  quite. 

"H'm,  h'm,"  said  he  when  he  saw  her 
In  maidenly  dress  of  white; 

A  mere  little  witch  in  pinafores, 
"No  wedding  yet,  My  Light." 

But  Cupid  laughed  at  his  blindness, 
And  the  lovers,  still  they  loved; 

The  birds  looked  on  in  gladness, 
And  Moon  and  Stars  approved. 

The  magnolias  shook  out  their  fragrance, 

Incense  hung  in  the  air; 
All  combined  to  bless  the  union, 

Save  papa's  indifferent  stare. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  165 

One  day,  it  was  in  springtime 

When  all  was  bright  and  clear. 
And  papa  sipped  his  julep 

In  the  arbored  rustic  chair. 

Feeling  as  gay  as  a  kitten, 

As  young  as  in  his  teens. 
And  chuckled  at  the  sunshine 

Which  filtered  through  the  vines. 

The  lad  stood  stammering  and  stuttering, 
With  hat  in  hand  stood  spluttering, 
Yet  never  a  word  was  uttering 

Before  the  astonished   dad, 

Who  a  moment  previous  had 

Forgotten  the  beautiful  spring. 

All  thoughts  of  anything, 

And  simply,  o'ercome  by  the  heat. 

Fell  back  in  his  rustic  seat. 

Snoring  a  healthy  snore 

As  though  to  wake  no  more. 

The  young  lover  with  heart  in  his  throat 

Surprisedly  gazed  on  the  sleeper. 
And  stumbling  attempted  to  awaken 

The  serenader  from  his  stupor. 

But  do  what  he  would,  though  hem  and  cough, 
The  noise  which  he  made  was  not  loud  enough 
To  drown  out  the  noise,  which  like  a  volcano 
From  out  of  that  sleeper's  proboscis  did  flow. 
He'd  stamp  and  then  cough  in  poetical  meter. 
But  with  bugle-like  snore  "Pa"  went  him  one  better ; 
Till  growing  quite  desperate,  about  to  depart. 
When  with  a  dull  groan  "Pa"  woke  with  a  start. 

A  little  insect,  harmless  enough. 
Not  knowing  what  was  to  come. 


1 66     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Saw  a  large  cavern  in  the  place  it  alit, 
And  inquisitively  entered  the  room. 
Like  the  mythical  wife  of  the  mythical  giant 
The  inquisitive  bug  had  not  time  to  repent. 
A  pecuHar  influx  of  fast  moving  air 
Caught  the  intruder  and  carried  him  far 
Down  into  the  cavern  and  lodged  him  there, 
Where,  as  Fate  would  have  it 

Did  strangle  and  choke 
And  making  him  cough. 

The  sleeper  awoke. 

While  the  lad  stood  stammering  and  stutter- 
ing, 
With  hat  in  hand  stood  spluttering, 
Quite  frightened,  not  a  word  uttering 
Before  the  astonished  dad, 
Who  awaking,  yet  dreaming,  was  mad. 
"Well  ?"  thundered  the  loving  papa, 
"Why  are  you  here?     I  vow 
You've  been  standing  and  staring 
Like  a  sunfish  or  herring 
In  that  detestable  bearing 
For  an  hour  in  the  sun.     Come  now. 
Speak  out."    And  his  voice  softening, 
By  seeing  his  julep  a  glistening 
In  the  warm  sun's  slanting  ray — 
"Come,  drink  a  sweet  bumper,  my  boy." 

Low  stooping  and  bowing  the  lad  does  accept, 
But  mumbling  a  protest  he  looks  at  the  vet ; 
For  fearful  at  displeasing,  yet  longing  to  say 
His  mission  of  missions  and  then  get  away. 

The  dear  old  codger  pours  out  a  full  glass. 
And  holding  aloft  as  though  to  say  mass 
Allowing  the  sun  to  strike  through  the  cheer 
And  cast  red  reflections  on  everything  near. 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  167 

He  smiled  a  broad  smile  and  frowned  a  big  frown, 
Forgot  his  companion  and — ^gulped  it  down. 
Then  quickly  remembering  the  duties  of  host, 
Filled  another  and  presenting  proposed  a  toast. 

"The  ladies,  the  ladies, — to  all  the  dear  girls 
Who  keep  us  a  guessing,  yet  rarer  than  pearls. 
As  essential  to  man  as  his  julep  and  pipe, 
Our  loving  and  loved  ones, — the  ladies,  by  Cripe!" 

With  a  low  laugh  and  gurgle,  the  julep  they  quaffed 

And  thus  together,  the  lad  here  vouchsafed 

To  broach  the  delicate  matter: 

For — happy  inspiration, — 

The  toast,  (the  epicure's  creation) 

Opened  the  way  to  what  he  would  say 

About  his  fairy-like  daughter. 

Full  eloquent  he  waxed,  describing  a  maid 

With  wondrous  eyes,  of  whom  it  was  said 

That  she  was  an  angel,  fairy  in  disguise, 

Madonna  or  goddess,  or  otherwise. 

Her  long,  flowing  hair  did  purity  impart, 

Had  wound  its  gold  self  around  his  young  heart. 

He  ranted  and  raved,  most  poetically  describing 
A  mythical  being  who  nearby  was  hiding. 
The  old  gent  for  a  moment  stopped  sipping  his  wine, 
For  the  novice's  actions  he  could  not  divine. 

In  amazement  he  listened  and  wondering 

What  a  peculiar  inspiration  this  description  could  be, 

Then  stopping  the  lad,  to  the  lad  said  he, 

"What  in  Croesus  is  the  name  of  the  thing?" 

The  birds  looking  on,  chirped  a  response; 

The  new-budding  flowers  they  nodded  their  head ; 
A  bunch  of  gold  curls  rushed  up  with  a  laugh, — 

"Why,  Fan  is  the  name,  and  she  I  would  wed." 


1 68     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

"Fan?  Fan?     My  Fan?     Why  man  you  are  mad! 
Little  Fan?     This  Fan? — She  belongs  to  her  Dad! 
Now  there  little  tootsy,  you  silly  little  goose, 
She  loves  me  too  much,  sir,  too  much,  sir, — let  loose." 

This  to  the  young  man  who  with  brass  for  nerve, 
Had  encircled  the  waist  of  the  golden-haired  dove, 
And  whispering  love,  stood  facing  the  wrath 
Of  a  southern  man's  will,  who  stood  in  his  path. 

"Why,  papa,"  she  pleaded, 

"You  know  I  love  you, 
But  papa,  oh,  papa, 

I  love  Alfred  too. 
And,  papa,  why  papa, 

As  Mother  you  did  love. 
By  loving  my  Alfred 

My  girlhood  I  prove. 
So  do,  papa — please,  papa. 

Do  give  your  consent. 
And  bless  us  dear  father. 

Now  there  is  a  saint." 

Low  warbled  the  throat  of  the  singing  brown  thrush; 
The  hum  of  the  bees  was  heard  in  the  hush; 
Perfume  sweet  was  waft  on  the  breeze. 
And  lonely  sighs  rustle  through  the  green  trees. 
The  sky  overhead  of  deepness  so  blue 

Bespoke   from  its  depths  of  lovers  here  true. 

For  who  can  resist  the  graces  and  art 

Of  a  pleading  so  subtle  which  comes  from  the  heart, 
Who  turn  a  deaf  ear  to  the  will  of  true  love, 

When  blood  of  your  heart  thus  eloquent  doth 
prove  ? 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  169 

Who  ruthless  deny  the  hope  and  the  will 
Of  a  loved  little  sylph,  who  loving  you  still. 

Obeys  the  direction  of  Nature  and  God, 
And  loving  another,  that  other  would  wed? 

The  common  lot — the  right  and  power 

We  cannot  resist — it  is  our  dower. 
Cupid,  a  cruel  little  tyrant  he  is ; 

Heaven  pity  the  skeptics  who  ever  refuse 
To  obey  their  souPs  longings,  'thout  friendship  or  love 

Disgruntled  exist,  and  then  sink  to  the  grave. 

The  old  gentleman  trembled  and  then  heaving  a  sigh 
Turned  to  the  bumper,  for  he  felt  quite  dry. 
And  hastily  brushing  a  renegade  tear. 
Forced  a  sad  smile  on  his  face  to  appear; 
And  putting  a  jovial  air  over  his  pain, 
Poured  out  three  glasses  and  toasted  again. 

"Good  gracious,  great  thunder! 

Why  hang  it  all,  man. 
Why  didn't  you  say  so, — 

You  can  have  little  Fan. 
My  blessing,  God  bless  you, 

Why  take  her,  my  lad, 
And  may  she  love  you 

As  she  does  her  old  Dad. 
Why  bless  you, — ha,  ha,^ — 

That  is  a  good  one. 
H'm — Take  her  and — get  out, — 

You  rascals,  be  gone! 
Away  for  the  present — 

That  is  a  good  joke — 
I'll — ^get — used  to  it  in  time,  lad, — " 

— But  here  his  voice  broke. 


I70     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


DEATH 

A   FANTASY 

Death  leaned  against  the  low-browed  precipice 
O'er-looking  the  haunts  of  men, 
Reflecting  on  ages  of  gain, 
And  heaved  a  weary  sigh. 

Long  since  his  horns  were  blunt  and  worn, 
Withered  his  tail,  with  edges  torn, 
And  low  drooping  tusks.     He  looked  forlorn. 
A  tear  lurked  in  his  eye. 

"Why  kill  these  poor  mortals  all  off  like  this? 
(They're  becoming  too  good  for  my  blood; 
TheyVe  settled  too  much  on  one  God.) 
Why  compel  the  poor  devils  to  die? 

For  each  one  that  I  kill  or  poke  in  the  ground 

I  find  another  is  nigh. 
Each  one  I  entice  to  commit  some  rank  crime. 
And  committing  it  soon  seek  death 

(Seek  myself,  for  I  and  Old  Nick  are  one) 
Another  poor  sinner  takes  breath. 

"More   receiving  birth  than   I   can   kill; 

More  going  to  Heaven  than  down  to  Hell; 
Still  more  are  living  than  death  they  take, — 
Though  poisoned  ambrosia  and  nectar  I  make 
To  instil  in  their  mind,  and  sin  awake. 

What  am  I  to  do  if  continue  it  will? 

More  births  than  deaths — and  a  hole  in  Hell ! 

Over-worked  now,  though  ceaseless  am  I, 

I  cannot  compel  all  Creation  to  die." 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  171 

And  he  leaned  against  the  low-browed  precipice, 

O'er  looking  the  haunts  of  men, 

Reflecting  on  ages  of  gain. 
And  heaved  a  weary  sigh. 


172     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SEABREEZE  BEACH  IN  THE  MOON- 
LIGHT 

(A  Dip  into  Verse  Libre — Almost  Drowned) 

THE   NIGHT 

The  night  is  somber,  sciagraphic,  tenebrious, — 
But  not  silent. 

The  sullen  roar  of  the  breakers 
Rolling  ceaselessly, 
Hissingly,  slitheringly, 
Beating  forward,  sweeping  backward, 
Like  a  threatening,  awful,  yet  fascinating 
Danger  in  a  drowsing  dream, 

Caught  now  like  a  phantom  sunbeam  on  a  fairie  mirror, 
Lost  anon, — a  mystic  vision  of   restrained  power, — 
A  challenge  of  danger  hidden  in  the  coral  recesses, — 
Curling  enticingly,  playfully  as  a  kitten, 
Fav/ning   at   my    feet,   witching,    seductive,    undulating, 
vampirish, — 
Ah,  that  is  night  upon  the  beach  at  Seabreeze! 

THE   URGE 

But  my  heart  is  filled  with  fear — 

A  horrid  dread  melts  my  vitals ; 

For  the  mighty  wastes  of  the  distance 

Call  to  me. 

Call  out  of  eons  of  Time, 

Call  out  of  the  pleocine  past, 

Call,  call,  enchantingly,  hypnotisingly : 

"Come  into  my  depths. 

Come  deep,  deep  into  my  subterranean  passages. 

Where  all  is  calm,  and  silent,  and  wonderfully  green, — 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  173 

Eternally,  softly,  cool  and  green, — 
And  I  will  give  you  rest,  oblivion.  Nirvana." 
Ah,  I  fear! 

My  heart  is  filled  with  the  dread  of  the  great  unknown; 
I  am  as  on  the  top  of  a  high  building 
With  vast  space  beneath, 

And  would  fain  throw  myself  over  the  ramparts. 
I  am  as  one  on  the  uttermost  point  of  the  Alps 
With  the  attraction  of  nothingness  below, 
And  feel  the  pull  of  that  awful  vastness. 
Vacuophobia  clutches  my  heart; 
And  my  soul — ah,  my  soul 
Recognizes  the  call — the  call  of  time. 
The  call  of  the  distance, — 

The   call   of   mysterious   wraiths    of    disembodied    sea- 
nymphs. 
For  in  that  deep. 

That  restless  bosom  of  millions  of  ages  past, 
Rest  the  forefathers  of  man. 

THE  FEAR 

The  Terror  is  upon  me! 

There  is  no  knowing  what  horrible  forms 

Lurk  beneath  yon  heaving  waters; 

Ghost  sprays  of  an  eon  still  pulse  and  throb 

Before  my  salt-dewed  eyes. 

Shapes,   forms, — ^hideous,   terrible,   frightful, — 

Such  as  the  soul- window  of  the  human 

Never  has  rested  upon, — 

Shapes  uncouth,  unreal,  gigantic, 

Major-masses  with  transcendent  bulk, 

Immense,  monstrous,  repellant 

Grotesques  of  aborted  nature, 

Salurian  gargoyles, 

Dinosaurii,   ichthyopterygii — 

All  the  bizarre  nightmarish  shapes 

That  the  frightful  tales  of  my  far-gone  youth 

Could  conjure  up 


174     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

(Tales  which  are  the  foundation  of  cowardice  in  the 

child) 
These,  all  these,  may  be  furtively  lurking 
Ambushed  ready  to  spring,  out  there. 
I  can  see  them — beyond  yon  white-crested  wave, 
Ready  to  thrust  out  their  intumescent  tentacles, 
Their  slimy,  sinuous   formations, 
And  draw  me  down,  deep  down, 
Into  the  vastness  of  the 
Bottomless  Ooze! 

THE   MONSTER 

And  so  I  fear! 

Here  in  the  night 

My  knees  shake, 

OVIy  heart  slows  its  beat, 

My  bowels  have  turned  to  water. 

For  the  eyes  of   Reptilian  Aw  fulness 

With  the  threat  of  dire  catastrophe 

Are  upon  me ! 

They  spring  out  of  the  distant  misty  gloom. 

I  swoon  in  my  soul; 

I  stand  as  one  in  a  camerated  maze ; 

A  raucous  roar  of  approaching  doom 

Shrieks  out  on  the  sullen  air, 

A  throb  of  mighty  footsteps  rends  the  portentous  silence. 

The  gory  eyes  grow  larger  1 

Qiaos  is  upon  me ! 

Vivid  reflections  of  the  ferocious  glare, 

Beaten  angling,   criss-crossed   from  the  coquina. 

Driven  slanted  and  blinding  from  the  white  sands. 

Daze  my  affrighted  eyes ! 

The  hulking  monster  draws  nearer! 

All  the  tempestuous  avalanches. 

The  protean  upheavals  of  wild  nature, 

Combine  in  one  titanic  moment! 

I  gasp! 

I  choke! 

A  roaring  monster  is  upon  me! 


IN  LIGHTER  VEIN  175 


-But  I  stand  unharmed ! 


I  gasp.     I  shudder 

I  moan  in  despair 

I  fain  would  fall  on  the  sands 

And  plead  for  life — 

But  all  is  vain 

A  whirlwind  of  sound, 

A  turbulant  turmoil  of  terribleness. 

Rushes  past. 

A  stench  of  death  poisons  me 

I  choke  as  a  dying  man — 

For  the  black  Gargantua, 

The  Brobdingnagian  leviathan 

Has  passed ! 

Leaving  only  its  stench  of  decay, 

Of  myriad  forms  destroyed, 

To  pollute  the  ruffled  air  of  night. 

THE   MOONLIGHT 

I  look  up  to  the  sky, 

Diana  gazes  down  in  silvery  smiles; 

White  rays  of  peace  bathe  my  ashen  face; 

The  ever-changing  surf. 

Having  given  up  its  prehistoric  monster, 

Has  calmly  subsided  into  a  senile  hiss, — 

Kissing  the  spot  it  once  has  lashed. 

Flecks  of  Stardust  dance  upon  the  shimmering  ripples,^ 

A  handful  of  silver  shillings 

Flung  broadcast  into  the  limpid  waters 

Of  the  Naples'-blue  bay, 

Fish-scales  filtering  thru  open  fingers 

Into  a  pail  of  molten  pearl. 

With  the  flashing  isparide  of  fireflies 

To  catch  up  and  petrify  the  glancing  light. 

Again  the  sinuous,  faithless,  slithering  foam 

Licks  at  my  feet. 

It  promises  the  impossible. 

Suggests  the  unknown. 


176     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

But  now  I  am  not  afraid! 

Oblivion  hath  no  witchery  for  me! 

Enchantment  has  been  abated, 

For  I  am  I ! 

And  I  LIVE ! 

Forever  I  live! 

And  the  now  calls  to  me ! — 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE 


LINES  TO  LOVE 

The  world  is  large,  and  hidden  doth  contain 
Enough  of  gold,  and  shining  wealth  of  earth, 
Of  rubies  rare  and  stones  of  untold  worth. 
Of  shimmering  pearls  on  the  sunbeat  Main, 
To  make  high  kingly  courtiers  disdain 
The  lower  elements  of  plebian  birth; 
And  counteth  not  the  root  of  senseless  mirth 
That  clowns  and  mocking,  struggling  actors  fain 
Would  show.    But  one  small  gem  of  god-like 

power 
And  subtle  worth  above  yon  maudlin  dross, 
A  priceless  legacy  or  queenly  dower, 
A  princely  coronet,  a  perfumed  flower 
That  blossoms  fresh  from  lowborn  earthly  moss 
And  scents  the  path  of  faith  for  ceaseless  hour, 
Is  Love — the  single  gem  of  priceless  worth 
That  makes  the  Man,  and  rules  the  struggling 

Earth. 


179 


1 80    STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


TO  MY  WONDER-GIRL 

Oh  wonder-girl — sweet  wonder-girl, 

Oh  girl-wife  of  my  dreams — 

I  held  thee  once  within  these  arms 

And  since  then  all  life  seems 

A  golden  mist  of  super-life, 

And  mellowed  fancy  teems 

With  superthoughts  and  superhopes 

And  superwork  and  plans; 

For  know,  oh  spirit-wonder  girl, 

Tho  hidden,  lost  and  gone 

Beyond  the  dim  and  distant  clouds, — 

Thy  presence  still  lives  on. 

Thy  lips  still  cling  to  my  eager  lips, 

My  eyes  still  catch  the  glance 

Of  the  thrill  and  joy  in  thy  melting  eye; 

My  arms  hold  thee  alone. 

And  I  must  live  with  but  these  dreams — 

My  visioned  hopes  in  vain? 

Can  nought  bring  back  to  me  the  sprite — 

My  wonder-girl — again? 

Ah,  must  these  aching  arms  be  void 

Of   the   pressure,    fragrant,    soft. 

Of  the  form  divine,  which  once  was  mine 

And  which  has  weirdly  drawn  aloft? 

Ah,  must  I  wander  on  in  vain 

Adown  the  corridors  of  time. 

And  with  aching  heart  and  eyes  that  smart 

With  unshed  tears  but  seek  and  start, — 

Ah,  seek,  and  watch,  and  search,  and  pray, 

Until  the  sad  and  endless  day 

Gives  out  unto  the  eternal  night 

Sans  wonder-girl,  sans  hope,  sans  light? 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  i8i 

Oh,  wonder-girl,  oh,  wonder-girl! 

I  dread  the  endless  pain  and  sorrow. 

I  dread,  sans  thee,  my  dim  to-morrow; 

Canst  not  return,  oh  girl  of  yore 

To  make  me  love  thee  deep  once  more? 


1 82     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


GONE  SO  SOON 

Gone  so  soon,  my  dear  ? 
And  my  heart  is  sad  and  drear; 
The  very  heavens  weep  and  sob 
For  thou  art  no  more  near. 

Gone  so  soon,  my  dear? 
The  very  sky  has  lost  its  charm, 
I  care  not  what  may  come  to  me 
Of  evil  or  of  gross  alarm, 
For  no  more  do  I  softly  feel 
Around  my  neck  thy  tender  arm. 

Gone  so  soon,  my  dear? 
And  empty  seems  the  lagging  world; 
I  would  again  that  thou  wert  near, 
For  in  my  heart  thy  spirit  is  curled; 
And  for  the  span  of  one  sweet  moon 
Thou  gav'st  me  thee, — and  gone  so  soon  ? 

Oh  love,  dear  love,  canst  thou  forget 
That  roses  with  the  dew  are  wet? 
That  silver  moonbeams  melt  in  the  mist? 
That  thy  soft  lips  by  mine  were  kiss't? 

And  in  my  arms,  of  Love  we  sipped 
With  throbbing  breast  and  honey  lipped? 
Ah.     'Tis  like  a  dream — that  thou  are  gone,- 
An  evil  dream, — ^and  gone  so  soon? 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  183 


A  FLEA 

Sweet ; 

If  thou  dost  still  deny  me  this, 

If  thou  refusest  me  one  kiss, 

(I  know  that  one  thou  would'st  not  miss) 

I  will  repine. 

If  thou  but  cast  on  me  one  glance 
In  angry  light;  or  if  perchance 
Thy  mood  forbid  my  love's  advance, 
I   must  repine. 

If  cold  thou  lookest  on  my  suit; 
If  dormant  lies  thy  heartstring's  lute; 
Nor  echoing  soft  my  love-toned  flute, 
I  will  repine. 

If  brighter  days  of  sun's  gold  light 
Make  not  my  melancholy  bright; 
Nor  happier  token  from  thy  sight, 
I  will  repine. 

But  if  one  ray  of  gold-tipped  noon 
To  me  from  out  thy  Twin  Stars  shone, 
'Twould  make  my  life  a  glorious  June — • 
The  sun  would  shine. 


1 84    STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


TO  THE  GIRL  WITH  THE  OLIVE-TINTED  EYES 

O,  you  ravishing  little  sweetheart, 
With  eyes  of  olive  blue, 
You  tantalizing  little  witch, 
What  shall  I  do  with  you? 
Eyes  not  brown,  and  yet  not  gold, 
With  blue-sky  tints  and  pale  mauve  glints, 
Deep  down  and  deeper  in  the  depths. 
Like  a  summer's  pool  with  willow  .shade 
Soft-kissed  by  the  scented  breath 
Of  the  wafted  breeze  made  by  the  wings 
Of  a  million  butterflies  fluttering  high, 
Now  low  on  the  earth,  now  high  in  the  sky. 
That  makes  me  dream  of  love  and  things 
Not  in  the  lexicon  the  old  grouch  made. 
Ah,  girl  of  my  heart  and  girl  of  my  arms, 
Why  do  you  intrigue  me  by  your  lithe  charms, 
Don't  you  know  well,  my  darling  elf. 
That  there  are  no  others — just  you  and 
myself  ? 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  185 


ALACK  A  DAY! 

Alack  a  day !    Although  the  skies  were  bright 
And  Phyllis'  smile  illumed  the  air  around 
With  joyous  flush,  her  eyes  were  filled  with  light 
Much  like  Cerulean  heavens  brought  to  ground; 
Yet  must  I  hush  my  jocund  jollity, 
For  Phyllis  says  her  heart  is  far  away. 
Alack  a  day!    Alack  a  day! 

Alack  a  day  I    I  vainly  try  to  still 
The  throbbing  of  my  heart,  which  obstinate 
At  vain  control  o'erleaps  my  struggling  will 
And  jumps,  like  prisoned  sprites,  into  my  throat, 
As  quite  forlorn  I  hear  her  sportive  threat. 
In  truth,  think  you  that  man  could  e'er  forget  ? 
Alack  a  day!     Alack  a  day! 

Alack  a  day  I    I  almost  thought  that  time 

Had  paused  and  sat  upon  the  brink  of  heaven. 

Awaiting  but  to  hear  the  note  sublime 

Course  from  the  lips  of  Phyllis,  and,  once  given, 

Plunge  on  down  into  everlasting  bliss. 

But 't  could  not  happen — I  snatched  the  dimpled 

kiss. 
Alack  a  day!    That  blessed  day! 


1 86     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


-GEORGIA 

Yes,    Georgia  was   a  pretty  girl, 

Was  Georgia,  was  Georgia, 
With  flossy  hair  and  yellow  curl. 

Was  Georgia,  was  Georgia. 
But,  ah,  the  upstart  was  a  flirt, 
And  treated  lads  as  mean  as  dirt; 
She  never   thought  just  how   it  hurt, 

Not  Georgia,  sweet  Georgia. 

She  had  a  father  mean  as  sin, 

Did  Georgia,  our  Georgia. 
Where  others  left  off,  he  would  begin, 

Poor  Georgia,  sweet  Georgia. 
Too  bad  to  keep  him  out  of  jail. 
Too  crooked  even  to  give  him  bail, 
They  sent  him  up  for  robbing  mail. 

Poor  Georgia,  sweet  Georgia! 

And  the  mother  that  the  sweet  girl  had — 

Gee  !  Georgia ;  Wow  !  Georgia — 
Was  almost  crooked  as  her  dad. 

Poor  Georgia,  sad  Georgia. 
She  looked  as  vile  as  a  sea-side  swamp. 
And  dressed  as  slack  as  a  female  tramp, 
Her  hair  was  towsled,  but  hush,  you  scamp, 
She  was  the  mother  of  Georgia. 

But  spite  of  all  the  kid  made  good, 

Did  Georgia,  our  Georgia. 
Her  milk-white  skin  held  some  pure  blood, 

Did  Georgia,  sweet  Georgia. 
She  looked  demure  with  her  big  blue  eyes, 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  187 

And  caught  your  heart  with  her  soft  quaint  sighs, 
But  her  head  was  good  and  ways  were  wise — 
Was  Georgia,  fair  Georgia. 

And  how  am  I  to  end  this  tale? 

Ask  Georgia,  fair  Georgia. 
She's  just  outside  with  my  dinner-pail, 

Dear  Georgia,  sweet  Georgia. 
What  care  I  what  her  dad  may  do. 
Or  whether  her  mother  does  take  a  chew, 
I  married  the  girl,  not  the  whole  cabeau, — 

Just  Georgia,  my  Georgia. 


1 88     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


BUT  ONE 

I  ask  no  great  or  ponderous  might, 
No  gold  or  precious  stone, 
I  would  not  fain  have  wealth  or  gain, 
My  plea,  but  one  alone, — 
But  one,  Arianna,  but  one. 

I  am  not  worth  to  think  of  thee, 
Not  great,  nor  noble  form; 
Poor  lowly  me,  of  clay  degree, 
Ask  but  a  mite  perform. 
Grant  one,  Arianna,  but  one. 

More  favored  ones  may  press  thy  hand. 
And  thoughtless  at  the  deed 
Press  others  fair  with  friendly  air ; 
Yet  for  thy  clasp  I  plead. 
Grant  one,  Arianna,  but  one. 

Perchance  some  nobler  knight  may  come 
And  love  thee  ardent,  long; 
Perchance  thy  heart  may  glow  impart, — 
Yet  echoes  mine  thy  song. 
But  thine,  Arianna,  but  thine. 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  189 


TO  THEE 

Yon  bud  unfolds  its  petals  soft 
And  shyly  turns  face  to  the  sun; 
It  spreads  its  silken  fibre  wide, 
Its  fragrant  life  but  now  begun. 
It  knows  not  why,  nor  tries  to  find 
The  secret  source  of  hidden  love. 
It  only  knows  the  sun  doth  shine, 
And  thrills  to  the  gentle  warmth  above. 

Yon  bird  spreads  forth  its  golden  sail. 
And  wings  its  way  far  in  yon  blue, 
Nor  does  it  falter  in  its  flight; 
Its  heart  is  pure,  its  eye  is  true. 
It  asks  not  why  the  throbbing  soul 
Springs  forth  in  thrills  of  joyous  sound, 
It  only  knows  the  world  is  good, 
And  joy  and  life  and  love  abound. 

And  so  my  heart  can  never  tell 
The  why  and  wherefore  of  its  love ; 
It  but  can  feel  thy  presence  near ; 
It  but  can  ask  and  let  thee  prove. 
It  knows  not  why  the  mantling  blush 
Steals  up  the  face  so  all  can  see; 
It  only  knows,  O  soul  of  mine. 
It  knows  one  thing,  its  love  for  thee. 


190     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


IT  MIGHT  HAVE  BEEN 

I  sat  down  to  write  and  knew  not  why, 

Involuntarily  I  started  my  pen; 
Another  force  seemed  to  control  my  thoughts, 

Another  power  to   guide  me  then. 
I  had  no  thought  of  the  words  thus  placed, 
I  took  no  note  of  the  lines  I  traced, 
I  seemed  to  dream,  and  as  one  dazed 
I  wrote  the  words, 

"It  might  have  been." 

Weary  of  life  and  tired  of  wrong, 

Oppressed  by  the  longing  and  pain, 
I  looked  back  on  the  paths  I  just  had  trod 

And  wished  I  could  tread  them  again. 
I  thought  of  a  face,  of  a  voice,  of  a  look, 
Of  the  days  I  spent  with  her  near  the  brook. 
When  I  fancied  I  could  read  her  soul  like  a  book; 
Then  mournfully  murmured, 
"It  might  have  been." 

I  wearily  thought  of  the  path  of  life. 

How  lonely  and  sad  'tis  for  men. 
When  hopes  have  vanished  and  life  is  a  waste, 

Because  of  the  words,  "It  might  have  been." 
Oh,  sad  are  the  words :  "Recall  them  I  pray, 
Oh,  give  me  again  another  day 
And  a  different  path  will  I  make  for  me, — " 
But  time  mocked  with  the  words, 
"It  might  have  been." 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  191 


I  woke  with  a  start  and  looked  around 

At  the  books  and  my  study  den ; 
My  head  sank  low,  my  eyes  grew  dim, 

And  my  hand  let  fall  the  coursing  pen, 
For  my  thoughts   had   stirred   dark  memories 

past, 
When  my  life  was  gay  and  hope  was  fast 
Realizing  my  ambition.     But  now  at  last 
My  only  words  were, 

"It  might  have  been." 


192     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


HEART-ACHE 

Lost  is   the   visioned   hope, 

The  one  sun-golden  dream 
That  made  my  life  ennobled, 

And  caused  the  night-gloom   seem 
As  though  the  courts  of  heaven 

Had  widened   full  their  portals. 
Had  thrust  the  golden  glory  down 

Upon  the  struggling  mortals 
With   bursting   rays    of    holy, 

Most  holy  radiant  light, 
And  rosed  the  dismal  pathway, 

Until  my  life  grew  bright. 

^Tis  like  the  setting  sunlight 

That  dies  in  the  western  breeze, 
Full — dank  with  the  gloom  of  midnight, 

With  the  winds  that  chill  and  freeze: 
More  cold  than  the  icy  boreas 

That  roar  from  the  caves  of  death; 
More  black  than  the  shades  of   Tartarus 

Arising  on  Stygian  breath; 
Because  the  blessed  brightness 
Is  doubly  lost  in  the  gloom; 
So  the  hope  of  the  uproused  soul 

Is   doubly  crushed  by  its  doom. 

But  through  the  gathering  twilight. 
And  through  the  deep  of  night, 

Behold !  the  cherub's  candles 
Pour  out  their  twinkling  light. 

And  speak  of  the  faithful  guardians 
Who  forever  vigils  keep, 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  193 

Despite  Life's  grim  disasters, 

Despite  Death  and  Lethe's  sleep. 
So  will  my  dreams  of  sadness 

Give  way  to  the  Light  Above; 
So  will  despair  and  madness 

Be  banished  by  thy  love. 


194     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


WHEN  I  MEET  HER  AGAIN 

Ah!    When  I  meet  her  again,  I  know 
Full  well  my  heart  will  speak,  and  though 
My  eyes  may  have  the  scales  of  night 
Encrusted  deep  to  seer  the  sight, 
And  densest  shadows  from  Stygian  gloom 
Like  the  pall  of  Death  from  Dante's  doom 
May  hover  about  to  rape  the  sense, 
And  weirdly  dull  the  mind  intense; 
Or  even  deeper  may  morphose  the  mind 
Till  the  outer  heart  and  Soul  be  blind, — 
Yet  shall  the  Inner  Soul  speak  out 
And  call  across  the  gruesome  void. 
As  though  alone  of  all  it  joyed 
In  leaping  the  chasm  of  Fate  to  shout 
Its  thrill,  and  feel  the  joy,  the  pain, 
Of  love ; — ^when  I  meet  her  again. 

Yes,  when  I  meet  her  again,  and  she 
May  glance  with  wonder,  beholding  me. 
And  a  troubled  look  may  cloud  her  eye 
As  the  fleeting  mist  which  dims  the  sky,^ 
And  though  at  first  a  curl  of  scorn 
May  pass  her  lips,  as  in  the  morn 
The  bittern  denies  its  pleading  mate. 
Or  the  pheasant  plumed  in  proud  estate 
Brooks  never  a  glance  at  the  lowly  flock. 
But  stands  to  dazzle  and  prunes  to  mock ; 
Yet  sudden  shall  her  soul  awake, 
As  swift  the  love  leaps  from  my  heart 
To  encompass  her  aura,  and  fleet  impart 
The  quickening  throb  that  ever  shall  make 
The  wondrous  One  which  once  were  twain, 
Indivisible; — when  I  meet  her  again. 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  195 


"  THOUGHTS,  IDLE  THOUGHTS" 

Thoughts,  thoughts — idle  thoughts, 

O,  that  I  could  forget! 

My  heart  yet  throbs  for  long  gone  days, 

My  mind  still  sighs  regret. 

O,  that  the  past  had  never  been, 

Or  that  I  could  undo 

The  many  wrongs,  the  pangs  and  pain, 

That  love  has  done  for  you. 


Thoughts,  thoughts,  idle  thoughts ! 

They  come  of  yesterday. 

When  you  and  I  were  happy,  love, — 

But  now  'tis  passed  away. 

Then  hearts  were  filled  with  hallowed  fire, 

And  soft  your  answer  sobbed; 

Upon  my  breast  your  heart  was  pressed, — 

'Tis  gone, — ^and  both  are  robbed. 


Thoughts,  thoughts,  idle  thoughts! 

Alas,  we  have  them  all. 

The  deeds  are  done,  the  past  is  gone, 

The  pains  alone  recall. 

God  pity  the  man,  old,  sere,  alone. 

Whose  only  memory,  pain; 

Whose  idle  thought,  with  sadness  wrought. 

Returns  again  and  again. 


196     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

God  pity  the  maid  whose  day  is  gone 
Without  the  thrill  of  love; 
Whose  sob  and  cry,  with  weeping  eye, 
The  dreams  of  youth  are  wove. 
Yet  was  that  joy  of  other  days 
With  Heaven's  blessings  bought; 
And  dreary  days,  once  filled  with  songs, 
By  idle,  vagrant  thought. 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  197 


THE    KNIGHT'S  REPLY 

A  blue-eyed  maiden,  bright,  with  laughing  lips, 
With  fair  round  form,  and  coral  finger  tips, 
With  golden  clustered  hair  on  which  a  rosebud  laid. 
While  'gainst  her  brow  the  glinting  sunbeams  played. 
Stood  at  the  fount  and  watched  the  silver  spray 
As  up  it  dashed  and  then  soft  purred  away. 


Low  at  her  feet  there  knelt  an  armored  knight 
With  stately  grace;  his  helmet  burnished  bright, 
A  sheathed  sword  hung  dangling  at  his  side. 
But  now  returned  from  danger,  far  and  wide. 
Besought  her  grace,  and  whispering  words  of  love 
Made  plea  that  she  his  passion  now  would  prove. 


With  simple  gesture,  arch  and  piquant  glance, 
And  watching  still  the  Naiades  in  their  dance, 
She  said,  "Stay.     Soon  my  curls  turn  old  and  gray, 
Like  spring  my  beauty  soon  will  fade  away. 
And  then,  oh  knight,  thy  heart  will  colder  turn, 
And  no  more  incense  on  love's  altar  burn." 


"Fair  one,"  he  cried  in  fervid  passioned  voice, 
"Wert  thou  but  haggard  now  I  would  rejoice! 
'Tis  not  thy  fairness  that  I  fain  would  win, 
'Tis  thine  ownself — thy  purity  within." 
But  still  she  coyly  held  her  hand  aloof. 
And  sought  to  put  his  loyalty  to  proof. 


198     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

"Kind  sir,  beyond  that  shading  cypress  tree 
There  is  a  maid  most  wondrous  fair  to  see, 
The  Vizier's  daughter,  proud  and  rich  and  fair, 
With  night  black  eyes  and  curling  ebon  hair; 
Behold  her  once,  and  for  her  love  you'd  sigh, — 
For  she  is  far  more  wondrous  fair  than  I." 

"More  fair  than  you  ?     Nay,  that  can  ne'er  be  true, 
There's  none  on  earth  to  me  more  fair  than  you ; 
For  all  is  fair  to  him  who  truly  loves, 
And  by  his  actions  every  heart-throb  proves.'* 
Nor  voice  nor  look  could  lure  him  from  her  side — 
And  thus  Sir  Geoffrey  won  his  blushing  bride. 


LYRICS  OF  LOVE  199 


WIPE  AWAY  YOUR  TEARS,  DEAR 

Wipe  away  your  tears,  dear, 
And  smile  again  once  more ; 
Be  the  same  sweet  girl,  dear. 
That  you  were  before. 
Brush  away  the  frowns,  dear. 
Let  love  shine  from  the  eye; 
Become  again  my  sweetheart, — 
For  love  can  never  die. 

Wipe  away  your  tears,  dear. 
The  clouds  soon  pass  away; 
The  sun  will  warm  a  heart  once 

chilled. 
The  month  soon  will  be  May; 
And  ere  the  years  may  pass,  dear, 
Some  errant  pangs  may  fly. 
Yet,   love,    sweet  love,   will   win, 

dear, 
For  love  can  never  die. 


200     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


LONGING 

Oh,  I  long  to  be  far,  far  away, 
Far  o'er  yon  dreamy,  throbbing  sea; 
But  I  would  not  stay  far,  far  away, 
Oh,  I  would  not  stay  far,  far  away. 
Far,  far  from  home,  and  thee. 

For  the  sights  I  may  see,  far,  far,  away. 
And  the  strange,  strange  ports  beyond  the  sea, 
Would  fill  my  heart  nor  half  so  full, 
Oh,  would  fill  my  heart  nor  half  so  full. 
As  a  sight  of  home,  and  baby,  and  thee. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS 

MY  SILENT  FRIENDS  OF  THE  LIBRARY 

A  friend  I  have — a.  friend  did  I  say? 
Ah,  yes  indeed,  a  many  have  I — 
Friends  tried  and  true  for  many  a  day. 
In  sorrow,  in  gladness,  they  ever  are  nigh. 
I  love  my  den  when  all  others  are  gone. 
When  the  candle  is  flickering  and  I  am  alone, 
A  fire  in  the  grate,  and  the  deep  undertone 
Of  peace  fills  my  soul  as  the  breeze  passes  by. 

I  love  my  bound  friends,  those  silent  jewels 
That  rest  on  the  shelf  and  await  my  pleasure, 
My  friends  who  argue  from  many  old  schools, 
And  add  to  my  wealth  with  their  golden  treasure. 
They  know  when  to  commune  with  silent  tongue — 
A  song  from  the  heart  yet  not  loudly  sung, 
A  gem  of  deep  thought,  even  doubters  among. 
Yet  all  are  my  friends,  of  truly  full  measure. 

Some   friends  of  mine  are   witty   friends. 
With  quip  and  quirk  and  pleasurable  joke; 
They  charge  the  blues  "avaunt"  from  drear  life, 
And  deprecate  the  powers  of  black  Loke. 
All  care  and  pain  they  soon  brush  away, 
While  these,  my  friends,  have  come  to  stay ; 
They  come  to  smile,  they  come  to  play, — 
My  friends  in  cloth  and  morocco  cloak. 

Josh  Billings  throws  his  cayenne  hash, 
And  Maupassant  breathes  a  gentle  shock. 
Bob   Burdette  twirls  his   first  moustache. 
While  Kendrick  Bangs  strolls  in  from  a  walk. 
There  is  jolly  Mark  Twain,  and  old  Bill  Nye — 

'Mark's  hair  is  too  much,  and  Bill's  is  too  shy — 

203 


204     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  the  jokes  they  crack — I'd  Hke  to  die! — 
As  they  roost  on  my  shelf  and  talk. 

Then  there  is  psycho  James  in  serious  vein, 
And  Sienkiewicz  of  the  Polish  school, 
While  Browning-  returns  again  and  again 
With  thoughts  as  healing  as  Bethesda's  pool; 
Stevenson  with  tales  of  the  Spanish  Main, 
And  Gulliver's  satire  of  deep  disdain, 
While  Sill  still  breathes  his  sad  refrain, 
*'Oh,  God  be  merciful  to  me — a  fool !" 

Ah,  yes,  Mort  d'Arthur  of  ancient  day. 

And  a  quaint  old  fellow  by  name  of  Chaucer; 

Spencer  and  his  sweet  round-de-lay. 

And  Holmes  with  his  poetical  teacup  and  saucer. 

Curwood  brings  the  heroic  North 

With  clean  and  wholesome  tales  of  worth. 

While  Butler  tickles  the  ribs  of  mirth, 

And  of  Roosevelt's  mind  I  stand  in  awe,  sir. 

Of  course  "Ye  Olde  Friends"  of  Victorian  school 
Look  in,  and  then  smile  in  a  fond  friendly  way, 
And  bring  to  my  hearth  full  mnay  a  rule 
Of  good  living  and  loving,  and  e'en  how  to  pray; 
But  my  real  ancient  friends,  Josephus  and  others, 
Homer  and  \"irgil,  and  old  fashioned  brothers, 
Transcendentalist  Emerson  whose  philosophy 

bothers ; 
Stay  by  me  and  hearten  me  for  every  new  day. 

Yes,  there  in  my  den  away  from  the  throng 
I  chat  with  my  friends,  and  know  they  are  true. 
I  can  talk  with  them,  visit  them,  all  the  day  long, 
Nor  will  they  feel  slighted,  if  other  things  I  do. 
So  here's  to  my  friends,  the  best  man  can  have, 
A  wise  man's  companion,  ambitious  man's  slave, 
And  every  man's  friend,  to  use  or  to  leave, — 
Old  as  the  mountains  and  yet  ever  new. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  205 


THE  CHIMES 

Written  at  Indianapolis,  while  the  cathedral  chimes  were  play- 
ing "The  Holy  City."  The  author  had  been  a  guest  of  the 
Hoosier  Poet,  James  Whitcomb  Riley,  and  the  chimes  pealed 
forth  the  sad  news  of  the  poet's  death. 

Dong! 

Dong! 

Dong! 

Dong! 
Slowly  and  massive  the  chimes  peal  forth 
Tolling  the  death  of  a  man  of  worth. 
Dong ! 

Dong! 

Dong! 

Dong! 

With  solemn  sad  cadence  they  mumble  the  sound, 

Thrilling  the  mourners  gathering  round, 

Now  dimly,  now  loudly  the  melancholy  rings, 

Softly  and  sweetly  the  chorister  sings. 

Grandly  and  solemn  the  organ  tone  brings 

A  hallowed  hush  down  the  dim  gloomed  aisle. 

And  again  comes  the  saddening  heart-sobs,  while 

The  bells  in  the  tower,  in  that  last  sad  hour. 

Boom  out  their  mournful  sepulchral  song, — 

Dong! 

Dong! 

Dong ! 

Dong ! 

Ah,  Father  in  Heaven,  we  weak  mortals  pray 
That  Thou  wilt  protect  us,  lest  our  feet  stray. 
And  the  thrill  of  those  chimes,  wherever  we  be. 


2o6     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

When  borne  on  the  breezes,  recalls  us  to  Thee. 

Tho  far  may  our  footsteps,  both  faltering  and  sad 

Wandering  in  paths,  which  Thou  hast  forbade, 

Grimy  and  lawless,  and  almost  forgot, 

Broken  in  spirit  and  soul  but  a  blot. 

Despised,  forsaken,  o'ercome  by  despair, 

Completely  estranged  from  divinity's  air; 

Yet  in  our  deep  moraine  let  the  chimes  ring  out. 

And,  like  tales  long  forgotten,  is  sin  put  to  rout, 

The  throbbing,  low  cadence  re-enters  our  heart. 

We  thrill  and  we  tremble  and  haltingly  start 

Again  back  to  Thee  m  our  mental  desire; 

While  the  rime  of  the  chime  creeps  higher  and  higher. 

From  the  first  sobbing  note  of  pathos  and  sorrow 

To  a  paen  of  joy  for  the  hopes  of  tomorrow. 

So,  Thou,  Oh  Great  Father,  that  sweet  sound  prolong. 
Let  churches  and  cathedrals  bring  forth  the  deep  song. 
Dongl 

Dong! 

Dong ! 

Dong ! 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  207 


STEDMAN 

The  onward-rushing  seasons  shout  aloud  in  joy; 

And  Earth  chants  anthems  sweet,  and  rolls  along 

Its  ceaseless  orbit;  and  the  grand  triumphal  song 

Of  countless  throngs  of  harp-angels  on  high, 

Each  with  a  burning  star  above  her  limpid  eye, 

Rises  up  and  ever  up  unto  the  gates  of  morn, 

And  far,  far  beyond,  where  souls  like  thee  are  born, 

And  there  around  the  dazzling  throne  they  lay. 

The  mighty  minds  assembled — poets,   picture-souls — 

Who  know  full  well  the  mystic  source  and  goals 

Of  all  the  airy  shafts,  triumphant  hymns, 

And  e'en  the  bleeding  words  that  drop  like  gems 

Into  an  aching  heart, — know  and  approve 

Thy  simple  songs,  which  I  have  read,  and  love. 


2o8     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

TO  EDGAR  ALLAN  POE 
Written  at  Fordham,  Poe's  home.    June  23,  191 1. 

Alas,  thou  led'st  a  life  forlorn, 
Thy  footsteps  lagging  missed  the  way, 
And  wandered  far  from  dewy  mom, 
The  radiant  warmth  of  God's  pure  day. 
But  soon  midst  reeking  slimy  things 
Didst  wend  a  pen-path  rankly  vile; 
Full  oft  it  a  haunting  specter  brings, 
And  oft  again  with  crimes  beguile. 

Man  of  doom  and  man  of  sin! 
Child  of  fate  and  born  of  sorrow ! 
Drugged  in  gloom,  deranged  within! 
Wan,  hopeless  past  and  lost  tomorrow ! 
Wrecked  upon  the  shoals  of  self, 
Like  staggering  ships  spent  in  the  storm; 
Knowing  nought  of  sordid  pelf, 
And  food  too  soon  of  the  Conquering 
Worm! 

Poet  of  strange,   fantastic  themes, 
Reconteur  of  direful  stories, 
Lunging  forth  thy  dreadful  dreams 
Filled  with  ghouls  and  psychic  worries, — 
Knowest  thou  not  that  tho  thy  brain 
Be  warped  and  seared  by  torrid  brooding, 
Yet  the  germ  of  Hope  remain  ?^ — 
The  flower  of  Life  is  in  the  budding. 

Alas,  too  soon  thy  song  was  sung! 
And  tuned  too  oft  in  minor  key; 
Methinks  thy  heart  with  gall  was  wrung, 
Like  Tantalus,  it  ne'er  was  free. 
We  stand  in  awe  at  works  so  great. 
We  grieve  in  dread  at  Ulalume, 
We  laud  thee,  Seer  of  High  Estate, 
Oh,  child  of  sorrow,  man  of  doom! 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  209 


TO-DAY  IS  THE  TO-MORROW  OF 
YESTERDAY 

PROLOGUE 

To-day  is  the  to-morrow  of  yesterday. 

Ponder,  mortal,  the  meaning  hidden  deep. 

Obscure,  but  potent  in  the  flaming  words  which  play 

So  smoothly  on  the  page.     Ponder,  lest  ye  weep. 

Thy  yesterdays  were  promises  of  all  rainbow  to-morrows ; 

The   plough   will   never   turn   again   the   half-unleveled 

furrows. 
Each  morning  saw  some  hope  within  the  heart  strings 

creep ; 
Each  sunrise  had  its  birth  in  some  soul's  deep  desire; 
Each  day  some  need  embraced  that  could  a  Joan  inspire ; 
And  genius  fain  would  climb  Art's  rugged  mountains 

steep. 
But   hold,    O   Man!     The   spirit   lacks    for   that   great 

Cosmic  Urge 
That  wills  to  do  the  visioned  work  which  comes  to  hand ; 
To-day,  alas,  is  much  too  short;  desires  laxly  merge 
Into   mere   wistful   thought — a  writing   on  the   shifting 

sand. 
"To-day  I  rest,  but  ah,  in  that  fond  gold  to-morrow 
Then  will  I  do  the  great  inspired  World-hoped  deed ; 
Then  will  I  paint  the  Magdalenes  of  Sorrow, 
Or  salve  the  mendicant  in  his  awful  need." 
Alas,  thus  pass  unchampioned  days,  for  swift  is  Time 

upon  its  way, — 
For  to-day,  O  mortal,  is  that  promised  morrow  of  that 

yesterday. 

And  to-day  is  the  yesterday  of  to-morrow; 

To-day  lay  up  thy  treasures,  lest  trouble  ye  may  borrow ; 

To-day  be  kind,  be  gentle,  liberal,  loving; 


2IO     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Each  deed  and  act  a  benediction  amply  proving. 
For  to-day's  simple  deed  may  subtly  act  unknown, 
Unheralded,  obscure,  its  worth  nor  widely  blown. 

Yet  to-morrow  that  simple,  unthought,  patient  deed 
May  bring  you  manifold  help  in  direst  need. 
The  present  lack  trace  back  to  yon  drab  yesterday; 
Yet  for  our  future  good  we  daily  pray. 
But  think,  O  man,  each  passing  westering  sun 
Proclaims  a  yesterday  hath  just  been  swiftly  run, 
And  to-day,  tho  spent,  brings  but  another  to-morrow 
To  bless  with  joy,  or  curse  with  bitter  sorrow. 
So  act  each  day  as  tho  it  held  a  blessing  in  its  heart; 
Each  flower  hath  honey,  and  fruit  its  nectar  will  impart. 
In  future  then  ye  well  may  happily  say, 
**I  laid  up  my  treasures  in  the  yesterdays  of  to-day." 

THE  STORY 

The  day  was  bright  as  the  happy  heart 
Of  a  child  who  romps  on  the  verdant  lawn; 
Full-orbed  the  sun  sent  slanting  rays 
To  waken  the  soul  of  radiant  dawn; 
Kissed  by  the  breath  of  a  vagrant  breeze 
There  fluttered  the  leaves  on  the  emerald 

trees. 
While  above  and  around  in  ecstasy 
Rang  the  carol  of  birds  in  full-throated 

ease; 
In  truth  the  miracle  of  a  perfect  May 
Had  banished  the  clouds  of  my  yesterday. 

The  clouds  which  shadowed  o'er  my  heart 
And  gloomed  my  mind  in  frenzy  blank — 
For  pain  and  age  had  dulled  my  art — 
Had  chilled  my  blood  and  caused  the  dank 
Foul  dreads  of  a  much- wronged  rage 
Enshroud  my  soul  in  doubtings  vague; 
And  through  it  all  my  rioting  blood 
Dipped  deep  in  slough,  nought  to  assuage; 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  211 

When  sudden  a  sigh  from  dim  away- 
Disturbed  my  repining  for  yesterday. 

I   turned   about.     My    heart   stood    still. 
For  an  unseen  presence  hovered  near. 
Upon  the  bench  which  erst  was  clear 
Now  oozed  a  horrid  form  of  ill, 
A  form  both  vague,  of  uncouth  shape. 
Methought  it  had  a  mouth  agape, 
And  rumbhng,  subterraneous  sounds, 
And  sulphurous  odors  seemed  to  escape. 
My  trembling  limbs,  filled  with  dismay, 
Forsook  their  strength  of  yesterday. 

But  soon  the  shape  before  my  path 
Assumed  a  quaint,  decrepit  form, 
A  castaway  on  the  sands  of  time; 
A  derelict  from  Life's  cruel  storm. 
He  slouched  with  shoulders  drooping  low, 
While  gaunt  his  mien — a  form  of  woe; 
Grey  hair  unkempt  and  straggling  beard. 
And  from  torn  buskin  his  bones  did  show. 
I  paused  and  gazed  at  the  sad  estray 
In  the  sunlit  present  from  far  yesterday. 

No  doubt  he  had  lived  a  somber  plot, 

For  each  tongue  if  'twould,  a  tale  could  tell; 

Within  each  past,  if  known  or  not, 

A  poem,  or  drama,  or  tragedies,  dwell. 

With  mute  apology  I  sat  me  down 

Beside  the  ragged,  outcast  lown. 

Some  mysterious  magic  impelled  me  on, — 

But  was  greeted  with  scowls  and  a  gathering 

frown. 
For  I  fain  must  probe  this  castaway 
From  out  of  the  chaos  of  yesterday! 

Nor  had  I  long  to  await  his  word, 
His  draggled  spirit  had  dwelt  alone 


212     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

So  long  that  his  soul  cried  out  for  God, 
And  furtive  his  dread  lest  I  be  gone. 
With  palsied  hand  he  brushed  his  eye, 
And  trembled  forth  a  hectic  sigh, 
Then  with  harsh  voice  and  rancid  breath 
He  muttered  soft  a  wish  to  die ; 
And  thus  he  spake  with  quaint  delay. 
In  a  foreign  tongue,  of  his  yesterday. 

An  odd  philosopher,  my  friend. 
Who  ere  a  moment  to  me  unknown, 
Now  betrayed  with  voice  a  gentle  sound, 
And  actions  grave,  although  a  moan 
Of  quick  despair  he  breathed  again 
With  bated  breath,  like  children  when, 
O'erfilled  with  fear  or  trembling  pain, 
They  heave  deep  sobs  and  sighs  in  vain ; 
And  soon  I  knew  his  misery 
Bespoke  his  loss  of  yesterday. 

"You  see  me  here !"     He  slow  began, 

"A  wreck  of  self ;  a  fallen  man ; 

But  once,  a  thousand  years  agone, 

I  was  not  here,  outcast,  alone. 

Then  rang  the  joy-bells  in  my  heart, 

Then  had  the  Sun  of  Life  a  start. 

All  peace  and  happiness  I  had. 

And  smiles  and  faith  could  love  impart; 

But  friend,  a  word  I  have  to  say, — 

To-day  is  the  to-morrow  of  yesterday." 

"Think,  O  Mortal,  before  you  act, 
And  lest  your  hasty  voice  provoke 
A  little  sting,  or  lack  of  tact 
A  black  despairing  step  invoke. 
Bethink  what  Fate  has  left  to  do. 
Reflect — the  Old  is  ever  New; 
A  promise  made  for  future  years 
May,   unfulfilled,   bring  bitter  tears. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  213 

So  let  this  hour  complete  your  sway, 
For  to-day  is  the  morrow  of  yesterday. 

"I  know,  O  Man,  'tis  passing  strange 

That  I  should  pause  here  and  complain; 

We  have  our  paths  in  life  to  arrange 

And  once  each  age  I  return  again. 

In  Rome  I  had  my  own  fireside. 

And  owned  a  Keep,  and  blushing  bride — 

Yes,  once  I  had  all  that  you  have. 

My  peace  and  love  at  eventide. 

But  alas,  O  Mortal,  I  cast  it  away, — 

And  to-day  is  my  morrow  of  that  yesterday." 

His  voice  took  on  an  awful  sound. 

As  though  'twere  the  thunder  of  roaring  sea, 

Or  the  ghostly  caverns  of  underground 

Had  thrown  their  gruesome  wail  to  me. 

And  mysterious  terror  chilled  my  blood; 

I  whispered  a  prayer  'gainst  evil,  for  good, 

For  ghastly  trembling  seized  on  my   limbs, 

As  he  lifted  his  cowl  and  showed  a  shroud. 

"Listen,"  he  groaned  sepulchrally, 

"To-day  is  the  morrow  of  yesterday!" 

"Each  age  I  must  this  tale  unfold. 

To  warn  all  man  'gainst  deadly  sin, 

To  guard  some  maid  'gainst  crime  untold, 

To   thwart  the   Monster  green   within. 

Each  age!     Long  years,  one  thousand  gone, 

From  darkest  day  'till  brighter  dawn. 

From  ancient  time  when  Otto  thrived 

Till  present  Renaissance  is  done. 

The  Curse  prevents  me  from  decay, 

I  warn  'gainst  the  deeds  of  yesterday. 

"Deep  in  your  heart  you  hold  a  sorrow.'* 

I  started  up  in  abject  fear, 

For  had  I  not  just  cursed  the  morrow, 


214     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  sworn  anathema  most  drear? 
**Nay,  frenzy  not  the  leaping  blood, 
For  from  this  hour  your  faith  is  good; 
And  list  this  tale,  reflect  thereon, 
And  make  its  meaning  be  your  food, 
For  ne'er  man  born  to  meet  the  fray 
Who  has  not  lost  some  yesterday. 

"One  thousand  years  have  lagged  and  dragged, 
Since  first  I  saw  the  siren  face 
Of  the  madonna  maid  of  Arahad ; 
And  quick  my  sight  to  love  gave  place ; 
Celestial   stars    seemed   beckoning; 
On  branch  and  trees  birds  warbling; 
Cerulean  skies  looked  brightly  down. 
And  through  my  life  coursed  throbs  of 

spring. 
Each  day  more  perfect  than  the  soul  of  May, 
And  I  gave  no  thought  to  my  yesterday. 

"Her  past  I  never  sought  to  know, 
Nor  questioned  such  beauty  its  noble  birth ; 
Her  love  alone  I  bought,  and  so 
With  love  alone  I  weighed  its  worth. 
'Twas  pure.     I  knew  such  luscient  skin 
With   liquid  pearl   dissolved  within; 
With  eyes  so  deep,  that  ethereal  skies 
A  puddle  was,  could  hold  no  sin. 
And  for  my  faith  and  constancy 
She  promised  to  reveal  her  yesterday. 

"Her  yesterday!     Alas,  her  morrow 
Never  came.     But  yet  each  hour 
Brought  joy  complete;  and  never  sorrow 
Struck  its  talons  with  churlish  power. 
Each  day  was   one  bewildering  joy 
So  glorious   full,   without  alloy, 
That  forgotten  was  all  thought  of  past, 
Like  winter's  chill  in  zepherous  blast. 


I 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  215 

And  year  by  year  sped  blithely  away, 
Till  buried  was  her  yesterday. 

"One  pensive  moment  the  impulse  came 
To  speak  and  have  her  tell  it  all; 
But  the  thrill  mysterious  of  infant  name 
Banished  all  doubt;  and  the  sacred  thrall 
Of  birth-hour  hushed  all  vagrant  thought; 
For  life  itself  its  truth  had  taught, 
And  midst  the  fruit  of  profoundest  bliss 
The  sinuous  qualm  of  suspense  was  forgot. 
We  probed  our  love,  and  recklessly 
Lay  blind  to  the  wraith  of  all  yesterday. 

"So  day  by  day  in  heart  of  pleasure 
We  probed  the  power  of  passion's  dream, 
We  sipped  the  crystal  cup  full  measure, 
And   ever   sought   the   latent  gleam 
Of  deeper  troth    in  new  desire. 
A  tense  and  overwhelming  fire 
Fanned  our  love  into  new  flame, 
'Til  roseate  edges  did  acquire 
A  wondrous  strength,  and  seemed  to  be 
Beyond  all  qualms  of  yesterday. 

"Whene'er  the  pin-prick  of  the  thought 
That  mayhap  in  her  unknown  past 
Some  ugly  terror  might  have  bought 
A  chance  enlodgement,  holding  fast 
Its  cancerous  coil  within  her  soul, 
And  at  some  moment  take  its  toll 
When  nature  lay  dormant,  virtue  asleep. 
Then  cruelly  rush  unto  its  goal, — 
Yet  thrust  I  the  doubt  in  haste  away, 
*The  morrow  will  plead  her  yesterday.' 

"To-morrow!    And  every  passing  glass 
Which  upended  the  sand  within  its  waist 


21 6     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Would  still  the  fruitless  hours  o'erpass, 
And  give  its  love  a  deeper  taste. 
*To-morrow!     Love,  will  I  explain, 
And  ope  a  secret  full  of  pain 
Which  like  a  poisonous  reptile  feeds 
Upon  my  heart,' — Then  Lethe  again. 
Each  moment,  hour,  hastening  day. 
Proclaimed  the  to-morrows  of  yesterday. 

"Procrastinate,  and  Time  is  lost, 

And  never  may  we  call  it  back, 

And  all  we  desire,  have  or  lack 

Into  the  lap  of  Eternity  is  tossed. 

A  day,  a  week,  a  passing  year, 

Without  a  doubt,  a  pain,  a  tear, 

And  more  and  more  the  joyous  feast 

Like  crv'stal  moons,  winnowed  of  fear; 

Forgotten  her  promises  from  day  to  day, 

Each  day  was  the  morrow  of  some  yesterday. 

"Full  oft  the  clarion  note  of  Time 
L^proused  the  billows  of  changing  fear 
To  burst  the  spell  which  held  sublime. 
And  smote  and  smote  upon  the  ear, 
'Awake !     Oh,  mortal  somned  in  Lethe, 
And  scale  the  rugged  heights  where  breath 
Of  higher  sanity  may  tear 
The  robes  from  Fate,  the  cowl  from  Death. 
Arrange  the  moment  that  she  may 
Breathe  the  tale  to  you  to-day !' 

"But  love  and  passion  brooked  no  rest. 
And  love  and  lovers  delight  were  king; 
She  loved,  I  loved,  and  which  the  best 
Did  love,  could  ne'er  a  judgment  bring. 
So  deaf  again  to  Time's  behest. 
And  deaf  to  memory's  stern  contest. 
For  who  could  at  such  moment  fling 
A  scorpion  in  the  cup  of  zest; 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  217 

So  passed  the  dawn,  and  passed  for  aye 
The  time  to  tell  her  yesterday. 

"One  morning  as  I  stood  and  dreamed 
And  looked  adown  the  distant  glade, 
I  thought  I  saw  a  hand  that  seemed 
To  hold  aloft  a  gleaming  blade; 
And  as  the  flash  of  mystic  toy 
Could  barely  pierce  me  to  annoy, 
My  heart  spake  out,  'It  but  displayed 
The  rainbow  of  everlasting  joy 
Caught  by  the  sheen  of  fountain's  play, — ■ 
The  million  suns  within  its  spray/ 

"Again  one  night  as  through  the  dusk 

We  wandered,  drawn  by  throbbing  bliss, 

The  air  incensed  with  myrrh  and  musk. 

And  heart  to  heart,  each  vow  a  kiss. 

The  slender  moon  meseemed  it  cast 

A  haunting  shadow  as  it  passed. 

And  far- faint  breath  half -mourned,  I  wiss, 

Because  I  faltered  to  the  last. 

And  failed  to  plead,  *Voice  it  to-day, 

For  to-day  is  the  morrow  of  all  yesterday/  " 

*  *  * 

Methought  a  gloom  had  settled  o'er 
The  trees,  the  park,  the  sky,  the  mall. 
And  a  strangling  vapor  seemed  to  soar 
Around  the  presence  like  a  pall. 
With  nervous  stride  I  stepped  aside 
And  fain  would  stem  the  rising  tide 
Of  fantastic,  irksome,  dolorous  tale 
Now  forced  upon  me  by  this  guide. 
Who  hoarsely  cried  and  bade  me  stay 
And  list  to  his  tale  of  yesterday. 

He  paused,  and  o'er  his  gaze  there  spread 
A  cloud  of  pain,  of  agony, 


2i8     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

As  though  a  storm  had  hid  the  sky, 
But  soon  was  spent  and  passed  away. 
And  by  this  time  the  heavens  o'ercast 
The  wind  sprang  up  in  icy  blast : 
And  raindrops  came  and  pattering  fast 
Swept  down,  but  still  his  melancholy  past 
He  urged  upon  me  insistently, — 
"To-day  is  the  morrow  of  yesterday." 


"The  heavens  above  ne'er  held  more  bliss 
Than  lay  within  my  humble  breast; 
Fair  lady  she  of  high  degree, 
And  I  her  favorite  knight  was  blessed. 
And  so  we  dwelt  for  many  years 
With  smiles  above  and  seldom  tears, 
With  love  much-told  and  faithfulness, 
Until  our  land  called  me  to  wars. 
Then  blithely  went  I  on  my  way 
With  armor  on,  nor  thought  to  stay. 

*'How  proud  she  looked  as  marching  by 
With  bugle  flouting  on  the  breeze, 
And  pennants  flying  to  the  sky, — 
One  hundred  thousand  at  her  knees. 
All  shouting  cheers  for  victory, 
Swearing  allegiance  to  our  throne 
With  vaunting  faith,  nor  discontent; 
And  I  the  'fender  of  the  crowTi. 
Soon  rode  we  forth  in  bright  array 
Nor  looked  we  back  on  our  yesterday. 

"Long  days  we  fought  and  fought  with  might. 
Like  legions  from  the  higher  world; 
We  struck  for  home,  to  save  our  right, 
And  in  God's  grace  our  flags  unfurled. 
The  martial  strains  of  melody 
Soothed  aching  bones  each  dying  day, 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  219 

And  stirred  the  blood  to  battle  fierce 
Upon  the  field  in  banked  array. 
For  ours  of  right  was  the  victory; 
Our  shout,  'Remember  yesterday/ 

"Eftsoon  returned  I  from  the  front 

With  tidings   of   triumphant   peace, 

To  pour  into  her  lap  the  jewels 

Which  came,  the  proof  that  war  should  cease. 

And  the  very  heavens,  with  blue  divine, 

And  deeper  hue  I  knew  would  shine 

From  her  proud  eyes  like  sapphire  twins, 

And  flash  a  script  of  love  to  mine. 

Full- joyed  I  hasted  happily 

To  bless  her  with  our  victory. 

"Nor  did  one  breath  of  dismal  thought 
O'ershadow  the  boast  of  eager  joy, 
And  apprehension  ne'er  uprose, 
For  was  our  faith  without  alloy. 
The  very  wrens  on  fence  and  wall 
Re-echoed  the  life  in  the  soldier's  call ; 
The  air  was  fair,  the  trees  were  green. 
But  hold!     Black  treacherous  foulness  may 
Besmirch  the  snows  of  yesterday. 

"When  bare  ten  leagues  from  our  castle  walls, 

A  lurking  courier  secretly 

Bore  in  a  message  of  intent  vile. 

And  disappeared  mysteriously. 

'What  ho !'  I  cried  in  anger  wroth, 

'Behead  that  villain,  or  by  my  troth, 

I'll  slay  each  bearer  of  that  tale, 

And  teach  the  scandal-mongers  truth ! 

My  house?    The  pride  of  Tuscany? 

And  bring  ye  tidings  such  to  me?' 

"But  spleen  once  'jected  in  the  blood. 
Will  boil  and  effervesce  withal 


220     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Until  the  over-venomed  mood 
O'erflows  and  tastes  of  bitterest  gall. 
Ne'er  slept  I  for  black  evil  hours, 
Nor  looked  where  strode  I  through  green  bowers. 
Ye  gods !    My  brain  was  seared  with  fire 
Which  quenched  could  be  by  no  earth-showers. 
For  in  that  dread  uncertainty, 
I  bethought  her  hint  of  a  yesterday. 

*'Her  yesterday !    I  stood !    Like  a  shock 

There  came  the  flash  of  mystic  sound 

From  out  the  past,  and  seemed  to  mock 

My  faith  in  man;  and  so  there  wound 

The  serpent's  coil  athwart  my  mind. 

The  slimy  creeping  coils  of  blind 

And  dreadful  jealousy,  and  doubt 

Of  the  unknown  past  she  had  left  behind. 

And  I  cursed  and  raved  in  agony 

At  the  untold  hell  in  her  yesterday. 

"That  night  as  I  dragged  me  to  my  tent 
Both  sick  at  heart  and  body  spent, 
Bethought  me  then  a  strange  intent 
To  which  I  quick  my  spirit  bent. 
Without  a  word  to  the  sleeping  band 
Who  returned  with  me  to  my  native  land, 
Without  a  sound  which  might  betray 
Me  to  my  guard,  or  my  will  withstand, 
I  stole  past  the  sleepers  silently 
To  probe  the  curse  of  that  yesterday. 


"High  o'er  the  tents  the  moon  shone  down 
And  sleepy  birds  crooned  in  yon  tree, 
While  starry  points  gleamed  from  a  town 
Which  hid  itself  'neath  the  distant  sky. 
I   heard  the  night  thrush  cheep  to  its  mate. 
Alas, — 'twas  not  a  night  for  hate; 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  221 

The  nightingale's  full  liquid  note 
Could  almost  monstrous  storms  abate. 
And  sweet  the  gentle  hush  held  sway — 
Forgot   for  the  dream  was  my  yesterday. 

"But  soon  I  beheld  the  marching  form 

Of  a  distant  guard  on  his  grim  night  beat, 

And  the  spectral  gleam  of  the  ghostly  turm 

Whose  tents,  moon-kissed,  did  the  sky-line  meet; 

And  I  groped  along  in  the  densest  shade 

While  a  troubadour  his  'plaining  made 

In  a  minor  key — far  o'er  the   camp, 

And  his  song  the  thongs  of  night  invade. 

His  melancholy  did  pain  betray ; 

'Twas  a  wail  for  the  fallen  of  yesterday." 

SONG  OF  THE   TROUBADOUR 

Alas!     Alas!     We   have   won   the   fray, 

And  our  dead  were  alive  bu,t  yesterday; 

Our  dead  are  silent  in  the  tomb 

And  our  living,  awaked,  soon  meet  their  doom,. 

For  every  day  there  is  a  to-morrow; 

For  every  joy  there  is  a  wan  sorraw; 

For  every  smile  there  is  a  tear; 

And  every  birth  for  tells  a  bier. 

Alas!    Each  pleasure  has  its  pain; 

Each  heart  of  white  doth  hide  its  stain; 

Each  ounce  of  gold  doth  hold  some  dross. 

And  every  gain  doth  show  some  loss. 

In  truth  all  life  is  agony. 

And  Death  surcease  from  misery; 

All  hope  but  ends  in  blank  despair 

And  sordid  grime  is  everywhere. 

Why  should  meak  man  in  terror  pray 

''Give  u^,  O  Lord,  our  Crust  this  dayV^ 

"I  turned  about  with  leaden  heart. 
And  ague  shook  the  form  of  night. 


22  2     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Then  glided  silently  through  the  mart 
Of  tomb-like  tents  in  the  moonlight  bright. 
Like  a  spectre  soft  I  stole  along, 
While  upon  my  ear  the  plaintive  song 
With  lagging  dirge  the  chords  prolong, 
Until  my  blood  stood  dead,  at  wrong — 
The  wrong  of  broken  faith;  and  grey, 
Dull  grey,  were  the  clouds  o'er  my  yesterday. 

"A  demon  I,  when  I  reached  the  plain,. 
And  strident  walk  and  curses  low 
Hung  on  the  air,  subdued  but  main 
Strong  and  vicious  at  the  bloAv. 
I  recked  what  wrong  befel  me  then. 
My  blood  o'ershot  my  throbbing  brain, 
And  black  and  red  surged  through  my  eye, 
As  I  breathed  the  curse  again  and  again; 
For  I  wrenched  my  heart  with  agony 
At  the  base  deceit  of  my  yesterday. 

"With  a  cry  of  hate  I  sprang  aloft 
And  cut  the  thongs  of  my  charger  there. 
Away  we  flew  while  oft  and  oft 
My   vision   pictured   the   faithless   pair. 
On  and   on  over  the  wind-swept  vale, 
With  speed  terrific  we  ploughed  the  dale; 
O'er  hill,  o'er  wood,  and  rising  scale 
The  distant  mount;  and  soon  our  goal 
Of  many  leagues  beblacked  the  sky, 
Just  at  the  dawn  of  another  day. 

"Nor  slacked  the  speed  of  the  flying  mare, 
Nor  slacked  the  hate  in  the  blackened  heart, 
For  sin  was  stamped  in  the  distance  there, 
And  Souls  were  stained  by  impious  art. 
With  floam-flecked  bit;   with  sweat-flecked 

coat. 
With  heaving  sides  and  swollen  throat 
The  horse  pushed  panting  through  the  moat 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  223 

And  staggered  spent  to  my  gemote, 
Where  a  hostler  sprang  in  blank  dismay 
To  view  this  master  of  yesterday. 


« i 


Hold !      Soft !'  quoth  I  with  steely  voice ; 
Tis  silence,  dog,  'ope  not  thy  mouth, 
Or,  by  my  faith,  will  the  imps  rejoice 
At  thy  carcass  sent  to  swell  my  wrath. 
No  word  to  living  soul  give  out 
That  I  am  here  or  e'en  about; 
Behold,  sub-rosa  on  my  path, 
And  I  will  yet  her  treachery  flout.' 
Commanding  thus  with  prompt  obey, 
I  sent  the  beggar  on  his  way. 

*Then  with  soft   footstep  to  the  court 
Wherein  the  somber  palace  lay. 
The  tryst  wherein  our  faith  did  sport. 
The  court,  dew-kissed  by  heaven's  ray. 
Where  tinkling  soft  the  sparkling  fount 
Like  cooling  streams  from  lethal  mount. 
And  clambering  vines  with  fragrance  sweet, 
And  buds  and  birds  of  myriad  count. 
Redolent  bower  of  dream's  display! 
Could  eft-day's  joys  our  hearts  betray? 

"The  aspiring  sun  had  squared  its  rays 

Above   the  rising   turret's   cope. 

And  pruning  doves  their  sounds  of  praise 

Now  crooned  and  swelled  the  prayer  of  hope. 

While  breezes  soft  and  redolent  waft 

The  tired  lotus  by  the  shaft 

Of  golden  light  which  shimmered  down, 

And  e'en  the  playful  fountain  laughed 

To  see  the  fresh-born  joy  of  May. 

It  iseemed  I  had  gone  but  yesterday. 

"But  all  that  cheer  sped  past  my  heart, 
Which  bitter-black  throbbed  out  its  hate. 


2  24     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Nor  could  soft  scenes  their  peace  impart 
Nor  gentle  sounds  its  gall  abate ; 
So,   stealthily  I   crossed   the  court 
\\'ith  evil  glare  and  gross  import, 
And  like  an  horrid-omened  gnome 
I  stole  into  a  secret  port 
Which  led  me  straight  into  the  bay- 
Where  slept  my  beloved  of  yesterday. 

"With  cunning  stealth  and  cautious  tread 
I  passed  across  the  velvet  floor 
Which  dulled  the  step,  and  neared  the  bed, 
The  canopied  couch  which  days  before 
My  bride  and  I  had  warmed  with  bliss. 
Had  sought  in  love,  had  sealed  by  kiss; 
The   silken   tapestr}-"   in  sweeping   fold 
Hung  drooping  soft,  and  well  I  wiss 
The  undraped  form  which  therein  lay. 
It  pierced  my  heart  in  agony. 

*T  looked  around  and  saw  each  piece 

Of  treasured  token  on  the  wall, 

Each  picture  had  its  san  felice. 

Each  book  and  ornament  its  call, 

And  all  the  love  of  long  ago 

Welled  in  my  breast  and  bade  me  go 

And  tarry  not  to  curse  the  hour 

That  brought  me  back  to  avenge  my  woe ; 

But  on  the  escritoire  there  lay 

A  gauntlet,  tied  most  prettily. 

"A  stranger's  gauntlet !     So  the  blood 
With  wildly-leaping  sting  and  pain 
Sprang  back,  and  blacker  was  my  mood 
Until   I   was   a  fiend  again. 
With  bitter  cry  I  drew  my  blade 
From  out  my  sheath  and  quickly  preyed 
Upon  the  couch,  and  thrust  aside 
The  drapes  that  hid  my  lecherous  bride. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  225 

With  harsh  and  raucous  curse  I  cry ! — 
But  vacant  my  couch  of  yesterday! 

"Dazed  quite  but  not  undone 
I  groped  my  staggering  way  in  gloom, 
For  had  my  task  but  now  begun, 
And  now  had  Fate  prepared  her  doom. 
Red  crime  black  hours  prefers  to  light. 
And  hides  its  horrors  from  the  sight. 
Like  devil-fish  which  inks  the  sea, 
And  throws  a  slimy  stain  to  blight. 
So  crouched  I  through  the  passage-way 
Which  darkly  led  me  to  bewray. 

"Anon  and  down  I  crept  along 
Until  I  came  to  a  wide  draped  door, 
And  halted  quick  as  a  tinkling  gong 
Smote  on  my  ear.     Like  long  before 
The  breakfast  bell  with  joyous  sound 
Would  call  the  roused  family  round, 
And  seated  happ'ly  by  the  board 
Most  pleasant  jollity  would  abound;  . 
But  now — I  halted  soft  to  see 
What  form  of  man  my  foe  might  be. 

"With  bated  breath,  scarce  turning  slow, 

I  pressed  the  portieres  soft  apart, 

And  gazed  upon  the  guilty  two 

Who  had  rent  the  love-strings  from  my  heart. 

I  gazed,  and  saw  the  purest  face 

That  any  maiden  e'er  did  grace; 

The  daintiest  form,  and  slenderest  limbs 

That  were  e'er  encased  in  filmy  lace. 

The  light  of  love  ne'er  left  her  eye; — 

And  this  was  the  wife  about  to  die. 

"A  half -smile  curved  her  enticing  lips. 
And  flashed  the  dare  from  her  wells  of  blue, 
While  the  courtier  kissed  her  finger  tips 


226     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  then  he  kissed  her  ripe  lips,  too. 
With   mighty   groan    I    repressed   my    spleen 
And  felt  the  edge  of  my  dagger  keen, 
While  all  unconscious  of  impending  fate 
They  ate,  and  laughed  at  the  sparkling  sheen 
Of  the  dancing  sun's  reflected  ray, 
Which  mirrored  the  dreams  of  our  yesterday. 

"He  was  young  in  form  and  bold  in  look, 
With  manly  doublet,   and   masterful  air; 
In  truth,  not  twice  his  will  could  brook. 
And  his  face  could  win  a  maiden  fair. 
The  butler  observ^ed  them  solemnly 
As  elders  will  the  children  at  play, 
And  seemed  benign  to  bless  their  meal, 
As  long  as  he  knew  her  knight  was  away. 
But  little  they  recked  that  terrible  'splay 
Which  would  doom  her  lack  of  constancy. 

*'The  meal  progressed  amid  sweet  words 
And  lingering  touches  of  the  hand, 
While  silver  carols  from  hidden  birds 
Bespoke  the  peace  throughout  the  land. 
He  looked  most  tender  in  her  eyes, 
As  though  his  breast  were  filled  with  sighs, 
Then  picked  a  timbrel  from  a  couch 
And  turned  sweet  joy-filled  melodies. 
His  vaunting  voice  was  raised  in  praise 
To  the  joys  of  ever-present  days." 

THE   SONG 

Rejoice  to-day!    Rejoice  to-day! 
To-day  is  the  yesterday  of  to-morrow ; 
Avaunt,  black  Death!    Begone,  won  Sorrow! 
For  Life   doth   call — We  Live   to-day. 
Forget   the   past,   nor   trouble    borrow; 
Live  for  to-day  in  blest  to-day! 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  227 

Have  joy  to-day!    Sweet  joy  to-day! 
Drink  deep  of  love,  the  cup  is  full. 
Nor  sigh  the  past,  nor  seek  to  lull 
The  passions  roused,  when  roused  to-day, 
For  vain  repines  make  life  hut  dull; 
Awake  to-day  and  love  for  aye! 

Live  in  to-day!     Taste  mirth  to-day! 
The  morrow  regrets  for  pleasures  lost. 
Enjoy   the  dance  what-e'er  it  cost. 
We  live  hut  once,  and  thence  away 
N'er  to   return.     What'er  thou  dost 
Drive  care  away,  my  prayer  to-day. 

Sweet  Love,  to-day  is  the  thrilling  day! 
Why,  oh  why,  can  the  love-feast  tarry; 
Eat,  drink,  and  thus  he  merry. 
For  to-morrow  leaps  and  we  may  die. 
The  earth  is  gold,  the  heavens  starry; 
Smile,  O  Love,  ^tis  our  nuptial-day! 


"I  heard,  and  quick  my  blood  grew  gall, 
And  I  strove  not  how  to  check  my  stride, 
For  I  beheld  her  crimson  at  his  call, 
And  embrace  him  tender,  like  a  bride. 
Then  speaking  soft,  as  lovers  do, 
I  heard  her  gently  pledge  the  two. 
The  words  were  low  and  I  heard  them  not. 
But  the  actions  speak  if  the  words  are  few; 
Then  quick  he  left  to   ride  away — 
With  the  heart  of  my  bride  of  yesterday. 

"He  approached  and  stepping  fast  as  wind 
Came  straight  and  bold  to  the  silk-draped 

door, 
Where   lurking   death  lay  waiting  behind 
To  thrust  him  away  forevermore. 
His  gauntlet'  arm  bare  touched  the  fold 


228     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

When  with  a  cry  like  fiends  untold 
My  blade  sprang  out,  and  with  a  scream 
His  stricken  form  grew  tense  and  cold, 
While  gurgling  blood  crept  dank  away; — 
O  God !    That  crime  of  yesterday ! 

"With  horror-stricken   face  and  eye, 
My  bride  could  only  gaze  like  death, 
When  she  beheld  that  it  was  I 
Who  had  hurled  such  harm  with  bitter 

wrath. 
She  swayed  and  fell  upon  the  floor, 
While  masks  of  fright  the  servants  wore, 
And  then  half-roused  she  from  the  swoon 
And  called  in  piteous  moans  and  sore 
For  the  dying   carcass  in  the  way 
That  had  blighted  the  joys  of  our  yesterday. 

"  *0  man !    O  God !'     She  wailed  in  pain, 

'O  Virgin,  smile  on  me  again; 

O  husband,  know  ye  what  ye've  done? 

My   only    brother   have   ye   slain; 

This  was  the  one  sad  yester-past, 

A  stripling  youth,  he  had  wantoned  fast 

And  banished  was  from  my  father's  court, 

But  now  returned  a  man  at  last; 

And  ye  have  murdered  him  this  day! 

Alas,  had  I  told  you  my  yesterday!' 

"With  broken  heart  and  pain  she  dies, 

But  e'er  her  soul  had  flown  away 

She  cursed  the  deed  that  I  had  done, 

She  cursed  it  in  her  agony ; 

For  by  that  blow  three  had  I  killed — 

The  youth,  my  bride,  and  unborn  child, — 

And  killing,  fore-ordained  had  wrought 

My  everlasting  misery. 

Now  every  hundred  years  must  I 

Beery  that  scene  of  yesterday. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  229 

"My  heart  stood  still  at  the  awful  deed, 

My  mind  refused  to  grasp  the  blow, 

I  tried  to  cry,  and  in  my  need 

I  tried  to  pray,  but  no  words  flow. 

My  tongue  laid  thick  and  parched  and  dry; 

My  eyes  were  blind,  I  fain  would  die, 

And  with  an  awful  scarred  scream 

I  heard  a  voice  from  out  the  sky, — 

A  voice  of  dreadful  mystery 

Proclaim  my  Doom  eternally. 

"  ^Forever  shalt  thou  come  on  earth 
And  thus  atone  each  hundredth  year, 
And  give  thy  horrid  tale  rebirth 
Until  a  heart  shall  fill  with  fear. 
A  heart  that  hidden  doth  contain 
Full-venomed  coil  of  jealousy; 
A  heart  that  rankles,  though  it  fain 
Would  salve  itself   from  misery.' 
And  so  this  day  my  warning  be — 
Beware  of  this  tale  of  yesterday, 

"Bethink  thee  e'er  thy  anger  fall, 
To-day  is  time,  the  morrow  too  late; 
To-day  atone  for  error's  call; 
To-morrow's  scales  may  fall  from  Hate, 
And  where  the  wrong  you  mayhap  thought 
Had  pierced  your  heart  and  misery  bought 
Perchance  may  be  a  mirage  black, 
And  wretchedness  may  come  to  nought. 
Beware  lest  to-morrow  bring  agony 
For  to-day  is  the  morrow  of  yesterday. 

"And  to-day  is  the  yesterday  of  to-morrow ; 
Bespeak  to-day  thy  future  joy; 
It  may  bring  smiles,  it  may  bring  sorrow. 
But  let  not  dross  with  gold  alloy; 
Clean  out  thy  heart  of  rubbish  dark, 
And  let  the  heaven-light  enter  in, 


230     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Enfold   the    angels    from,  the   ark 
And  let  the  Love  in  Life  begin. 
We  have  but  once  to  pass  this  way, 
And  each  day  is  a  morrow  of  yesterday." 

With  this  last  word  he  turned  around, 
His  face  grew  sere  and  parched  his  skin, 
He  struck  then  thrice  upon  the  ground, 
And  lo,  it  ope'd  and  from  within 
There  'rose  a  sound  of  music  soft, 
As  angels  make   from  Heaven's  loft. 
But  ere  a  word  I  could  reply, 
With  mingled  sulphurous  smell  and  cry 
He  disappeared,  and  with  a  sigh 
I  swooned  at  this  tale  of  yesterday. 

*  *  * 

The  rain  had  spent  its  vagrant  drops, 

And  blue  the  sky  in  western  joy. 

The  birds  sang  blithe  in  yon  elm  tops 

While  rays  of  Sol  were  slanted  coy. 

I  brushed  the  moisture  from  my  brow. 

And  mused  in  mind — 'twas  strange  in  trow, 

For  had  the  sprite  but  read  my  mind, 

And  to  the  world  had  isent  thfs  vow? 

'Twas   sad   in  truth   that    Destiny; 

And  To-day  is  the  Morrow  of  Yesterday! 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  231 


THE  STORM 

Peaceful  was  the  day,  and  calm  the  balmy  air; 
High  o'erhead  the  lazy  clouds  floated  slowly  on; 
And  in  the  trees  the  robin  carrolled  his  full-throated  song 
In  flute-like  tones,  while  from  the  golden  field 
The  meadow-lark  piped  his  wondrous  obligato. 
Ah,  God  was  in  Nature,  and  Nature  was  God, 
And  all  was  well  and  good. 

The  robin's  mate  twittered  softly  upon  the  nest. 

Fed  by  the  busy  male  who  sang  joyously  while  he  fed; 

And  goldfinch,  oriole,  wren  and  mocking-bird 

Joined  in  the  symphony  of  divine  nature,  led 

By  the  tuneful  bobolink  who  pertly  outvoiced  them  all, 

To  make  God's  harmony  complete. 

While  strident   sparrow   syncopated  as  a  thrumming 

kettledrum 
His  scolding  voice,  and  twittered  a  lovenote  anon. 

But  sudden  the  orchestra  ceased. 

A  harsh  wind  blew  through  the  bending  boughs 

And  ruffled  the  feathers  of  the  brooding  robin-mother. 

The  God  of  Nature  now  took  on  a  passing  frown; 

Displeasure  had  reached  his  volatile  soul, 

And  the  darkness  of  illwill  was  scouraging  across  his  face. 

What  kind  of  God  is  this  who  changeth  so? 

Can  a  God  frown,  and  destroy  by  his  frown? 

What  form  of  emotional  pleasure  hath  that  God, 

That  so  can  change  all  happiness  in  a  trice? 

Can  man  love  such  a  fearful  God  ? , 

A  threatening  cloud  obscured  the  paling  sun, 
Treacherous,  black,  overshadowing,  horrible! 


232     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Purple  depths  lay  in  its  darker  parts,  and  there 

At  the  edges  pale  golden  gleams  of  phosphorescent 

light 
Yellowed  the  trembling  landscape,  while  a  haze 
Of  terrible  agony  paused  and  hovered  over  all. 
Deep  mutterings  and  rumblings  grumbled  in  the  air, 
While  vivid  bursts  of  livid  light  flared  across  the  vault, 
And  danced  jagged  streaks  of  ill  omen  'gainst  heaven's 

screen, 
And  the  trees  and  flowers  bent  their  heads  in  suppli- 
cation 
At  the  onrushing  God  of  the  Storm. 
Was  this  the  same  God  riding  on  the  winds, 
Who  erstwhile  had  smiled  into  the  heart  of  the  ecstatic 
birds  ? 

With  a  rush  and  whirl  and  a  howl  and  a  roar. 

Came  the  battle  of  Evil  to  give  the  Good  war; 

Came  the  horrible  imps  from  the  realms  of  chaos 

To  destroy  all  the  joy  that  had  been  there  before. 

The  thunderous  tread  of  the  army  of  night 

Swept  onward  in  battalions  and  regiments  of  fright, 

While   Heaven's   artillery   volleyed    its    evil   malediction 

Upon  the  forest  and  field  and  hillside  alike; 

Pausing  here  and  there  to  flash  a  blinding  bolt 

Upon  a  noble  tree,  or  spire,  or  gaping  gable. 

Until  havoc  reigned  and  peace  was  peace  no  more. 

And  thus  did  the  God  of  Nature  show  his  love, — 

By  destruction,  misery,  and  death. 

What  a  God! 

Anon  the  ghastly,  gloomy  cloud  passed  on 
With  its  trail  of  violence,  destruction,  and  death. 
And  in  its  path  havoc  reigned — havoc  and  misery. 
While  scattered  round  ^vere  ruins  of  the  former  joy, 
Ruins  of  the  morning's  peace  and  contentment. 
Happiness  was  happiness  no  more,  for  wrought 
By  the  hand  of  that  God  lay  all  aspiration  in  the  muck 
Of  the  torrent's  terrible  destruction  and  waste. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  233 

That  which  had  taken  years  to  upbuild  and  rear — 
God's  temples — to  grow  and  point  their  proud  heads 
To  the   pleasant  skies,   now   lay   ravished,   couchant, 
devastated. 

What  that  God  had  made  in  agony  of  conception 

By  circling  processes  of  long-built  time  he  had  destroyed 

Wantonly  in  a  moment,  and  with  it  all 

The  harmless  joyous  life  of  the  melodious  dawn. 

The  birds,  the  butterfly,  the  bud,  and  blossom,  and  grain. 

And  there,  upon  the  jagged  rock  upreared 

In  mute  protest  to  the  hardened  heaven  above 

I  found  the  mother  robin,  nest  tattered  and  in  shreds. 

With  broken  wings,  eyes  forever  closed  and  silent  throat, 

Heart-beats  stilled  beyond  recall  by  the  cruel  storm, — 

The  storm  upon  which  that  God  had  ridden  his  angry 

chase, — 
God,  The  God  of  Nature, — Nature  in  its  finer  mood, 
And  Nature  in  its  most  ruthless  mood, 
Liberation  of  the  hosts  of  hell,  the  powerful  minions 
Of  everlasting  force,  energy  enough  to  drive  the  World, 
Its  factories,  trams,  anji  mills  for  an  Eon  of  Time, — 
All  used  for  one  brain-stormed  moment  to  destroy 
One  harmless  Httle  mother  bird  peacefully  nesting — 
One  robin,  one  sparrow  in  its  nest. 
How  pitiful ! 

Ah,  such  a  waste  of  useless  power! 
What  a  God! 

What  a  God! 

What  a  God! 


234     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


MISUNDERSTOOD 


One  bright  day  as  pondering  I  sped, 
In    dreamy   absorbed   contemplation, 
I  heard  a  cry,  weak,  wailing  and  sad, — 
'Twas  the  cry  of  a  soul  in  grieved  tribulation. 
Unconsciously,    softly,   it   entered   my   mind, 
And  left  deep  longings  and  memories  behind. 
In  vain  I  endeavored  to  recall  the  sad  word ; 
In  my  heart  it  sounded  a  responsive  chord; 
Deeply  I  pondered,  yet  do  what  I  might 
That  cadence  of  sorrow  eluded  me  quite; 
Till  dreaming  and  reflecting,  with  weight  at  my  heart 
(I  thought  'twas  a  warning  of  Delphicus  art) 
When  suddenly  came  ringing  a  knell,  soft,  subdued, 
And  I  breathed  the  sad  words — 
"I'm  misunderstood.'' 

The  soft,  sad  refrain  kept  ringing  and  low. 
Through  memory  it  came  stealing,  light — like  the  snow 
Falling  white  and  pure  on  the  cold,  dank  earth, 
Clothing  nature  and  barrenness  with  vestments  of  birth. 
Thus  to  my  deep  longing  and  echoing  mind 
Came  the  cadence,  the  dissonance  of  that  sad  wind. 
Mayhaps  some  lost  soul  had  breathed  the  cruel  word, 
And  sinking  heart-broken  for  suspicions  incurred. 
Or  perhaps  some  fair  Echo,  with  soft  beaming  eyes. 
Loved  affectionately  and  coyly,  was  repulsed,  and  dies; 
A  child,  with  soft  arms,  enfolds  man  about, 
Its  caress  is  chided,  its  lovelight  dies  out. 
And  again  that  sad  wailing  resounds  through  the  wood. 
The  sorrowful  inflection, 
"I'm  misunderstood." 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  235 

Misunderstood,  misunderstood,  how  pregnant  with  love! 
How  longingly  are  echoed  these  words  from  above ! 
How  often  are  we  hindered  in  our  struggle  through  life 
By  mistaken  impressions  which  often  cause  strife! 
How  many  a  sad  soul,  with  love  in  its  heart, 
Is  forced  to  wan  sorrow  because  of  this  dart; 
And  often  poor  stranger,  with  interest  intense, 
Becomes  a  drear  outcast  because  of  this  lance. 
All  manner  of  men  in  this  world  cannot  meet 
The  others  with  smiles,  and  gracefully  greet. 
All  tongues  cannot  speak  with  easy  eclat. 
For  many   a  dreamer  knows   worldliness   not. 
An  eccentric,  the  recluse,  a  genius  imbued, 
Loves  nature  and  beauty,  but  e'er 
Misunderstood. 


236     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


AFTER  ALL 

After  all,  what  profits  it  the  race ; 
The   desperate   act,   the   dare,   the   frenzied  pace; 
The  firm  resolve — too  oft  dismayed  by  doom; 
The  ghastly   task,   soon  lost  in  sullen  gloom; 
The  life  of  love,  the  prim  and  silent  prayer, 
The  hopes  forlorn,  the  daily  grind  and  care; 
Dark  grovelling  crowds,  a  mass  of  sprawling  spawn, 
Stand  vainly  at  the  brink  of  dawn; 
All,  all  but  lust  and  petty  passion's  slave, 
And  even  lives  of  virtue  also  find  the  grave, 
After  all,  after  all. 

After  all,  what  benefits  come  on  amain. 

Is  not  this  fleeting  life  one  sordid  round  of  pain? 

A  streak  of  sunshine  edges  through  the  threatening 

cloud 
And  passing  pleasure  sapiently  seeks  the  solemn  shroud; 
A  wail  of  new-born  mote  transcends  the  morning  light, 
And  faltering  at  the  threshold,  is  hushed  at  gruesome 

night. 
It  breaks  the  sodden  chains  of  millions  silent  ages. 
It  trails  a  tiny  streak  on  Fate's  mysterious  pages, 
An  agony  of  mortal  mother's  birth-hour  worth, 
And  fleeting  vanished  with  the  isoul  that  gave  it  birth, 

After  all,  after  all. 

After  all,  the  gleam  of  fires-infernal  glare 
Reflections  in  our  heart,  and  wake  despair; 
The  maid  of  innocence  the  mistress  to  the  man. 
The  man — a  vulture  since  the  world  of  lust  began — 
Is  slave  to  self,  and  barely  views  the  gleam 
Which  Aurora-like  gives  color  to  his  dream. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  237 

And  after  all,  when  Silent  Night  its  curfew  rings, 
And  Age  the  fairy  .snows  of  soft  contentment  brings, 
E'en  then  the  pain  of  long  forgotten  hopes  arise, 
Remorse — regret — ^will  heave  the  breast  with  sighs, 
After  all,  after  all. 

PRAYER 

Ah,  Thou  mysterious  moving  spark  divine, 
Imbedded  in  the  meanest  as  a  shrine. 
Give  Thou  the  power  to  rise  above  the  stanchant  pall 
Which  Stygian-like  dismays  and  hovers  over  all; 
Arouse  the   Soul  to  strive  above  the  puny  ways 
That  shackle  mallow  mortals  through  his  hopeless  days; 
And  thrust  him  sheer  upon  the  plane  of  nobler  thought 
Which,  heaven-sent,  a  Nature's  prize  hath  wrought! 
And  even  then  like  falcon  on  the  keener  chase 
Glorify  and  thrill  each  Soul-Life  to  its  place — 
After  all,  after  all. 


238     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  BIRTH 

The  sky  is  deep  and  clear  o'erhead 
Like  the  soul  of  a  vestal-virgin  nun; 
And  the  distant  stars  shine  with  delight 
That  their  watch  for  the  night  is  nearly  done. 
Far  out  in  space  rush  the  spheres  of  fire 
Whirling  an  orbit  supreme  and  grand, 
Which,  but  a  grain  from  the  infinite, 
Make  music  to  a  master's  magic  wand. 

And  that  music — the  chord  of  an  angel  choir 
Accompanying, — majestic,  the  prelude  sublime, 
Attuned  to  the  throbs  of  the  human  heart, 
With  its  joys  it  is  keeping  rhythmic  time. 
And  that  heart  is  a  spark  from  the  starry  sky, 
Divine,  in  the  flush  of  the  glowing  morn, 
For  Aurora  has  lent  his  golden  crown 
To  the  tiny  babe  that  is  born. 

The  winds  blow  soft,  and  sweetly  sigh. 
Like  the  harp  in  Apollo's  tuneful  hand, 
And  bring  the  aroma  from  pastures  nigh, 
And  the  myrrh  from  the  mystic  foreign  land, 
And  it  whispers  a  lullaby,  crooning  and  low, 
While  it  tells  of  the  worlds  it  has  seen. 
It  lures  and  beckons,  distracts,  always. 
As  it  hums — its  dreamy  morphian  paean. 

And  it  kisses  the  mother  who  is  sleeping  light, 
And  caresses   the   child  that  is   born; 
And  it  soothes  the  pains  of  the  aching  womb, 
For  'tis  bright  on  this  hazy  summer's  morn. 
All  nature  awakens — and   dances  in  joy, 
The  birds  and  the  flowers  and  flitting  bees; 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  239 

While  a  molten  ray  of  the  golden  sun 
Kisses  the  cradle  through  the  lace-like  trees. 

An  angel  bows  from  the  throne  of  God 
And  hovers  above  that  hallowed  place, 
While  the  hours  pause  as  they  pass,  and  gaze 
At  the  tiny  life  and  the  soul  of  grace. 
And  the  oriole  flies  to  the  nearby  hedge, 
While  the  lark  tells  the  wren  and  the  yellow 

thrush. 
So  they  tune  their  throats  with  one  accord, 
Breaking  through  the  sacred  birth-hour  hush. 
As  the  rapturous  songs  rise  to  the  sky 
And  re-echo  as  the  angel  lutes  respond, 
A  smile  of  joy  lights  the  mother's  eye, 
For  she  dreams  of  the  great  and  bright  beyond. 
Well  she  knows  that  the  babe  at  her  breast 
Has  been  blest  on  that  glorious  peaceful  morn. 
For  the  peace  of  holy,  happy  love 
Glorifies  the  home  where  a  child  is  born. 


240     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


IN  EXCELSIS 

The  gurgling  brook  laughs  as  it  glides  along, 
And  sounds  the  bass  notes  of  the  titlark's  song, 
And  mirrors  clear  the  nodding  trees  above, 
As  though  in  all  the  world  there  was  no  wrong. 

But  soon  the  titlark's  song  is  hushed  in  death; 
The  trees  are  cold  and  bare  in  nakedness; 
The  shivering  brook  has  ceased  its  melody. 
And,  icebound,  waits  the  springtime's  kiss. 


Book  of  Hope!     From  out  thy  holy  pages 
Stream  forth  the  prophecies  of  countless  ages; 
The  loves,  the  fears,  the  hopes  of  new-made  man; 
The  balm  of  wizards  and  advice  of  sages ! 
The  world  was  young.    With  all  the  youthful  fire 
It  filled  its  days  with  happy  love's  desire. 
All  life  was  fair;  the  well  of  youth  flowed  high; 
Green  was  the  earth,  and  blue  the  sunlit  sky. 

But  soon,  alas,  the  bloody  spectre,  War, 

Stalked  o'er  the  land,  and  heart  from  heartstrings 

tore ; 
And  envy  crushed  into  a  mangled  mass 
The  dream  of  peace  and  love  that  passed  before. 
So  in  the  agony  of  writhing  ages 
Time  brought  the  Psalms,  and  Hope  the  calm-voiced 

Sages ; 
And  thus  from  Heaven  the  golden  prophet  came 
Announcing  "Peace"  here  in  a  Saviour's  name. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  241 


^  2jC  S|C 

The  world  is  old.    Ten  million  ages  gone 
Since  first  the  sun  was  fashioned  by  the  Eternal  One ; 
And  eons  before  the  countless  spheres  in  space, 
Like   mighty    wheels,    whirled    ceaseless    cycles    on 

and  on. 
And  from  that  ultimate  of  dawning  time 
All  mystic  forces  formed  a  gem  sublime. 
There  in  the  manger  lowly  on  one  wintry  morn 
Creation's  Gem,  The  Prince  of  Peace,  was  born. 

All  sorrow,  vice  and  crime  were  brushed  away, 
All  taints  of  blood  had  ceased  that  golden  day, 
And  He,  the  Brother,  Saviour  of  Mankind, 
Then  blessed  the  seed,  and  glorified  for  aye 
The  valiant  prince  on  proud  and  gilded  throne, 
The  pauper  poor  who  dies  in  filth  alone. 
And  all  the  wondering  world,  through  heart  and 

core. 
Shall  know  that  love  of  God  forevermore. 


Then  Ring!     Ring!     Ring!     Ye  bells 

Out,  your  joyous  deep-toned  knells! 
Tell  the  world  your  happy  story! 
Ring  of  Peace  on  Earth,  and  Glory! 
How  the  rhythm,  ringing,  wells — 
Round  and  round!     Their  rapture  swells! 
Ring!     Ring!     Ring!     Ye  bells! 


242     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  SUICIDE 

Written  upon  the  suicide  of  an  unhappy  friend,  who  had  met 
with  continuous  defeat  in  life,  but  who  had  really  accompHshed 
more  than  he  had  thought. 

Let  bards  and  sages  and  philosophers 
Describe  the  symptoms  of  love; 

Yet  none  can  tell  how  act  it  will, 
Though  most  profound  they  prove. 

Cupid,  rascal,   a  scheming  imp, 

Of  cunning  mischief  untold; 
One  will  he  strike  with  velvet  touch, 

Another  in  death  will  fold. 

Pure  love  ennobles  one  mortal's  life, 

Yet   blasts   another's    hope; 
One  nature,  lingering,  purifies. 

Intensity  burns  to   droop. 

Let  science,  psychology,  testify 
That  Love  and  Life  are  Faith, 

But  once  let  Love  unfold  its  wings, — 
Despair  oft  ends  in  death. 

Then  judge  ye  not  too  harsh  this  man 
Who  seeks  death  and  the  grave, 

'Twere  better   far  his  death  to  seek, 
Than  despairing,  loveless,  to  live. 

A  prayer  give  ye  to  rest  his  soul : 

A  tear  might  now  be  shed, 
All  can  not  love  successfully, 

But  all  can  seek  the  dead. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  243 


TO  KNOW  THY  GOD 

O  Soul,  Why  wander  here  alone, 
Unceasing  seeking  toward  the  light? 
In  ages  past  the  seed  was  sown 
Which  sprouts  and  blossoms  day  and  night. 
The  flowers  shed  their  petals  soft, 
The  wind-blown  seeds  must  sprout  again, 
Their  fragrance  full  must  rise  aloft 
And  both  must  salve  the  souls  of  men. 
The  Mystic  flower  springs  from  the  well 
Where  Jacob's  fount  its  waters  drove, 
And  full  the  cups  of  the  faithful  swell 
As  from  Mount  Zion  the  treasures  prove. 
For  fount  and  flower  and  seed  and  spring 
From  heart  of  nature  finds  its  way. 
And  IT  from  God  its  treasures  bring 
And  from  Thy  God  gifts  come  alway; 
We  know  it  not,  nor  care  we  less 
What  spreads  the  green  on  Aaron's  rod, 
But  pause,  O   Soul,  thy  love  confess, 
And  then,  O  Soul,  wilt  know  thy  God. 


244     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  CRIMINAL 


The  world !    The  world !    The  world ! 
Oh,  Time !     Sad  hast  thou  dealt  with  us ! 
Fate,  where  is  thy  boasted  glory? 
And  Night,  where  is  thy  vaunted  peace? 
For  now  does  Crime  stalk  abroad  in  gore; 
And  purity  hides  her  blushing  face  in  shame; 
And  even  Justice  gropes  blindly  in  the  gloom; 
For  Life  is  Death;  and  man  is  man  no  more. 

But  who  made  that  man  a  beast? 
You  tell  me,  doctors,  from  your  chairs  divine. 
Come.     Speak  out,  and  in  Reason's  feast 
Unfold  to  us  groping  after  higher  light, 
Grovelling  through  the  crime-filled  night, 
Through  which  the  moon  will  blush  to  shine, 
Who  crushes  the  spirit  of  God's  grand  form? 
Who  stamps  the  weak  like  the  slimy  worm? 
Distorts  the  mind — ^'twas  once  sublime — 
Into  the  fiend-form  of  a  hideous  crime? 
Who  made  that  man  a  beast 

Who  made  that  man  a  criminal? 
You  tell  me,  Host,  with  your  white-starched  gown 
That  smells  of  dregs  and  alcohol; 
With  diabolical  smirking  on  your  brow, 
And  'friending  all  with  unctious  vow. 
You  knew  him  once  ere  he  became  a  lown; 
He  was  a  good  man  then,  nor  thought  of  ill, 
But  lived  his  life  and  loved  God's  will, 
Nor  had  an  evil  manner  in  his  way, 
Except  that  he  was  poor  and  could  not  pay. 

Who  made  that  beggar'd  man  a  criminal? 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  245 

Who  made  that  man  a  debauchee? 
You  tell  me,  Mighty  Powers  that  rule. 
Did  he  a  wrong?    Did  honor  flee? 
Or  was  his  sin  that  he  was  meek, 
And  had  no  friend  except  the  weak? 
Is  poverty  a  crime?    And  he  a  fool 
Who,  forced  by  low-companioned  pain, 
Compelled  to  leave  his  dungeon  cell  again. 
Goes  out  to  strive  against  his  rankling  past. 
And  is  hounded  by  your  dogs  to  deeds  aghast? 

Who  drove  him  to  this  debauchee? 

Who  made  that  man  an  outcast  fiend? 
Mother  you  tell  the  pitiful  tale. 
He  loved  you  once,  and  Youth  to  him  was  kind; 
Once  at  your  knee  he  lisped  his  childish  prayer, 
And  you,  O  Mother,  stroked  his  curling  hair 
From  off  his  feverish  brow,  with  hands  cold,  pale; 
And  how  the  ache  within  your  heart  would  grow 
As  on  the  squalid  hearth  would  die  the  glow 
Of  the  last  hope  for  aid — 'twas  then  he  knew 
That  from  the  grime  of  vice  few  star-flowers  grew. 

Who  placed  him  there?    Who  made  him  fiend? 

Who  gave  that  boy  a  criminal  name? 
You,  Autocrats,   with  criminal  minds  and  brain. 
Did  you  compel  him  to  this  loathing  life  of  shame? 
Because  he  was  weak,  and  you  were  strong; 
And  because  the  "Law  could  do  no  wrong?'* 
You  had  no  heart,  could  feel  no  pain! 
For  glory  was  the  gem  you  sought. 
E'en  though  at  the  price  of  another  'tis  bought; 
And  again  and  again,  without  reason  or  cause. 
You  crush  his  endeavor  and  defile  our  laws ! 

Made  you  him  criminal?     Gave  him  that  name? 

Who  blasted  that  soul  and  scarred  that  mind? 
Defiled  that  temple  that  God  hath  made? 
Destroyed  that  beacon;  made  him  blind; 


246        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Eternally  damned  him  in  fiendish  hate, 
And  blotted  his  name  from  the  Eternal  Gate; 
Forced  him  through  slime  and  gore  to  wade? 
God  made  him  once  like  the  image  of  God; 
He  was  nobler  once  than  the  reeking  clod ; 
He,  too,  had  a  right  to  live  and  to  move ; 
He  was  not  a  fiend — ^he  could  work  and  love ! 

Who  blasted  that  soul  and  deadened  that  mind? 

Who  tore  that  heart  from  that  human  shape? 
He  was  rich  in  strength — now  he  is  weak  and  poor; 
He  was  sovereign  man — now  less  than  the  ape; 
Lower  than  the  serpents  that  crawl  in  the  slime ; 
Far-fallen  from  the  paths  that  were  once  sublime. 
Who  made  him  carrion,  and  locked  the  door 
'Gainst  hope  in  his  breast  ?    Aye !     Grovel  there ! 
You  ghouls  in  the  guise  of  rank  despair! 
You  hound  him  to  death.    You  made  him  so, 
You  bow  to  the  mighty,  but  strangle  the  low. 

Who  broke  the  fountain?    Who  mangled  that 
shape  ? 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  247 


THE  TRAGEDY  OF  LIFE 

"All  the  world  is  a  stage."    Shakespeare. 

The  protean  stage  of  life  surrounds  us  all, 
Would  mortals  but  their  eyes  uncase 
And  bid  the  heartless  curtains  raise, 
Then  through  the  lens  of  Pity  gaze, 

And  view  the  struggling  actors  from  the  mall. 

The  ghastly  tragedy  of  Doom  is  on. 

There  stalks  the  grim  and  painted  horde; 

There  rant  the  puppets  on  the  board; 

Thus  some  in  rags  and  some  with  sword. 
(The  merry  prompter's  box  and  lines  are  gone.) 

Here  on  the  right  you  view  the  shifting  scene 
In  Cora's  meadow — lover-wise — 
And  eyes  which  glow  with  fondest  joys, 
And  sparkle  bright  with  virgin  sighs, 

Are  met  by  Ades,  borne  to  haunts  obscene. 

And  here  is  stirred  in  depths  of  trembling  hope 
A  mother's  heart.     Oh  vision  bright! 
A  cherub's  face;  a  spark  of  light; 
'Twas  wafted  from  thy  Godhead's  sight, 

But  soon,  alas,  in  grief  is  left  to  mope. 

Again  appears  a  strong,  stern  master  face 

Upon  this  troublous  stage  of  Fate; 

Is  lauded  high ;  but  mocked  by  State ; 

A  King  of  Heaven!     An  advocate! 
Then  crucified  in  thankless  rank  disgrace. 


248         STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Ambitious  rainbowed  hopes,  elysian  joys, 
Enlivened  walk  and  smiling  eyes, 
And  happy  visions,  dreams,  and  sighs ; 
Deep  glowing  hopes  of  girls  and  boys, — 

All  stifled  by  some  lurking  monster's  cries. 

Fond  Gaia,  with  her  temples  white  with  years; 

Brave  children  near,  and  home  and  love; 

A  smile  of  peace,  she  looks  above. 

For  through  her  life  all  lives  are  wove. 
Her  prologue  act  is  done;  shed  pearls  for  tears. 

Now   from   the   shadowed   wings   there   skulking 
glides 

The  spectre  form,  both  rank  and  vile ; 

The  demon  shape  with  festering  guile ; 

A  loathsome  monster,  in  sin  senile, 
He  comes  from  Hell,  for  he,  like  Eros,  bides. 

And  there  in  wake,  a  trembling  aping  form. 
Both  halting  slow,  yet  vainly  proud. 
With  boisterous  song  and  boastings  loud, 
Lest  whispering  conscience  may  intrude. 

Behold  a  weak,  debauched,  and  groveling  worm. 

That  form,  all  reeked  and  flecked  by  enticing  fiend, 
All  smirched  and  blackened  by  the  fire, 
Polluted  by  his  base  desire. 
Wallowing  low  in  festering  mire, 

Was  once  the  fondest  hope  of  home  and  friend. 

And  there, — but  alas,  ring  down  the  curtain  roll; 

Blot  out  the  hideous,  loathsome  cast; 

For  Thalia  glides  quick  fleeting  past. 

And  Melpomene  brings  up  the  last 
With  jangling  dirge  and  shivering  bells  that  toll. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  249 

Dear  God!     Tis  Thou  alone  can'st  prompter  be! 

'Tis  well  that  thou  hast  hidden  all ! 

For  we  but  human,  made  to  fall, 

And  then  to  rise  full  at  thy  call. 
Must  lean  our  weakling  ways  and  wills  on  Thee. 

Life's  spark  was  struck  for  but  a  passing  day. 

And  oft  to  Love  each  soul  is  cold, 

Each  heart  a  secret  grief  doth  fold. 

Each  suffering  mind  has  pain  untold. 
And  every  life  its  hidden  tragedy. 


250     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


SOLILOQUY 

Transcribed  from  the  mutterings  of  a  pessimist  who  was  about 
to  commit  suicide,  but  who  was  prevented  by  the  author  from 
accomplishing  this  end. 

My  life  is  dark  and  dreary, 

No  light  is  shining  to  cheer, 

Of  hope  I  have  grown  weary, 

Of  death  I  have  no  fear. 

All  ambitions  have  miscarried. 

All  desires  are  rent  in  twain. 

Success  is  nought  but  to  be  worried 

With  trials  that  return  again. 

Though  striving  to  attain  my  desire, 

Though  praying  and  working  hard. 

Though  attempting  to  learn  and  climb  higher, 

IVe  had  coldness  for  my  reward. 

I  have  tried  to  lift  up  the  lowly, 

Aye,  and  striven  to  help  the  poor; 

But  oft  have  I  stopped  to  question: 

My  Nature  demanded  more. 

If  planning  and  working  and  praying 

Will  give  a  success  in  life, 

Mine  ought  surely  be  waiting 

To  give  me  some  hope  in  the  strife. 

But  not  a  glimpse  of  bright  dawning 

Has  shed  its  radiance  around; 

No  God  has  deigned  to  assist  me. 

No  sympathy  for  me  doth  abound. 

"Every  man  for  himself"  is  the  byword, 

"Devil  take  the  last"  is  the  sound 

Which  seems  to  engross  the  people, 

And  they  sneer  as  they  glance  around. 

E'en  God  seems  to  have  me  forgotten,—* 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  251 

Or  really  is  there  such  a  being- 

Of  great  and  omnipotent  power. 

Who  takes  us  poor  mortals   when  dying? — 

If  so,  then  here  is  a  victim 

Of  the  coldness  of  this  cruel,  cold  world ; 

For  I  seek  death  rather  than  perish 

A  Pre-Adamite  on  blind  mortal  hurled. 

If  there  be  a  Heaven  Eternal, 

If  there  sits  a  great  God  on  high, 

Then  take  Thou  my  soul,  O  Thou  Great  One, 

For  I  but  long  to  die. 

What  is  man's  sad  lot  here  while  living? 

Weary  waiting  and  strife  and  pain; 

Three^score  years  of  much  trouble, 

And  returning  to  dust  again. 

"Dust  thou  art,  to  dust  returnest," 

Was  said  of  us  creatures  here  below, 

And  when  our  life  work  is  finished. 

Puff !  to  oblivion  we  go. 

Perchance  it  meant  not  the  spirit. 

Mayhap  not  said  of  the  Soul, 

But  what  is  that  indefinite  quantity? 

Will  we  know  when  we  reach  the  goal? 

Why  must  we  work  for  one  moment? 

■■ — ^And  life  but  one  moment  is. 

Grasped  or  stolen  from  Eternity, 

And  forgotten  by  Him  that  arose. — 

But  has  there  a  Saviour  arisen? 

Oh  questions,  ye  must  arise! 

Where  is  the  end  of  Eternity  ? 

What  lies  beyond  the  skies  ? 

A  mystery  is  life  and  living ! 

Yes,  I  am  weary  of  all ! 

If  now  there  be  a  Great  Master, 

I  am  weary  and  await  his  call. 

Pain  did  I  give  up  on  entering. 

Destruction  of  life  to  exist; 

But  no  pain  will  I  awake  on  departing — 

Then  take  me,  Ye  Heavenly  Blest! 


252     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 


THE  PAST 

Those  gladsome,  happy  days  of  yore 
With   thoughtless   joys,   return   no   more, 
But  in  our  thoughts  sweet  memories  lie, 
We  recall  the  past,  and  dream,  and  sigh, 
A  smile  then  curls  our  whispering  lip 
As  some  quaint  fancy  our  memories  stir; 
A  frown,  or  tear  from  lashes  drip, 
As  wrong  or  sorrow  returns  once  more, 
And  as  the  longing  and  desire 
Of  happy  love-days  cross  our  mind 
We  tenderly  breathe  a  soul-sent  prayer, 
"To  her,  Oh  Father,  be  thou  kind  " 
Then  to  this  age  perforce  we're  brought. 
And  of  the  future  fond  we  think. 
Oh  happy  past!     Thy  hopes  have  taught 
Full  many  a  lesson !    Now  at  the  brink 
We  await  Eternity. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  253 


THE  MYSTERY  OF  THE  SPHINX 

Upon  an  ancient  slip  of  papyrus,  recently  exhumed  in  the  ex- 
cavations of  Egyptian  tombs,  was  found  a  short  description  of 
what  purported  to  be  the  legend  which  surrounds  the  building 
of  the  Egyptian  Sphinx  and  the  uses  for  which  it  was  designed. 
The  story  mainly  involves  the  beautiful  daughter  of  one  of  the 
rulers  of  Egypt  in  the  ancient  days,  who  for  some  misdemeanor 
was  condemned  by  her  father  to  be  buried  alive  in  a  large  tomb, 
and  remain  there  until  a  man  many  centuries  hence  should  pro- 
cure a  mythical  ring  and  bring  it  to  the  Sphinx,  whereupon  he 
would  have  access  to  the  tomb  of  the  Goddess,  as  she  was  called, 
and  reawaken  her  to  life. 

Long  has  it  stood  weathering  the  storms, 
Never  flinching,  never  craving  for  rest : 

Its  foundation  is  buried  by  the  fine  red  sands, 
But  still  it  stands  silently,  a  monument  blest. 

'Tis  told  by  sages,  by  bards  and  in  legends 
That  a  secret  it  guards,  it  v^ill  never  unfold; 

Its  face  is  set  rigid;  its  eyes  gaze  far 
Out  o'er  the  desert.     It  has  never  told 
To  man  its  secret. 

Its  osseous  eyes  have  a  farav^ay  look, 
Gazing  far  out  over  mortal  man's  head, 

As  though  never  stooping  to  pygmy  conver- 
sation, 
Lest  to  tell  its  great  secret  perchance  it  be  led. 

Upon  its  cold  face  are  chiseled  the  lines 
Of  wisdom,  of  thought,  of  power  and  grace; 

It  has  a  determined  God-like  appearance, 
Which  man  could  well  copy  did  he  have  a  place 

In  keeping  a  secret. 

Who  will  guess  the  secret?  What  does  it  mean? 
Does  that  enormous  mound  of  modeled  stone 


254     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Hide  the  grave  of  an  Egyptian  king? 
Lies  a  princess  here  buried,  a  saint  entombed? 
Is  this  the  great  hallowed  sepulchre 
Of  the  goddess  who  was  doomed 
To  be  buried  alive  or  mummified, 
And  ne'er  to  see  the  light  till  ages  have  died 
And  been  hurried  past  on  its  incessant 

string, 
Till   centuries   have  come,   and   with   it  the  ring 
Which  will  resurrect  the  goddess, 

Reawake  her  to  life? 
Who  is  the  successful  one  in  the  strife 
To  guess  the  secret? 

Nay!     The  Sphinx  never  grows  weary! 

It  guards  its  secret  well. 
Somber  it  stands,  nor  is  it  so  easy 

Its  secret  to  tell. 
Then  find   out   its   secret,   you   antiquarians 
who  delve, 

It's  a  puzzle,  a  mystery. 

All  think.    Who  will  solve 

The  secret? 

The  enigma  is  old,  but  yet  ever  new:^ 
As  the  Sphinx  alone  has  refused  to  do 
What  all  other  works  of  ancient  art 
Have  long  since  been  compelled  to  impart, — 
To  man  its  secret. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  255 


THE  COSMIC  URGE 

Nebulous  and  inchoate 

Mystic,  misty,  insensate. 

Unformed  and  vast,  intangible. 

That  fills  all  void  to  endless  space — 

Was  here  before  the  world  began. 

Was  here  before  the  stars  above 

First  'gan  their  endless  journeyings, 

And  e'en  was  e'er  the  portals  of  endless  time 

Oped  up  the  auroreal  paths  of  eternity 

To  let  the  first  shy  throb  of  pulsing  cloud 

Attain  its  faintest  shimmer  of  dawning  form! 

Call  it  the  Spirit,  God,  or  Jove, 

Fill  it  with  mysterious  powers, 

Assign  all  attributes  above. 

The  guide,  the  guard  thru  all  the  hours, 

Progenitor  of  time  and  space, 

Forefathers  of  our  very  race, — 

Yet  back,  far  back  to  the  first  moment's  surge. 

We  find,  we  feel 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

Instinct  of  Creation,  the  power  to  do. 
Reflex,  intuitive,  the  Ultimate  Will; 
The  secret  of  life,  to  live,  to  grow. 
The  vaunted  lust,  desire  to  kill, 
Electric,  magic,  bromide,  heat. 
Combustion,   force,   and  psychic's  threat; 
All  forms  of  growth,  from  low  to  high, 
From  atom  ultimate  to  lower  form 
Of  amoebic  life,  thru  and  nigh 
To  higher  ways  of  cosmic  hope. 
Power,  pressure,  potency, — 
Acme  of  vibratory  efficiency, — 


256     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Omnipotent  Will  with  mortals  merge, — 
All  are  but  forms  of 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

What  builds  the  petrified  music  of  the  seer? 

The  angel-hymns  of  the  architect? 

Aye,  what  plants  the  spark  of  Eternal  Fire 

Upon  that  vast  and  gigantic  Milky  Way, 

And  makes  the  myriad  monster  spheres  spin  and  whirl 

On  their  endless  path  so  ceaselessly? 

What   force   uprears   the   wondrous   mountains   gigantic 

And  flows  the  restless  seas  from  shore  to  shore, 

Builds  the  land,  the  shifting  sand, 

And  erects  the  rocky  temples  to  wild  nature's  god? 

What  visions  the  wonder  of  our  modern  Aladdin, 

The  dazzling  sight  of  the  morn  of  youth. 

The  urge  of  the  worm  to  ape  the  man, — 

The  paupers  to  become  the  king? 

Ah,  define  all  things,  but  man,  thou  fool,  remember, 

There  is  ever  a  dynamic  quickening 

Of   the   protoplasmic  dust   into   the   procreative   unit. 

Amalgamating  all   with  the   subliminal 

Essence  of  Life, — 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

Comb  the  Universe  for  living  words  to  express 

The  faintly  subtle  breath  of  meaning. 

And  brush  the  comet's  tail  on  the  celestial  seas  of  space 

For  phrases,  idioms,  thoughts  and  gradations 

Of  abstruse  explanations  which  when  boiled 

And  purged  and  pressed  and  condensed 

By  Hydraulic  and  Herculean  pressure 

To  their  penultimate  will  in  deep 

And  Divine  Condensation  exactly  defined 

What  all  theologies,  all  religions. 

All  ethics,  philosophies,  theorems. 

Yogis  and  other  mysterious  and  mystic 

Promulgations  from  out  of  the  brain 

Of  man  mean,  when  they  try  to  explain 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  257 

Youth  perpetual,  perennial  renewal, 

The  Living  God,  Immortal  Life,  and  all 

The  Occult  storms  of  Higher  Thought, — 

'Tis  all  one-thoughted  and  expressed  by  the  words — 

The  pregnant  words, — 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

The  oribund  acorn  placed  within  the  ground, 
A  sepulchre   of   buried   sodden   hopes. 
And  soon  anew  the  queries  deep  propound — 
"Shall  rise  the  dead,  and  only  gropes  the  soul 
For  light  above  and  newer  life  when  dead 
And  rotted  cruel,  and  fed  upon  by  that 
Minute  small  germ  within  itself  contained? 
Is  that  the  mystic  cycle  ultimate?" 
The  Urge  within  that  tiny  cannibal  grain 
That  caused  it  to  awake  and  stretch  and  come 
From  out  of  its  unhallowed  dreamless  lethargy 
And  send  its  searching  tender  roots 
Deep  in  the  parent  breast  to  feed  and  feed 
Upon  its  mother,  dead  and  rotting  there, 
Only  to  gather  strength  to  thrust  its  head 
Above  the  fallow  ground  and  rise  in  joy. 
Majestic  and  noble,  t'ward  the  sun  and  skies, 
And  in  the  span  of  quickly  passing  years 
Expand  a  shelter  to  the  farer  of  the  way 
As  he  plods  his  hopeless  weary  path  along ; 
That  Power,  the  irresistable  essence  of  Life 
Is  called  by  Name, 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

What  urge  find  we  within  the  passioned  male 

When  Spring  its  flushing  green  the  branches  tinge, 

To  seek  a  mate — a  mate  yet  shy,  yet  bold. 

And  equal  passioned,  send  in  ecstasy. 

An  endless  chain  of  life  and  life  and  life  again? 

Instinct  of  primogeniture  !     Alas 

The  cavilling  ornithologist  with  scant 

And  scurrilous  audacity  would  preach 


258     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

The  cyclic  growth  of  insensate  will. 

Call  it  but  what  you  may,  'tis  there,  'tis  here, 

'Tis  but  the  Cosmic  Urge  within  the  blood, 

The  drop  of  High  Divinity  that  comes 

We  know  not  whence,  nor  how,  nor  where. 

That  all  things  have,  that  moves  all  time, 

And  space,  and  things  throughout  all  space. 

And  fills  each  every  atom,  ion,  drop, — 

All  the  vastnesses  of  time — Eternity. 

It  is 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

We  all  have  dimly  seen  and  marvelled  at 
The  pragmic  mystery  of  a  Soul  groping 
On  its  faltering  way  to  higher  things : — 
Commodity — Beauty — Art  and   Commerce, — 
Literature  and  the  frenzied  mind 
Of  the  wild-eyed  Poet  in  the  zenith 
Of  his  power — Surge  of  Procreation, 
Supernatant  activities  of   impowered  mankind, — 
Superfluitant  dream  of  the  allseeing  idealist 
Vaulting  into  the  mystic,  unknown, 
Vast  spaces  of  paths  untrodden, — 
Scientist,  Biologist,  Psychist,  Savant, 
Searching  the  micrococci  of  Ultimate  Truth, 
All — all — are  but  the  impulse  apparent 
Of   the  inherent   God — 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

The  Harmony  of  the  Soul  awakes  in  ecstasy, 

And  Music  of  the  silent  flying  spheres 

May  thrill  and   thrall   the   optimistic  mental   reach; 

The  poison  worm  may  spin  its  silk  cocoon, 

And  lo,  a  shy  but  gorgeous  butterfly 

Emerges,   to  bask  and  flit  and  flutter  high. 

And  flashes  in  the  warm  soft  sun 

A  day,  a  night — to   sip  the  honeyed  nectar 

From  the  chalice  of  the  Blushing  Rose. 

It  knows  not  why,  nor  cares. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  259 

It  soon  must  die — but  on  its  own  spark 

Of  life  is  sent  down  the  distant  ages, 

The  urge  to  procreate — to  live  again; 

All  the  vibratory  Life,  the  latent  Power, 

The  Galvanic  Energy,  the  drive,  the  tower, 

The  Propulsive  Essence  of  the  Universe, 

The  Bite  of  Ambition,  Desire  of  Advancement — 

It  is 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

Eternally  productive  is   nature, 

Eternally  and  perpetually  and  ever 

Its  mandate  goes  forth — to  live  again 

And  never  die.     That  is  why 

I  created  thee  and  all  Adams. 

There  is  no  true  inertia. 

The  power  of  multiple-existing  being 

Never  had  a  beginning  ultimate. 

It  Was  before  the  first  moment  of  time  began, 

It  Is,  and  ever  shall  be. 

It  was  here,  there,  and  everywhere, 

In  the  dark  places  as  well  as  the  light. 

And  thru  and  thru  the  uttermost  paths 

Of  wide  and  limitless  space, 

Lo,  we  find  it  there  also. 

The  Hebrew  and  Religionist 

Bow  low  in  humility  and  strike  their  breasts 

And  pray  an  abject  prayer  and  call 

It  Diety,  God,  Jehovah,  Elohim, 

While  each  sect  and  separate  theology 

Gives  it  a  name  which  has  its  fear 

To  conjure  with.     But  sum  it  all, 

Take  the  subtle  shades  of  meaning 

From  the  hollow  words  of  each,  and  we  find 

That  all  alike  are  Unity — all  but  express. 

The  thought  we  place  in  terrible  words, 

It  is 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 


26o     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Take  the  magic  microscope  and  seek 

The  smallest  spot  of  nothingness,  and 

Lo,  discover  that  Life  is  still  extant; 

The  vibration  of  Eternal  Power 

Is  there,  and  even  in  the  miscalled 

Senseless  things,  the  rock,  the  clod,  the  drop 

Of  insensate  slime,  and  less,  the  ion  of  small 

And  smallest  subdivision  of  matter, — 

So  small  that  even  the  all-seeing  eye 

Of  the  Pagan  or  Christian  God, 

The  Thor  or  Jove  of  the  Ancients, 

Budda,   Nuk-pu-Puk,   or  the  great   I  Am 

Of  all  the  tribes  and  nations 

Since  reason  sat  on  the  shoulders  of  man. 

May  not  even  know  that  it  is  hidden  there, 

And  yet  within  that  electron  of  ultimate  vibration 

There  will  we  find  the  source  of  things; 

It  has  the  Urge,  the  thrill  to  be, — 

All  have  their  life,  their  power,  vibration, 

A  part  of  things,  ^ 

The  Cosmic  Urge. 

The  servant  of  man  and  all  am  I, 

And  yet  the  secret  master, 

For  I  prod  to  live  but  not  to  die, — 

Ignore  me — and  seek  disaster. 

The  uttermost  space  of  Heaven  I  own, 

The  deepest  spot  in  Hell, 

Nor  smile,  nor  tear,  nor  plea,  nor  moan, 

Can  halt  the  impulse  of  my  spell. 

I  drive,  I  prod  with  ceaseless  force, 

And  blood  and  sap  flows  stronger, 

And  he  obeys  who  skims  the  course, 

And  lives  by  m_e  the  longer. 

For  I  am  I,  the  Power  Divine, 

The  essence  deep,   the  kinetic  surge, 

And  if  thy  life  is  merged  in  mine, 

Thou  livest,  Man,  for  I — 

I  am 

The  Cosmic  Urge! 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  261 


THE  DOOM 

A   HOAX   IN   THE   MANNER   OF   POE:'s   RAVEN 

This  poem  was  written  as  a  hoax  to  mislead  a  loud-voiced 
critic.  The  intent  was  to  achieve  Poe's  rhyme  and  meter.  It 
accomplished  its  purpose. 

ARGUMENT 

Long  ago,  so  the  legend  runs,  in  Scotland,  the  only  scion 
of  a  noble  family,  squandering  his  patrimony,  sought  relief 
and  release  from  the  contempt  of  the  world  by  secluding  him- 
self in  one  of  his  ancient  castles.  With  him  he  had  his  amour- 
ette, a  most  beautiful  young  maiden,  whom  he  had  picked  up  in 
sunny  Italy,  and  whom  he  loved  with  an  intense  and  deep  pas- 
sion. However,  he  had  never  done  her  the  honor  nor  favor 
of  making  her  his  wife,  and  so  taking  ill  she  sadly  died,  dis- 
honored. 

When  it  was  too  late,  the  young  nobleman  realized  his  great 
wrong,  and  at  her  bier  was  so  overcome  with  remorse  that  he 
became  violently  insane  for  the  time.  From  that  time  on,  he 
refused  to  allow  the  bier  to  be  removed,  but  vainly  sought  sur- 
cease from  his  sorrow  by  mourning  over  her. 

And  it  is  said  that  forever  will  he  live,  vainly  mourning  and 
repining  over  the  beloved  bier  of  his  wronged  mistress.  The 
castel  lies  in  ruins  now,  the  casket  is  rotted  and  crumbled  into 
dust,  and  it  is  whispered  that  but  a  shadow  remains  of  the  aged 
man  who  can  never  die.  But  the  older  people  still  claim  to  see 
his  spirit  form  hovering,  vainly  hovering  and  regretting,  there 
over  the  passing  of  lost  opportunities,  opportunities  which,  once 
passed,  never  come  again. 

Time  agone  while  listless  dreaming  in  my  castle, 

hardly   seeming 
Conscious  of  the  fitful  gleaming  of  the  candle  in 

my  room, — 
Listing  not  the  spluttering  flutter  of  the  candle  in 

my  room, — 
Dreaming  dreams  of  lingering  longing,  seeing  shadows 

in  the  gloom. 
Suddenly  I  heard  the  patter 

Of  a  footstep,  then  the  clatter. 


262     STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Clatter  of  some  ghostly  matter 
On  the   loam   without  my   room, — then  at   the  terrace 

Near  my  room. 
Idly  thought  I,  and  did  mutter,  *'0h,  'tis  nothing 

but  the  shutter 
Making  idle  noise  and  flutter 

In  the  gloom." 

Dreaming  here  of  lost  ambitions,  thinking  thoughts 

of  waning  missions. 
Fondling  hopes  of  staid  conditions  which  were  pent 

up  in  my  heart, 
Conjuring  now  gleaming  visions  of  ideals 

deep  in  my  heart. 
Mourning  sadly  for  Wanita — deep  regrets  to  me  impart ; 
Then  again  I  heard  the  tapping. 

Then  the  patter,  then  the  rapping, 
Rapping  of  a  body  flapping 
'Gainst  the  lattice  of  my  room — making  noises 

in  the  gloom. 
Not  aroused  yet  from  my  napping  I  conflict  the  sounding 

—tapping, 
With  the  shutters  idle  flapping 
In  the  gloom. 

Drowsily  was  I  there  thinking  of  the  circles  which 

were  linking 
Souls  departed  to  the  shrinking  lower  toils  of 

Hades'   shore, — 
Thinking  of  Algheries'  circles, — morbid  view  of 

Adies'   shore, 
And  my  mind  was  filled  with  visions, — visions 

of  black  Dante's  lore. 
When  within  my   fancy  stealing 

Came  a  dread,  a  ghastly  feeling, 
Like  the  shudder  when  the  pealing 
Of  a  bell  tolls  through  the  gloom, — Like  the  knell 

of  Stygian  doom. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  263 

Then  there  stole  to  fancies  napping, — ^gently,  softly 

came  that  tapping, 
Tapping,  tapping,  and  the  rapping 
In  the  gloom. 

Softly  in  my  dream  'twas  stealing,  mingling, 

tingling  with  the  pealing 
Of  that  bell;  in  thought  revealing  all  the  agony 

of  my  soul. 
In  my  dream  I  heard  a  knell  which  brewed 

a  warning  to  my  soul. 
Ghastly  visions,  soft  from  Hell  upon  my 

dreamland   fancy  stole. 
Pondering  thus,  yet  was  not  sleeping, 

Por  my  heart  was  filled  with  weeping, 
Weeping,  for  my  soul  was  keeping 
Longings  deep  from  Nita's  tomb, — My  heart  would 

sink  in  Nita's  tomb; 
And  the  flicker  of  the  candle  cast  weird  shadows, — 

and  the  smell 
Of  the  champak  from  the  dell 
Breathed  of  gloom. 

Ah, — *twas  summer's  breeding  time,  when  all  sweet 

flowers,  fragrant  climb 
In  radiant  blossoms,  and  the  thyme  and  odors, 

graceful  and  perfume 
Awake  dead  romances,  and  sorrows  of   dead  longings 

fill  the  gloom; 
When  the  mind  is  stirred  to  weeping  by  the 

fragrance  in  the  room; 
When  jasmine  buds  remorse  awakes, 

A  troubled  brain  from  musk  betakes. 
The  odor  of  frankincense  speaks 
Of    dark    mystery    and    gloom,^ — the    pung-sweet    aloe 

breathes  of  doom, — 
There  through  the  dark  I  longed  the  morrow;  At 

Nita's  couch  I  strove  to  borrow 


264        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Life  for  her  and  hope  from  sorrow 
And  the  gloom. 

Low  my  loved  one  lay  and  dying.     Here  I  watched 

and  prayed,  and  sighing 
For  life's  hope,  to  me  denying,  vainly  longed  gross 

Death  to  thwart; 
O,   how  pale  and  sweet  was  lying — "Love,   My  Love, 

We  can  not  part!" 
There  I  dreamed — to  still  the  deep  unsatisfied 

longings  in  my  heart; 
While  without  a  storm  came  dashing, — 
Thunders  rolled  and  fiercely  crashing, 
Lightnings  spring  and  jagged  flashing 
Stir  Heaven's  tears,  the  vault  illume,  tears  for 

Nita   and   her   doom. 
Lo,  the  sultry  atmosphere  bestirred  my  heart,  aroused 

in  fear. 
I  dreamed  and  voiceless  whispers  hear — 
"Now  thy  doom." 

Half  awakened  then  I  ponder,  "What  alchemy 

roused  by  thunder 
Could  such  hideous  noises  conjure,  here  comes  brooding 

in  my  room?" 
Now  my  heart  is  filled  with  terror,  imagining  faces 

in  the  gloom. 
Oh,  the  gloom,  the  gloom,  the  fearful  gloom;  black, 

black  and  scoriae  in  my  room! 
Deep  in  my  heart  it  now  was  sinking, 

While  there  I  sat,  half-dreaming — thinking. 
Thinking  of  my  love  and  linking 
Past  regrets  of  love  and  home — I  hoped  for  love  beyond 

the  tomb. 
Behold  again  the  ghastly  noise,  above  the  thunder's 

howl  did  rise, 
Upon  my  heart  it  quaking  lies. 
Voice  from  the  tomb. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  265 

I  trembling  glanced  at  Nita's  face  and  whispered, 

"Ah,  'twas  Nita's  voice, 
Which,  echoing  soft,  did  now  arise  in  lingering  cadence 

through   the   gloom. 
She  begged  for  water  or  for  nectar; — Sweet  Love — thy 

whisper  in  the  gloom/' 
While  kissed  upon  her  slender  form  the  flickering  candle 

shadows  lume, 
But  her  sweet  lips  were  closed  in  silence, 
Damp  her  brow, — her  earthly  romance 
Closing  now.     The  air  grew  dense 
As  filled  by  incense  from  the  gloom.     A  formless 
censer  in  the  room. 
I    gazed  about  in  blank  despair,  and  sought  for  forms 
high  in  the  air, 
Illumed  by  lightning's  vicious  glare 
Which  spoke  of  doom. 

The  heavy  curtains  fitful  swaying  roused  a  fear,  my 

heart  dismaying; 
Every  wierdsome  sound  betraying  unseemly  visitors 

prowling  near. 
Then  softly,  softly,  stepped  I,  walked  I,  to  the  door 

in  quaking  fear, 
Hoping,  fearing  'gainst  all  hope  that  'twas  but 

'maginings  of  despair. 
Cautiously,  I  oped  the  door 

And  peered  without — the  gloom  t'explore, 
When,  -fiends  beheld  I  on  the  floor! 
A  leering  face  press  through  the  gloom! — push  through 

the  crack  into  my  room! 
I  gasped  in  terror  at  the  sight,  and  pressed  the  door 

in   frantic   fright, — 
Rank,  loathsome  faces  in  the  night 
Hid  by  the  gloom. 

"Ye   Heavens!"   cried   I   in  agony,   "The   fiends!    The 

fiends  from  Tartary ! 
What  means  this  loathsome  augury, — these  fiends, 


266        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

these  imps  at  this  wan  hour? 
Why  mock  my  sorrow  and  reverie,  my  dying  love 

at  this  wan  hour? 
How  dare  they  come,  unsought,  unhid,  and  force 

themselves  in  Nita's  bower?" 
In  frantic  dread  I  pressed  the  door, 

But  at  the  windows, — through  the  floor 
They  glide,  they  press  and  filtering,  pour, 
A  ghastly  stream  of  mist  and  gloom,  assuming  form 

within  my  room ! 
By  fright  I  clung  then  to  the  door,  but  lo — 

it  cleft,  and  fiends  of  yore 
Thrust  me  avaunt  and  screeching  roar, 
"Now  thy  doom!" 

Then  a  mass  of  ghastly  gloom  came  rushing  in  my 

ancient  room : 
Howling  demons,  fiendish  visions,  racked  and 

broken,  Satan  sore ! 
Miserable  visions,  horrible  visions — racked  and 

broken, — Satan  sore  ! 
Troups  of  ghouls,  and  putrid  spirits  fresh  from 

Tartary  cross  my  floor; 
Hideous  corpses  with  lolling  faces, 

Stink  and  rot, — yet  noisome  voices 
Raised  in  shrieking  loud  rejoices. 
Desecrate  my  'witched  room — howl  and  crawl  within 

my  room, 
Calling  forth  this  gruesome  warning  in  a  voice  of 

rage  and  scorning — 
(In  my  heart  deep  it  was  burning) 
"Now  thy  doom!" 

Startled  thus  I  stood  and  staring,  -'"^^ 

moving  never,  breathless  peering, 

"Why  this  ghastly  mass  of  jeering  spirits, 
furious, — Hell's  delight  ? 

Hideous  spirits,  ugly  spirits,  frightful,  devilish — 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  267 

Hell's  delight! 
Why  such  loathsome  midnight  visitors   forced 

unbidden  on  my  sight?" 
Stood  I  trembling  now  in  horror, 
Knowing  not  but  'twas  my  hour, 
And  enwrapped  in  Satan's  power 
Here  entrapped  within  my  room — with  his  demons, 

in  my  room, — 
Howling  forth  their  direful  warning,  while  the  words 

were  in  me  burning 
Surging  forth  and  hot  returning, 
"Now  thy  doom !" 

Circling  'bout  in  rank  confusion,  screeching  yet 

their  wroth  contusion, 
Soon  they  sink  unbidden  on  all  space  within 

my  room; 
Making  hell-hole,  taint  and  corrupt,  all  the  space 

within  my  room; 
Polluting  all, — my  couch  and  table,  scrolls,  and 

memories  all  entomb; 
While  the  fulsome  sulphur  smell 
In  bluish  haze  direct  from  Hell 
Upon  the  uncouth  visitants  fell 
Enwrapping  all  in  Pluto's  gloom, — within  my  heart 

lies  Pluto's  gloom, — 
Entwines  the  words  of  dread  despair  in  circling 

columns  through  the  air, — 
Lit  by  the  lightning's  fitful  glare, 
"Now  thy  doom!" 

Stopping  then  the  furious  beating  of  my  heart 

then  in  me  eating 
Core  of  strength,  and  fiercely  heating  mind  and 

soul  in  brooding   fear, — 
Sapping  all  my  strength  and  mind  in  hopeless, 

frenzied  brooding  fear, — 
Thus  I  spake  with  trembling  shake  to  Pluto's 

form  now  standing  near, — ? 


268        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

*'Sire,  thy  pardon  I  implore, 

If  here  thy  presence  I  endure, 
Pray  thy  business  now  outpour? 
V/hence  away,  and  w^hy  you  come,  with  all  thy 

demons  in  my  room? 
Speak !     O,  ruling  fiend  of  Hades !     Why  this  awful 

throng  of  shades?" 
Then  the  gloomy  answer  made  is — 
"Now  thy  doom!" 

Startled  thus  I  stood  and  staring,  never  moving, 

breathless  peering, 
'Till  I  thought  my  numbed  hearing  played  me  false 

as  had  my  sight, — 
Both  my  mind  and  o'erwrought  hearing  played  me 

false  as  had  my  sight. 
Now  I  doubted — words  I  scouted  as  false  visions 

of  my  fright. 
Still  the  gruesome,  shrieking,  howling, 

Of  the  shades,  who  now  were  growling 
And  like  base  monsters  restless  prowling. 
Gritting  teeth  and  casting  spume  in  restless  tramping 

round  my  room, 
To  the  thunders  which  yet  crashing,  and  without  the 

glare  yet   flashing, 
Echoing  the  fiendish  gnashing, — 
"Now  thy  doom!" 

Soon  the  noise  became  oppressing,  to  my  heart  and 

mind  depressing, 
So  with  fear  I  turn,  expressing  quaking  doubts  at 

this  intrusion. 
Trembling  now  I  stand  repeating  quaking  doubts 

at  this  intrusion. 
Implore  of  Pluto  in  words  of  anguish — "O,  dispel 

this  loud  confusion." 
At  a  beck  and  wave  of  arm. 

Now  every  shade  and  hideous   form 
With  ghostly  grins  around  me  swarm, 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  269 

Breathe  their  rank  and  stinking  fume  from  out  their 

throats  into  my  room, 
LolHng,  grinning,  ghastly  staring,  with  one 

shout — then  closely  leering 
Sudden  silence  greets  my  hearing — 
Like  the  tomb. 

'Gainst  the  wall  then  breathless  standing,  wisting  not 

what  this  portending. 
Silence  broke  I  by  demanding  once  again  of  Pluto 

there. 
Spoke  I  now  with  fear  and  trembling  once  again 

to  Pluto  there, 
While  the  wind  howled  at  my  lattice,  filled  my 

heart  with  dread  despair. 
"Sire"  said  I  with  a  quaver, 

"Though  in  Hell  I'm  no  believer, 

Yet,   perchance,    King   of   Death's   river, 
For  some  quest  to  me,  you  come.     Mayhap,  you 

journey  from  Hell's  gloom 
To  bear  my  Nita  to  your  fell.     But  listen,  she  ne'er 

goes  to  Hell." 
Then  the  answer,  with  a  yell — 
"Now  thy  doom!" 

Once  again  the  brooding  silence  stills  the  specters 

howling  violence, 
And  I  look  with  quick  beguilance  at  the  forms  low 

leering  there, 
Knowing  not  what  hellish  meaning  brooks  the  forms 

low  leering  there. 
Seized  with  lurking  dread  and  fear,  then  bending  low 

in  mute  despair, 
"Sire,  now  thy  pleasure,"  cried  I 
"For  thy  might  I'd  not  deny, 
If  perchance  now  I  must  die, 
Pray — before  I'm  wrapped  in  gloom — avenging 

Fiend — O  ere  my  doom 
Wafts  me  away  from  earthly  day,  one  moment  spare — 


270        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

O  spare  to  me, 
That  I  a  wrong  may  rectify, 
Before  my  doom." 

Low  on  my  knees  I  bent  imploring,  while  without 

the  storm  was  roaring, 
And,  within, — my  fate  deploring, — here  I  beg  for 

Pluto's  grace. 
For  fair  Nita  would  I  live,  so  now  I  beg  for  Huto's 

grace ; 
Aye,  to  live  for  her  alone  and  now  to  protect  her  from 

disgrace. 
Not  a  move  or  motion  made  he. 
Not  a  single  whisper  said  he, 
But  with  gruesome  stare  he  eyed  me. 
Till  my  reason  fought  with  gloom — all  my  mind 

was  filled  with  gloom. 
Then  these  words  of  terror  heard  I,  "Mortal  for  thy 

sins  ye  die, — 
Death  alone  can  satisfy. 
Await  thy  doom!" 

"No,  no,  O,  reigning  King  of  Evil,  be  thou  monster, 

fiend  or  devil, 
Bringing  misery,  death  or  trouble,  yet  a  moment  I 

implore ! 
Thy  name,  O,  tell  me;  and  companions!  Fiend!  the 

reason  I  implore ! — 
Why  woulds't  tear  me  from  Wanita,  whom  the 

fairies  e'en  adore?" 
Slowly  fierce  the  answer  came. 

"Hear  me,  Mortal !  Know  my  name !  Memories, 

Memories,  grief  and  shame ! 
All  thy  sins  new  form  assume;  all  thy  failures, 

in  this  gloom; 
All  ambitions  lost  are  nigh ;  all  thy  passions  now 

espy,  ^ 

And  Nita's  sin,  O  soul,  am  I 
To  fill  thy  doom!" 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  271 

Guilty  now  my  mind  is  thronging  with  wild  thoughts 

of  misspent  longing, 
Here  with  hopes  of  life  prolonging  list  I  now  to 

judgment  word, 
Through  my  memory  now  is  thronging  long-forgotten 

lust  endured. 
Sin  and  passion,  hope  and  longing — Fair  Wanita's 

love  I  lured. 
"Oh,  loved  sin,  of  love  most  dear, 
Wanita's  grail,  dost  thou  appear? 
Then  of  this  hoard  I  have  no  fear ! 
For  on  thy  grave  my  love  would  bloom;  in  thoughts  of 

thee  I  know  no  gloom. 
Ah,  welcome  then — for  sad  her  lot,  my  mistress  once 

yet  near  forgot. 
E'en  when  laid  low  in  Nature's  grot, 
An  echo's  doom." 


"Aye,  rash  deceiver,  she  lay  dying,  while  thou  for 

lustful  pleasures  sighing 
Refused  love's  hope,  e'en  grace  denying,  thy  troth  in 

bonds  didst  never  tie. 
Didst  never  wed  thy  loved  one,  Nita,  nor  lover's 

bond  didst  ever  tie. 
Now,  for  thy  faithlessness  to  pure  one, — aye,   for 
baser  sins  now  dieT 
With  a  fiendish  shriek  dismaying, 
All  the  shades  around  me  swaying 
In  grinning  circles,  there  arraying, 
Gibbering,  howling  round  my  room,  clamoring,  calling 

for  my  doom ; 
While  I  in  breathless  agony,  preferred  my  death  than 

memory, — 
Merciful  Father!     I  longed  to  fly 
To  my  doom. 

"Away,  away,  ambition's  Fiend!    Regretful  longings 
get  thee  behind! 


272        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Remorse  and  shame,  O,  be  thou  kind,  and  misspent 

Hours  appear  no  more ! 
Idle  thoughts  and  lustful  passions,  vain  desires 

I'd  know  no  more ! 
Of  Lethe  I'll  drink,  of  Nita  think  and  slowly  sink 

to  Aides'  shore!" 
Upon  my  bended  knees  then  praying. 

Oblivion's  stream  would  I  be  spraying, 
Regretful  memories  allaying, 
Fain  would  I  now  to  death  succumb,  and 

sacrifice  Greek  hecatomb — 
Could  I  with  Nita  fair  but  roam;  upon  her  bosom 

make  my  home. 
And  ever  loving,  through  her  tomb, 
Seek  my  doom. 

Then  cried  the  reigning  Fiend  from  Hell,  *lf  this 

thy  plea,  then  all  be  well. 
From  now  to  hence  until  the  knell  of  God's  eternal 

judgment  day, 
Until  thy  flaming  mind  shall  burn  thy  sorrow's 

sin  on  judgment  day. 
Shall  vain  regrets  and  memories  bestrew  thy  path 

eternally. 
These  shades,  thy  sins,  shall  follow  thee; 
Nor  e'er  forget,  nor  fancy  free, 

Nor  longing  washed  from  memory. 
This,  mortal,  then  shall  be  thy  doom,  we  thy 

companions  in  thy  room. 
No  vain  regrets  shall  shape  thy  course. 

Nor  thoughts  of  Nita  with  remorse, 
Nor  tears  of  sorrow  ease  the  force 
Of  thy  doom!" 

In  furious  glee  they  loll  around,  these  ghastly 

ghosts  from  underground, 
Demonic  cries,  then  loud  resound,  as  gleefully  my 

room   they're   wronging, 
And  past  regrets  and  vain  repining  surge  through 

my   room — my   memory  thronging. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  273 

My  heart  is  filled  with  vain  repining — repining 

hope — Wanita's  longing. 
And  still  those  spectre  forms  are  sitting, 
Sitting,   flitting,   still  emitting 

Shrieks  and  groans, — alas,  the  beating 
Of  the  rain  'gainst  Nita's  tomb  echoes  dismal 

through  all  my  room, 
Calling   forth  this  gruesome  warning    (but  now  I 

love  these  sounds  with  yearning), 
From  darkest  night  until  grey  morning — 
"This  thy  doom!" 


GRADUATION  ODE 

A  ryhmed  address  to  the  college  class  of  1901. 

Sluggish  this  pen,  and  dull  this  mind, 

To  carve  such  words  of  burning,  livid  fire 

As  rouse  the  over-anxious,  eager  soul 

Of  ardent  youth,  from  languorous  earth's  desire, 

And  lead  this  broadening  life  from  high  to  higher, 

Until  all  baser  dross  is  cast  behind, 

Like  misspent  longings  faintly  brushed  away 

For  brighter  thoughts  of  Nature's  holier  day, 

In  noble  God- wrapt  striving  for  the  goal. 

Life  is  doing.     The  golden  hours  are  crowding  past, 

Each  with  its  diamond  moment  in  its  train; 

Nor  fate,  nor  prayer,  nor  man,  nor  God, 

Can  halt  the  throng,  or  call  them  back  again. 

A  wrong  is  done,  'tis  done  for  aye, 

Nor  bitter  wailings,  tears,  nor  vain  regrets 

Can  stop  the  pain  that  stings  full  deep  and  fast 

Until  the  dawning  of  the  everlasting  day. 

No  deed  is  lost.     The  past  is  dead, 

And  mouldering  in  the  grave  of  long-forgotten  years; 

But  yet,  like  mural  monuments  up-builded  high. 

Or  like  the  granite  needle — pointing  towards  the  sky 

For  thousand  years  in  ancient  Thothmes'  land. 

And  then  transported  far  to  unknown  climes 

On  living  ships,  and  set  with  alien  kind — 

Still  biding  its  mission  to  the  modern  mind, 

So  thoughts  will  live,  and  lingering  in  the  night, 

Point  other  struggHng  thinkers  towards  the  light. 

274 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  275 

And  what  if  dismal  gloom  o'ershadow  all? 

The  home  is  lost ;  a  voice  is  gone ; 

A  song  is  stilled  upon  a  loved  one's  lips,, 

Or  heart  can  joy  no  more  in  golden  dawn, 

For  from  the  sombre  bier  you  lift  the  pall. 

And  press  an  aching  cheek  against  a  marble  face? 

A  heart  is  numb ;  and  oh !  the  dreary,  desolate  void 

That  follows  as  you  grieve  from  place  to  place 

Unsoothed,  uncomf orted,  alone :  a  sad 

And  melancholy  exile  from  the  sound  of  joy: — 

While  all  around  you,  wealth  of  life  expands 

And  Nature  spreads  her  silver  threads  abroad 

To  ravish  e'en  the  poorest  outcast  slave 

And  make  him  better,  then,  to  bear  his  load? 

Those  joyous  trills  of  liquid  music  swell 

Not  from  yon  tiny  throats  to  mock  your  loss; 

Nor  beats  the  golden  sun  with  fervid  ray 

Upon  your  low  thatched  roof,  ruthless  to  wave 

A  brighter  glory  o'er  your  head,  and  cause  the  gloom 

To  pall  more  dark  and  sombre  in  your  room; 

But  rather,  with  the  love  of  nature  full. 

To  warm  the  chilled  heart  into  new  power; 

To  brighten  every  sad  and  sobbing  hour. 

And  fill  the  soul  with  tender  music,  sweet  and  low, 

That  e'en  gray  dolour  takes  a  soft  ethereal  glow 

Which  makes  you  nobler,  purer,  and  content 

To  bear  the  sorrows  which  are  heaven-sent. 

I  cannot  but  be  saddened  at  the  thought 

Of  coming  age — the  death  of  hope.     The  deep 

And  awful  longings  that  arise 

Within  my  breast,  and  bear  me  to  the  skies 

Of  great  desire  and  high  ambition — bought 

By  the  hard  endeaver,  toiling  while  the  sleep 

Of  lust  and  sordid  fear  hangs  on  the  brow 

Of  cowering  kern — shall  all  soon  end 

In  dust.     The  grovelling  clod  with  grime  overwrought 

Shall  drop  his  hoe  and  sink  again  into  the  clod ; 

The  flowers  shall  scent  the  woodland  air,  and  die, 


276        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

And  e'en  the  mightv'  oaks  spread  out  their  arms 

That  stayed  the  storms  of  centuries, 

And  moulder  low  again  into  the  green, 

Soft  sward,  like  fading  lights  across  a  mo\'ing  screen. 

Yet  shall  man  live!     No  cringing  brute 

Can  lift  his  vision  to  the  vault  above 

And  know  the  deity  of  self.     Xo  being 

Can  tread  the  trembling  earth  with  mightv^  foot. 

And,  filled  with  the  knowledge  of  the  love 

That  rules  the  season's  ampler  gro^siii. 

Rise  above  the  baser  elements  of  earth. 

Unless  it  be  a  soul  with  deit>'  imbued; 

A  higher  Hfe  with  broader,  nobler  girth 

Than  grubbing  swine  and  slimy  things  that  blight; 

E'en  though  the  evil  triumph  in  the  night. 

The  melting  sun  of  faith  will  drive  away 

The  reeking  horde;  and  swords  of  Day, 

With  edges  whet  by  love  for  truth. 

Will  high  upraise  the  bulwark  of  the  throne 

That  ne'er  shall  fall — ^the  throne  of  soul. 

Of  life  ennobled  by  high  sacrifice. 

Then  shall  that  roaring  lion  of  Albion's  lands 
Crawl  cowering  to  his  distant  gloomy  den. 
While  o'er  and  round  his  bone-bescattered  lair 
The  skeletons  of  murdered  hopes  shall  be 
Re-camated.  and  rise  full-free  eternally. 
And  e'en  yon  dastard  eagle's  \-ulture  flight. 
That  strong-winged  bird  of  many  notions. 
Shall  halt  before  the  wings  of  coming  peace. 
Fors:et  to  drown  its  low-browed  children's  moan 
With  fiercer  clangings  of  its  wilder  might 
In  mock-pretence  to  guard  their  unfledged  flight. 
And  sinking  slowly,  satiate  with  war. 
Shall  view  the  child-men  reign  for  evermore. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  277 

Truth  may  e'er  be  crushed  and  broken 
By  the  wiles  of  mighty  wrong; 
Noble  deeds  full  oft  are  twisted 
Like  the  gnarles  upon  the  oak, 
And  are  clothed  in  blackest  visage 
By  the  envious  Norse-fiend,  Loke ; 
Yet  that  truth  will  soon  be  spoken 
In  the  hallowed  realm  of  song, 
And  that  deed  at  last  will  quicken 
In  the  breast  of  heroes  strong. 
Though,  if  weak  the  trembling  worker. 
Yet  with  noble  aims  imbued, 
Still  remember:  tiny  acorn 
Seeds  may  rise  to  do  great  good. 
All  great  deeds  had  small  beginnings; 
All  great  men  were  once  mere  babes ; 
And  through  fire,  or  careful  winnings 
They  attained  their  treasure-glebes. 
So  thou,  too,  may  rise  to  greatness, 
And  by  laboring  through  the  night, 
Strike  the  rusted  chains  from  custom, 
Raise  the  world  to  nobler  height. 
Ne'er  distracted,  ne'er  despairing. 
Pressing  forward  toward  the  goal, 
Fear  to  do  no  deed  of  daring. 
Rather  fear  to  chain  the  soul. 

II 

Youth  is  hope.     Its  optimistic  breath 

Of  visioned  centuries  disturbs  the  brows 

That  grovel  in  the  dim,  archaic  gloom 

In  vain  endeavor  to  out-skill  grim  death 

By  mystic  compounds  drawn  from  Mimer's  spring. 

And  live  a  Faust,  forgetting  that  the  doom 

Of  earth  is  on  the  Pater  at  his  vows, 

The  saint  who  shrives  the  guilty  thief. 

The  mother  tender,  with  her  first-born  child. 

And  every  being  thrown  from  out  the  womb ; 


278         STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

While  youth,  with  glowing  eyes  of  prophecy, 

O'ertums  the  dismal  past,  and  in  the  wild 

And  frantic  turmoil  grapples  with  the  law 

That  makes  the  lower  mortal  more  divine, 

Upbuilding  high  the  cosmos  of  the  soul 

That  never  dies.     He  feels  the  sudden  sting 

Of  dissolution,  not  the  bier  of  grief 

\A'here  conqueror  worms   spread  wide  the  grave's  dark 

jaw, 
But,  as  the  dim  and  echoing  past  has  rolled 
Its  ponderous  years  into  the  chaos  of  a  dream, 
Upraising  man  unto  a  high  estate, 
So  shall  the  whirling  cycles  of  the  years, 
Like  might}-  suns  reflecting  thrice  the  gleam 
Of  some  mysterious  central  deity, 
Again  dispel  the  exiled  Adam's  tears, 
Who  struggles  vainly  'gainst  his  sterner  fate. 
And  lift  him  up,  disrobed  of  fleshy  clay. 
Into  the  dazzling  glow  of  heaven's  deathless  day. 
Youth  knows  no  bounds,  for  in  his  eager  mind 
He  flies  the  pathless  sea  and  leaves  all  fear  behind ; 
Lord  of  the  past,  with  future  undismayed, 
The  ver\'  elements  bow  in  fierce  and  tremulous  hate, 
Yet  dare  not  disobe}^  his  calm  but  stem  mandate ; 
While  from  the  hollow  skies  he  tears  the  clouds, 
And  culls  the  growling  thunders  from  the  air, 
And  with  all  these,  a  Jove,  he  comes  arrayed ; 
His  life  inherits  all  that  life  could  dare. 

Then  brave  the  future  with  as  stern  a  front 

As  ever  rock-ribbed  fortress  glowered  toward  the  sea. 

Look  not  in  yon  red  clouds  for  guerdon  won, 

Nor  dream  fantastic  glories  in  thy  impassioned  brain; 

For  thee  thy  battle  has  but  now  begun. 

The  strife  must  end  in  death,  or  victory. 

So  stand  upon  the  deep  and  dark  abyss 

One  faltering  moment,  then  with  calm  and  pious  trust, 

Launch  out  to  wing  the  far  unfathomed  blue, 

And  wield  the  scimitar  bravely  for  the  just; 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  279 

Plunge  into  a  broad  and  higher  sphere 
A  fiercer  strife  of  knowledge  then  to  wage, 
And  jeopardize  full  all  that  thou  holdest  dear 
To  achieve  the  nobler  purpose  of  thy  age. 
Ope  thou  the  tomes  of  life  and  read  the  page 
That  spreads  its  mystic  signs  before  thy  eye, 
Like  hieroglyphics  from  that  mystic,  ancient  race 
Long-dimmed  by  time,  who  knew  of  things  we  fear, 
For  there,  inscribed  in  symbols  half  divine. 
Yet  half  of  earth  and  therefore  incomplete. 
Are  writ  the  deeds  of  heroes  of  all  time^ — 
Though  some  bold  Hectors  are  to  fame  delete, 
And  wrinkled  Echoes  in  the  corridors  of  fame 
Have  long  forgotten  many  a  Plato's  name. 

Ponder  well  these  musty,  age-dimmed  tomes, 

And  note  that  he  is  not  the  greatest  lord 

Who  carves  his  brothers  with  his  screaming  sword. 

But  he  who  with  eternal  faith  sublime 

Will  live  unknown,  except  by  deed  and  word 

To  rouse  the  unborn  to  the  true  ideal 

Of  noble  truth  and  blessed  manhood's  prod. 

Let  Alexander  break  his  murderous  blade, 

And  to  his  books  a  peaceful  savant  go ; 

And  let  the  tired,  o'er  worked,  plodding  jade 

Lift  high  his  eyes  to  heaven,  that  he  may  grow 

Full  fleet  like  Him  on  whom  the  storm 

From  out  foul  Judas'  guilty  Temples  blow, 

And  be  a  man — a  brother  to  his  God. 

The  world  sweeps  on,  and  progress  is  the  sound 

That  raises  heaven-wrought  temples  from  the  ground. 

Mighty  questions  must  be  solved; 

Doughty  deeds  must  yet  be  done ; 

Empires  builded;  thoughts  expounded; 

Glorious  victories  to  be  won. 

New  occasions  bring  new  masters; 

Leaders  rise  from  out  the  throng, 

Like  the  Davids  of  disasters, 


28o        STARDUST  AND  DANDELIONS 

Created  by  the  breath  of  song. 
Only  he  who  is  prepared 
Can  become  the  peoples'  king; 
Of  him  alone  who  has  bestirred 
Will  the  future  centuries  sing. 
Grasp  the  scepter  ere  it  pass  thee 
Like  a  bridegroom  in  the  night ; 
Ever  watchful  stand,  and  fearless 
Strike  for  freedom  and  for  right. 
We  have  great  men  all  around  us, 
Though  the  times  are  not  so  pall 
As  to  dim  the  lesser  actors,  and 
Cast  their  shadows  on  the  wall. 

Be  prepared  for  each  new  moment, 
That  it  sees  thy  task  well  done; 
Let  the  next  ne'er  find  thee  idle ; 
Let  it  see  a  new  begun. 
So  through  life  with  steady  plodding 
Let  thy  peace  be  on  thy  brow ; 
Let  no  evil  cross  thy  labor 
But  the  highest  be  thy  vow; 
Till  at  last  thy  lagging  footsteps 
Halt  beneath  the  low  thatched  roof ; 
And  the  Weaver  of  Life's  Tapestry, 
Gathering  up  the  warp  and  woof, 
Thanks  thee  with  praise  full  measure, 
Lights  thee  onward  with  its  beams; 
Then  on  couch  of  well- won  leisure 
Lie  thee  down  to  peaceful  dreams. 


MEDITATIVE  POEMS  281 


L'ENVOI 

Dear  Reader,  think  not  I  give  this  verse 
To  make  you  smile,  or  weep,  or  frown; 
Nor  ask  for  you  to  call  the  hearse, 
Nor  have  you  nail  the  cover  down; 
If  you  have  read  this,  then  enough 
Of  pain  have  I  inflicted  on  ye. 
For  I  can't  help  but  write  the  stuff. 
So  save  your  blows  and  grin  upon  me. 


THE  END