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Title: The Book of Humorous Verse
Author: Various
Editor: Carolyn Wells
Release Date: December 22, 2007 [eBook #23972]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOOK OF HUMOROUS VERSE***
Compiled by
CAROLYN WELLS
Author of "Such Nonsense,"
"The Whimsey Anthology,"
etc., etc.
NEW YORK
GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
[Pg iv]
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TO
ROBERT CHAPMAN SPRAGUE
[Pg v]
A hope of immortality and a sense of humor distinguish man from the beasts of the field.
A single exception may be made, perhaps, of the Laughing Hyena, and, on the other hand, not every one of the human race possesses the power of laughter. For those who do, this volume is intended.
And since there can be nothing humorous about an introduction, there can be small need of a lengthy one.
Merely a few explanations of conditions which may be censured by captious critics.
First, the limitations of space had to be recognized. Hence, the book is a compilation, not a collection. It is representative, but not exhaustive. My ambition was toward a volume to which everyone could go, with a surety of finding any one of his favorite humorous poems between these covers. But no covers of one book could insure that, so I reluctantly gave up the dream for a reality which I trust will make it possible for a majority of seekers to find their favorites here.
The compiler's course is a difficult one. The Scylla of Popularity lures him on the one hand, while the Charybdis of the Classical charms him on the other. He has nothing to steer by but his own good taste, and good taste, alack, is greatly a matter of opinion.
And no opinion seemeth good unto an honest compiler, save his own. Wherefore, the choice of these selections, like kissing, went by favor. As to the arrangement of them, every compiler will tell you that Classification is Vexation. And why not? When many a poem may be both Parody and Satire,—both Romance and Cynicism. Wherefore, the compiler sorted with loving care the selections here presented striving to do justice to the verses themselves, and taking a chance on the tolerant good nature of the reader. [Pg vi]
For,
"A jest's prosperity lies in the ear Of him that hears it. Never in the tongue Of him that makes it."
Which made me all the more careful to do my authors justice, leaving the prosperity of the jests to the hearers.
Carolyn Wells.
[Pg vii]
The compiler is indebted to the publisher or author, as noted below, for the use of copyright material included in this volume. Special arrangements have been made with the authorized publishers of those American poets, whose works in whole or in part have lapsed copyright. All rights of these poems have been reserved by the authorized publisher, author or holder of the copyright as indicated in the following:
Little, Brown & Company: For selections from the Poems and Limericks of Edward Lear.
The Macmillan Company: For selections from the Poems of Lewis Carroll and Verses from "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" and "Through the Looking Glass."
Harr Wagner Publishing Company: For permission to reprint from "The Complete Poems" of Joaquin Miller "That Gentle Man From Boston Town," "That Texan Cattle Man," "William Brown of Oregon."
Frederick A. Stokes Company: "Bessie Brown, M.D." and "A Kiss in the Rain," by Samuel Minturn Peck.
Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Company: For the inclusion of the following Poems by Sam Walter Foss: "The Meeting of the Clabberhuses," "A Philosopher" and "The Prayer of Cyrus Brown" from "Dreams in Homespun," copyright, 1897. "Then Agin—" and "Husband and Heathen," from "Back Country Poems," copyright, 1894. "The Ideal Husband to His Wife," from "Whiffs from Wild Meadows," copyright, 1895.
Forbes & Company: "How Often?" "If I Should Die To-night," and "The Pessimist," by Ben King.
The Century Company: For permission to reprint from St. Nicholas Magazine the following poems by Ruth McEnery Stuart: "The Endless Song" and "The Hen-Roost Man"; and by Tudor Jenks: "An Old Bachelor"; and by Mary [Pg viii] Mapes Dodge: "Home and Mother," "Life in Laconics," "Over the Way" and "The Zealless Xylographer."
Thomas L. Masson: For permission to reprint "The Kiss" from "Life."
E. P. Button & Company: "The Converted Cannibals" and "The Retired Pork-Butcher and the Spook," by G. E. Farrow.
Houghton Mifflin Company: With their permission and by special arrangement, as authorized publishers of the following authors' works, are used: Selections from Nora Perry, John Townsend Trowbridge, Charles E. Carryl, Oliver Wendell Holmes, John Greenleaf Whittier, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Bret Harte, James Thomas Fields, John G. Saxe, James Russell Lowell and Bayard Taylor.
A. P. Watt & Son and Doubleday, Page & Company: For their permission to use "Divided Destinies," "Study of an Elevation, in Indian Ink," and "Commonplaces," by Rudyard Kipling.
G. P. Putnam's Sons: Selections from the Poems of Eugene Fitch Ware and "The Wreck of the 'Julie Plante,'" by William Henry Drummond.
Henry Holt & Company: Two Parodies from "— and Other Poets," by Louis Untermeyer.
Dodd, Mead & Company: "The Constant Cannibal Maiden," "Blow Me Eyes" and "A Grain of Salt," by Wallace Irwin.
John Lane Company: For Poems by Owen Seaman, Anthony C. Deane and G. K. Chesterton.
The Smart Set: "Dighton is Engaged," and "Kitty Wants to Write," by Gelett Burgess.
Small, Maynard & Company: For selections from Holman F. Day, Richard Hovey and Clinton Scollard.
The Bobbs-Merrill Company: For special permission to reprint from the Biographical Edition of the Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley (copyright, 1913) the following Poems: "Little Orphant Annie," "The Lugubrious Whing-Whang," "The Man in the Moon," "The Old Man and Jim," "Prior to Miss Belle's Appearance," "Spirk Throll-Derisive," "When the Frost is on the Punkin."
The Bobbs-Merrill Company: For permission to use the [Pg ix] following Poems by Robert J. Burdette, from "Smiles Yoked with Sighs" (copyright, 1900), "Orphan Born," "The Romance of the Carpet," "Soldier, Rest!", "Songs without Words," "What Will We Do?".
Charles Scribner's Sons: For permission to use "The Dinkey-Bird," "Dutch Lullaby," "The Little Peach," "The Truth About Horace," by Eugene Field. [Pg x]
I: BANTER | page | ||
The Played-Out Humorist | W. S. Gilbert | 25 | |
The Practical Joker | W. S. Gilbert | 26 | |
To Phœbe | W. S. Gilbert | 28 | |
Malbrouck | Father Prout | 29 | |
Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream | Oliver Herford | 30 | |
From a Full Heart | A. A. Milne | 31 | |
The Ultimate Joy | Unknown | 32 | |
Old Fashioned Fun | W. M. Thackeray | 33 | |
When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas | W. M. Thackeray | 34 | |
When the Frost is on the Punkin | James Whitcomb Riley | 34 | |
Two Men | Edwin Arlington Robinson | 35 | |
A Familiar Letter to Several Correspondents | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 36 | |
The Height of the Ridiculous | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 38 | |
Shake, Mulleary and Go-ethe | H. C. Bunner | 40 | |
A Rondelay | Peter A. Motteux | 41 | |
Winter Dusk | R. K. Munkittrick | 42 | |
Comic Miseries | John G. Saxe | 42 | |
Early Rising | John G. Saxe | 44 | |
To the Pliocene Skull | Bret Harte | 46 | |
Ode to Work in Springtime | Thomas R. Ybarra | 47 | |
Old Stuff | Bert Leston Taylor | 48 | |
To Minerva | Thomas Hood | 49 | |
The Legend of Heinz Von Stein | Charles Godfrey Leland | 49 | |
The Truth About Horace | Eugene Field | 50 | |
Propinquity Needed | Charles Battell Loomis | 51 | |
In the Catacombs | Harlan Hoge Ballard | 52 | |
Our Native Birds | Nathan Haskell Dole | 53 | |
The Prayer of Cyrus Brown | Sam Walter Foss | 54 | |
Erring in Company | Franklin P. Adams | 55 | |
Cupid | William Blake | 56 | |
If We Didn't Have to Eat | Nixon Waterman | 57 | |
To My Empty Purse | Geoffrey Chaucer | 58 | |
The Birth of Saint Patrick | Samuel Lover | 58 | |
Her Little Feet | William Ernest Henley | 59 | |
School | James Kenneth Stephen | 60 | |
The Millennium | James Kenneth Stephen | 60 | |
"Exactly So" | Lady T. Hastings | 61 | |
Companions | Charles Stuart Calverley | 63 | |
The Schoolmaster | Charles Stuart Calverley | 64 | |
A Appeal for Are to the Sextant of the old Brick Meetinouse | Arabella Willson | 66 | |
Cupid's Darts | Unknown | 67 | |
A Plea for Trigamy | Owen Seaman | 68 | |
The Pope | Charles Lever | 70 | |
All at Sea | Frederick Moxon | 70 | |
Ballad of the Primitive Jest | Andrew Lang | 72 | |
Villanelle of Things Amusing | Gelett Burgess | 73 | |
How to Eat Watermelons | Frank Libby Stanton | 73 | |
A Vague Story | Walter Parke | 74 | |
His Mother-in-Law | Walter Parke | 75 | |
On a Deaf Housekeeper | Unknown | 76 | [Pg xi] |
Homœopathic Soup | Unknown | 76 | |
Some Little Bug | Roy Atwell | 77 | |
On the Downtown Side of an Uptown Street | William Johnston | 79 | |
Written After Swimming from Sestos to Abydos | Lord Byron | 80 | |
The Fisherman's Chant | F. C. Burnand | 81 | |
Report of an Adjudged Case | William Cowper | 82 | |
Prehistoric Smith | David Law Proudfit | 83 | |
Song | George Canning | 84 | |
Lying | Thomas Moore | 86 | |
Strictly Germ-Proof | Arthur Guiterman | 87 | |
The Lay of the Lover's Friend | William B. Aytoun | 88 | |
Man's Place in Nature | Unknown | 89 | |
The New Version | W. J. Lampton | 90 | |
Amazing Facts About Food | Unknown | 91 | |
Transcendentalism | Unknown | 92 | |
A "Caudal" Lecture | William Sawyer | 92 | |
Salad | Sydney Smith | 93 | |
Nemesis | J. W. Foley | 94 | |
"Mona Lisa" | John Kendrick Bangs | 95 | |
The Siege of Djklxprwbz | Eugene Fitch Ware | 96 | |
Rural Bliss | Anthony C. Deane | 97 | |
An Old Bachelor | Tudor Jenks | 98 | |
Song | J. R. Planché | 99 | |
The Quest of the Purple Cow | Hilda Johnson | 100 | |
St. Patrick of Ireland, My Dear! | William Maginn | 101 | |
The Irish Schoolmaster | James A. Sidey | 103 | |
Reflections on Cleopathera's Needle | Cormac O'Leary | 105 | |
The Origin of Ireland | Unknown | 106 | |
As to the Weather | Unknown | 107 | |
The Twins | Henry S. Leigh | 108 | |
II: THE ETERNAL FEMININE | |||
He and She | Eugene Fitch Ware | 109 | |
The Kiss | Tom Masson | 109 | |
The Courtin' | James Russell Lowell | 110 | |
Hiram Hover | Bayard Taylor | 113 | |
Blow Me Eyes! | Wallace Irwin | 115 | |
First Love | Charles Stuart Calverley | 116 | |
What Is a Woman Like? | Unknown | 118 | |
Mis' Smith | Albert Bigelow Paine | 119 | |
Triolet | Paul T. Gilbert | 120 | |
Bessie Brown, M.D. | Samuel Minturn Peck | 120 | |
A Sketch from the Life | Arthur Guiterman | 121 | |
Minguillo's Kiss | Unknown | 122 | |
A Kiss in the Rain | Samuel Minturn Peck | 123 | |
The Love-Knot | Nora Perry | 124 | |
Over the Way | Mary Mapes Dodge | 125 | |
Chorus of Women | Aristophanes | 126 | |
The Widow Malone | Charles Lever | 126 | |
The Smack in School | William Pitt Palmer | 128 | |
'Späcially Jim | Bessie Morgan | 129 | |
Kitty of Coleraine | Edward Lysaght | 130 | |
Why Don't the Men Propose? | Thomas Haynes Bayly | 130 | |
A Pin | Ella Wheeler Wilcox | 132 | |
The Whistler | Unknown | 133 | |
The Cloud | Oliver Herford | 134 | |
Constancy | John Boyle O'Reilly | 137 | |
Ain't it Awful, Mabel? | John Edward Hazzard | 137 | |
Wing Tee Wee | J. P. Denison | 139 | [Pg xii] |
Phyllis Lee | Oliver Herford | 139 | |
The Sorrows of Werther | W. M. Thackeray | 140 | |
The Unattainable | Harry Romaine | 141 | |
Rory O'More; or, Good Omens | Samuel Lover | 141 | |
A Dialogue from Plato | Austin Dobson | 142 | |
Dora Versus Rose | Austin Dobson | 144 | |
Tu Quoque | Austin Dobson | 146 | |
Nothing to Wear | William Allen Butler | 148 | |
My Mistress's Boots | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 153 | |
Mrs. Smith | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 155 | |
A Terrible Infant | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 156 | |
Susan | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 157 | |
"I Didn't Like Him" | Harry B. Smith | 157 | |
My Angeline | Harry B. Smith | 158 | |
Nora's Vow | Sir Walter Scott | 159 | |
Husband and Heathen | Sam Walter Foss | 160 | |
The Lost Pleiad | Arthur Reed Ropes | 161 | |
The New Church Organ | Will Carleton | 162 | |
Larrie O'Dee | William W. Fink | 165 | |
No Fault in Women | Robert Herrick | 166 | |
A Cosmopolitan Woman | Unknown | 167 | |
Courting in Kentucky | Florence E. Pratt | 168 | |
Any One Will Do | Unknown | 169 | |
A Bird in the Hand | Frederic E. Weatherly | 170 | |
The Belle of the Ball | Winthrop Mackworth Praed | 171 | |
The Retort | George Pope Morris | 174 | |
Behave Yoursel' Before Folk | Alexander Rodger | 174 | |
The Chronicle: A Ballad | Abraham Cowley | 176 | |
Buxom Joan | William Congreve | 179 | |
Oh, My Geraldine | F. C. Burnand | 180 | |
The Parterre | E. H. Palmer | 180 | |
How to Ask and Have | Samuel Lover | 181 | |
Sally in Our Alley | Henry Carey | 182 | |
False Love and True Logic | Laman Blanchard | 183 | |
Pet's Punishment | J. Ashby-Sterry | 184 | |
Ad Chloen, M.A. | Mortimer Collins | 184 | |
Chloe, M.A. | Mortimer Collins | 185 | |
The Fair Millinger | Fred W. Loring | 186 | |
Two Fishers | Unknown | 188 | |
Maud | Henry S. Leigh | 188 | |
Are Women Fair? | Francis Davison | 189 | |
The Plaidie | Charles Sibley | 190 | |
Feminine Arithmetic | Charles Graham Halpine | 191 | |
Lord Guy | George F. Warren | 191 | |
Sary "Fixes Up" Things | Albert Bigelow Paine | 192 | |
The Constant Cannibal Maiden | Wallace Irwin | 194 | |
Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles | Frances M. Whitcher | 195 | |
Under the Mistletoe | George Francis Shults | 196 | |
The Broken Pitcher | William E. Aytoun | 196 | |
Gifts Returned | Walter Savage Landor | 198 | |
III: LOVE AND COURTSHIP | |||
Noureddin, the Son of the Shah | Clinton Scollard | 199 | |
The Usual Way | Frederic E. Weatherly | 200 | |
The Way to Arcady | H. C. Bunner | 201 | |
My Love and My Heart | Henry S. Leigh | 204 | |
Quite by Chance | Frederick Langbridge | 205 | |
The Nun | Leigh Hunt | 206 | |
The Chemist to His Love | Unknown | 206 | |
Categorical Courtship | Unknown | 207 | |
Lanty Leary | Samuel Lover | 208 | [Pg xiii] |
The Secret Combination | Ellis Parker Butler | 209 | |
Forty Years After | H. H. Porter | 210 | |
Cupid | Ben Jonson | 211 | |
Paring-Time Anticipated | William Cowper | 212 | |
Why | H. P. Stevens | 214 | |
The Sabine Farmer's Serenade | Father Prout | 214 | |
I Hae Laid a Herring in Saut | James Tytler | 216 | |
The Clown's Courtship | Unknown | 217 | |
Out Upon It | Sir John Suckling | 218 | |
Love is Like a Dizziness | James Hogg | 218 | |
The Kitchen Clock | John Vance Cheney | 220 | |
Lady Mine | H. E. Clarke | 221 | |
Ballade of the Golfer in Love | Clinton Scollard | 222 | |
Ballade of Forgotten Loves | Arthur Grissom | 223 | |
IV: SATIRE | |||
A Ballade of Suicide | G. K. Chesterton | 224 | |
Finnigan to Flannigan | S. W. Gillinan | 225 | |
Study of an Elevation in Indian Ink | Rudyard Kipling | 226 | |
The V-a-s-e | James Jeffrey Roche | 227 | |
Miniver Cheevy | Edwin Arlington Robinson | 229 | |
The Recruit | Robert W. Chambers | 230 | |
Officer Brady | Robert W. Chambers | 232 | |
Post-Impressionism | Bert Leston Taylor | 235 | |
To the Portrait of "A Gentleman" | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 236 | |
Cacoethes Scribendi | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 238 | |
Contentment | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 238 | |
A Boston Lullaby | James Jeffrey Roche | 240 | |
A Grain of Salt | Wallace Irwin | 241 | |
Song | Richard Lovelace | 241 | |
A Philosopher | Sam Walter Foss | 242 | |
The Meeting of the Clabberhuses | Sam Walter Foss | 244 | |
The Ideal Husband to His Wife | Sam Walter Foss | 246 | |
Distichs | John Hay | 247 | |
The Hen-roost Man | Ruth McEnery Stuart | 247 | |
If They Meant All They Say | Alice Duer Miller | 247 | |
The Man | Stephen Crane | 248 | |
A Thought | James Kenneth Stephen | 248 | |
The Musical Ass | Tomaso de Yriarte | 249 | |
The Knife-Grinder | George Canning | 249 | |
St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fishes | Abraham á Sancta-Clara | 251 | |
The Battle of Blenheim | Robert Southey | 252 | |
The Three Black Crows | John Byrom | 254 | |
To the Terrestrial Globe | W. S. Gilbert | 256 | |
Etiquette | W. S. Gilbert | 256 | |
A Modest Wit | Selleck Osborn | 260 | |
The Latest Decalogue | Arthur Hugh Clough | 261 | |
A Simile | Matthew Prior | 262 | |
By Parcels Post | George R. Sims | 262 | |
All's Well That Ends Well | Unknown | 264 | |
The Contrast | Captain C. Morris | 265 | |
The Devonshire Lane | John Marriott | 266 | |
A Splendid Fellow | H. C. Dodge | 267 | |
If | H. C. Dodge | 268 | |
Accepted and Will Appear | Parmenas Mix | 268 | |
The Little Vagabond | William Blake | 269 | |
Sympathy | Reginald Heber | 270 | |
The Religion of Hudibras | Samuel Butler | 271 | |
Holy Willie's Prayer | Robert Burns | 272 | |
The Learned Negro | Unknown | 274 | |
True to Poll | F. C. Burnand | 275 | [Pg xiv] |
Trust in Women | Unknown | 276 | |
The Literary Lady | Richard Brinsley Sheridan | 278 | |
Twelve Articles | Dean Swift | 279 | |
All-Saints | Edmund Yates | 280 | |
How to Make a Man of Consequence | Mark Lemon | 280 | |
On a Magazine Sonnet | Russell Hilliard Loines | 281 | |
Paradise | George Birdseye | 281 | |
The Friar of Orders Gray | John O'Keefe | 282 | |
Of a Certain Man | Sir John Harrington | 282 | |
Clean Clara | W. B. Rands | 283 | |
Christmas Chimes | Unknown | 284 | |
The Ruling Passion | Alexander Pope | 285 | |
The Pope and the Net | Robert Browning | 286 | |
The Actor | John Wolcot | 287 | |
The Lost Spectacles | Unknown | 287 | |
That Texan Cattle Man | Joaquin Miller | 288 | |
Fable | Ralph Waldo Emerson | 290 | |
Hoch! Der Kaiser | Rodney Blake | 291 | |
What Mr. Robinson Thinks | James Russell Lowell | 292 | |
The Candidate's Creed | James Russell Lowell | 294 | |
The Razor Seller | John Wolcot | 297 | |
The Devil's Walk on Earth | Robert Southey | 298 | |
Father Molloy | Samuel Lover | 307 | |
The Owl-Critic | James Thomas Fields | 309 | |
What Will We Do? | Robert J. Burdette | 311 | |
Life in Laconics | Mary Mapes Dodge | 311 | |
On Knowing When to Stop | L. J. Bridgman | 312 | |
Rev. Gabe Tucker's Remarks | Unknown | 312 | |
Thursday | Frederic E. Weatherly | 313 | |
Sky-Making | Mortimer Collins | 314 | |
The Positivists | Mortimer Collins | 315 | |
Martial in London | Mortimer Collins | 316 | |
The Splendid Shilling | John Philips | 316 | |
After Horace | A. D. Godley | 320 | |
Of a Precise Tailor | Sir John Harrington | 322 | |
Money | Jehan du Pontalais | 323 | |
Boston Nursery Rhymes | Rev. Joseph Cook | 324 | |
Kentucky Philosophy | Harrison Robertson | 325 | |
John Grumlie | Allan Cunningham | 326 | |
A Song of Impossibilities | Winthrop Mackworth Praed | 327 | |
Song | John Donne | 330 | |
The Oubit | Charles Kingsley | 330 | |
Double Ballade of Primitive Man | Andrew Lang | 331 | |
Phillis's Age | Matthew Prior | 332 | |
V: CYNICISM | |||
Good and Bad Luck | John Hay | 334 | |
Bangkolidye | Barry Pain | 334 | |
Pensées De Noël | A. D. Godley | 336 | |
A Ballade of an Anti-Puritan | G. K. Chesterton | 337 | |
Pessimism | Newton Mackintosh | 338 | |
Cynical Ode to an Ultra-Cynical Public | Charles Mackay | 339 | |
Youth and Art | Robert Browning | 339 | |
The Bachelor's Dream | Thomas Hood | 342 | |
All Things Except Myself I Know | Francois Villon | 343 | |
The Joys of Marriage | Charles Cotton | 344 | |
The Third Proposition | Madeline Bridges | 345 | |
The Ballad of Cassandra Brown | Helen Gray Cone | 345 | |
What's in a Name? | R. K. Munkittrick | 347 | |
Too Late | Fits Hugh Ludlow | 348 | [Pg xv] |
The Annuity | George Outram | 350 | |
K. K.—Can't Calculate | Frances M. Whitcher | 353 | |
Northern Farmer | Lord Tennyson | 354 | |
Fin de Siècle | Unknown | 357 | |
Then Ag'in | Sam Walter Foss | 357 | |
The Pessimist | Ben King | 358 | |
Without and Within | James Russell Lowell | 359 | |
Same Old Story | Harry B. Smith | 360 | |
VI: EPIGRAMS | |||
Woman's Will | John G. Saxe | 362 | |
Cynicus to W. Shakespeare | James Kenneth Stephen | 362 | |
Senex to Matt. Prior | James Kenneth Stephen | 362 | |
To a Blockhead | Alexander Pope | 362 | |
The Fool and the Poet | Alexander Pope | 363 | |
A Rhymester | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 363 | |
Giles's Hope | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 363 | |
Cologne | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 363 | |
An Eternal Poem | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 364 | |
On a Bad Singer | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 364 | |
Job | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 364 | |
Reasons for Drinking | Dr. Henry Aldrich | 364 | |
Smatterers | Samuel Butler | 365 | |
Hypocrisy | Samuel Butler | 365 | |
To Doctor Empiric | Ben Jonson | 365 | |
A Remedy Worse than the Disease | Matthew Prior | 365 | |
A Wife | Richard Brinsley Sheridan | 366 | |
The Honey-Moon | Walter Savage Landor | 366 | |
Dido | Richard Porson | 366 | |
An Epitaph | George John Cayley | 366 | |
On Taking a Wife | Thomas Moore | 367 | |
Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party | Thomas Moore | 367 | |
Some Ladies | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 367 | |
On a Sense of Humor | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 367 | |
On Hearing a Lady Praise a Certain Rev. Doctor's Eyes | George Outram | 368 | |
Epitaph Intended for His Wife | John Dryden | 368 | |
To a Capricious Friend | Joseph Addison | 368 | |
Which is Which | John Byrom | 368 | |
On a Full-Length Portrait of Beau Marsh | Lord Chesterfield | 369 | |
On Scotland | Cleveland | 369 | |
Mendax | Lessing | 369 | |
To a Slow Walker and Quick Eater | Lessing | 369 | |
What's My Thought Like? | Thomas Moore | 370 | |
Of All the Men | Thomas Moore | 370 | |
On Butler's Monument | Rev. Samuel Wesley | 370 | |
A Conjugal Conundrum | Unknown | 371 | |
VII: BURLESQUE | |||
Lovers and a Reflection | Charles Stuart Calverley | 372 | |
Our Hymn | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 374 | |
"Soldier, Rest!" | Robert J. Burdette | 374 | |
Imitation | Anthony C. Deane | 375 | |
The Mighty Must | W. S. Gilbert | 376 | |
Midsummer Madness | Unknown | 377 | |
Mavrone | Arthur Guiterman | 378 | [Pg xvi] |
Lilies | Don Marquis | 379 | |
For I am Sad | Don Marquis | 379 | |
A Little Swirl of Vers Libre | Thomas R. Ybarra | 380 | |
Young Lochinvar | Unknown | 381 | |
Imagiste Love Lines | Unknown | 383 | |
Bygones | Bert Lesion Taylor | 383 | |
Justice to Scotland | Unknown | 384 | |
Lament of the Scotch-Irish Exile | James Jeffrey Roche | 385 | |
A Song of Sorrow | Charles Battell Loomis | 386 | |
The Rejected "National Hymns" | Robert H. Newell | 387 | |
The Editor's Wooing | Robert H. Newell | 389 | |
The Baby's Debut | James Smith | 390 | |
The Cantelope | Bayard Taylor | 393 | |
Never Forget Your Parents | Franklin P. Adams | 394 | |
A Girl was Too Reckless of Grammar | Guy Wetmore Carryl | 395 | |
Behold the Deeds! | H. C. Bunner | 397 | |
Villon's Straight Tip to All Cross Coves | William Ernest Henley | 399 | |
Culture in the Slums | William Ernest Henley | 400 | |
The Lawyer's Invocation to Spring | Henry Howard Brownell | 402 | |
North, East, South, and West | Unknown | 403 | |
Martin Luther at Potsdam | Barry Pain | 404 | |
An Idyll of Phatte and Leene | Unknown | 406 | |
The House that Jack Built | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 407 | |
Palabras Grandiosas | Bayard Taylor | 407 | |
A Love Playnt | Godfrey Turner | 408 | |
Darwinity | Herman C. Merivale | 409 | |
Select Passages from a Coming Poet | F. Anstey | 410 | |
The Romaunt of Humpty Dumpty | Henry S. Leigh | 411 | |
The Wedding | Thomas Hood, Jr. | 412 | |
In Memoriam Technicam | Thomas Hood, Jr. | 413 | |
"Songs Without Words" | Robert J. Burdette | 413 | |
At the Sign of the Cock | Owen Seaman | 414 | |
Presto Furioso | Owen Seaman | 417 | |
To Julia in Shooting Togs | Owen Seaman | 418 | |
Farewell | Bert Leston Taylor | 419 | |
Here is the Tale | Anthony C. Deane | 421 | |
The Willows | Bret Harte | 423 | |
A Ballad | Guy Wetmore Carryl | 426 | |
The Translated Way | Franklin P. Adams | 427 | |
Commonplaces | Rudyard Kipling | 427 | |
Angelo Orders His Dinner | Bayard Taylor | 428 | |
The Promissory Note | Bayard Taylor | 429 | |
Camerados | Bayard Taylor | 430 | |
The Last Ride Together | James Kenneth Stephen | 431 | |
Imitation of Walt Whitman | Unknown | 434 | |
Salad | Mortimer Collins | 436 | |
If | Mortimer Collins | 436 | |
The Jabberwocky of Authors | Harry Persons Taber | 437 | |
The Town of Nice | Herman C. Merivale | 438 | |
The Willow-Tree | W. M. Thackeray | 439 | |
A Ballade of Ballade-Mongers | Augustus M. Moore | 441 | |
VIII: BATHOS | |||
The Confession | Richard Harris Barham ["Thomas Ingoldsby"] | 443 | |
If You Have Seen | Thomas Moore | 444 | |
Circumstance | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 444 | |
Elegy | Arthur Guiterman | 445 | [Pg xvii] |
Our Traveler | H. Cholmondeley-Pennell | 445 | |
Optimism | Newton Mackintosh | 445 | |
The Declaration | N. P. Willis | 446 | |
He Came to Pay | Parmenas Mix | 447 | |
The Forlorn One | Richard Harris Barham ["Thomas Ingoldsby"] | 449 | |
Rural Raptures | Unknown | 450 | |
A Fragment | Unknown | 450 | |
The Bitter Bit | William E. Aytoun | 451 | |
Comfort in Affliction | William E. Aytoun | 453 | |
The Husband's Petition | William E. Aytoun | 454 | |
Lines Written After a Battle | Unknown | 456 | |
Lines | Unknown | 456 | |
The Imaginative Crisis | Unknown | 457 | |
IX: PARODY | |||
The Higher Pantheism in a Nut-Shell | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 458 | |
Nephelidia | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 459 | |
Up the Spout | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 460 | |
In Memoriam | Cuthbert Bede | 463 | |
Lucy Lake | Newton Mackintosh | 463 | |
The Cock and the Bull | Charles Stuart Calverley | 464 | |
Ballad | Charles Stuart Calverley | 467 | |
Disaster | Charles Stuart Calverley | 469 | |
Wordsworthian Reminiscence | Unknown | 470 | |
Inspect Us | Edith Daniell | 471 | |
The Messed Damozel | Charles Hanson Towne | 471 | |
A Melton Mowbray Pork-Pie | Richard le Gallienne | 472 | |
Israfiddlestrings | Unknown | 472 | |
After Dilettante Concetti | H. D. Traill | 474 | |
Whenceness of the Which | Unknown | 476 | |
The Little Star | Unknown | 476 | |
The Original Lamb | Unknown | 477 | |
Sainte Margérie | Unknown | 477 | |
Robert Frost | Louis Untermeyer | 479 | |
Owen Seaman | Louis Untermeyer | 480 | |
The Modern Hiawatha | Unknown | 482 | |
Somewhere-in-Europe-Wocky | F. G. Hartswick | 482 | |
Rigid Body Sings | J. C. Maxwell | 483 | |
A Ballad of High Endeavor | Unknown | 484 | |
Father William | Lewis Carroll | 485 | |
The Poets at Tea | Barry Pain | 486 | |
How Often | Ben King | 489 | |
If I Should Die To-Night | Ben King | 489 | |
"The Day is Done" | Phoebe Cary | 490 | |
Jacob | Phoebe Cary | 491 | |
Ballad of the Canal | Phoebe Cary | 492 | |
"There's a Bower of Beanvines" | Phoebe Cary | 493 | |
Reuben | Phoebe Cary | 493 | |
The Wife | Phoebe Cary | 494 | |
When Lovely Woman | Phoebe Cary | 494 | |
John Thomson's Daughter | Phoebe Cary | 494 | |
A Portrait | John Keats | 496 | |
Annabel Lee | Stanley Huntley | 497 | |
Home Sweet Home with Variations | H. C. Bunner | 498 | |
An Old Song by New Singers | A. C. Wilkie | 506 | |
More Impressions | Oscuro Wildgoose | 509 | |
Nursery Rhymes á la Mode | Unknown | 509 | |
A Maudle-In Ballad | Unknown | 510 | [Pg xviii] |
Gillian | Unknown | 511 | |
Extracts from the Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne | Gelett Burgess | 512 | |
Diversions of the Re-Echo Club | Carolyn Wells | 515 | |
Styx River Anthology | Carolyn Wells | 521 | |
Answer to Master Wither's Song, "Shall I, Wasting in Despair?" | Ben Jonson | 526 | |
Song of the Springtide | Unknown | 527 | |
The Village Choir | Unknown | 528 | |
My Foe | Unknown | 529 | |
Nursery Song in Pidgin English | Unknown | 530 | |
Father William | Unknown | 531 | |
A Poe-'em of Passion | C. F. Lummis | 532 | |
How the Daughters Come Down at Dunoon | H. Cholmondeley-Pennell | 533 | |
To an Importunate Host | Unknown | 534 | |
Cremation | William Sawyer | 534 | |
An Imitation of Wordsworth | Catharine M. Fanshawe | 535 | |
The Lay of the Love-Lorn | Aytoun and Martin | 537 | |
Only Seven | Henry S. Leigh | 543 | |
'Twas Ever Thus | Henry S. Leigh | 544 | |
Foam and Fangs | Walter Parke | 544 | |
X: NARRATIVE | |||
Little Billee | W. M. Thackeray | 546 | |
The Crystal Palace | W. M. Thackeray | 547 | |
The Wofle New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown | W. M. Thackeray | 552 | |
King John and the Abbot | Unknown | 554 | |
On the Death of a Favorite Cat | Thomas Gray | 557 | |
Misadventures at Margate | Richard Harris Barham ["Thomas Ingoldsby"] | 558 | |
The Gouty Merchant and the Stranger | Horace Smith | 563 | |
The Diverting History of John Gilpin | William Cowper | 564 | |
Paddy O'Rafther | Samuel Lover | 571 | |
Here She Goes and There She Goes | James Nack | 572 | |
The Quaker's Meeting | Samuel Lover | 576 | |
The Jester Condemned to Death | Horace Smith | 578 | |
The Deacon's Masterpiece | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 580 | |
The Ballad of the Oysterman | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 583 | |
The Well of St. Keyne | Robert Southey | 584 | |
The Jackdaw of Rheims | Richard Harris Barham ["Thomas Ingoldsby"] | 586 | |
The Knight and the Lady | Richard Harris Barham ["Thomas Ingoldsby"] | 590 | |
An Eastern Question | H. M. Paull | 598 | |
My Aunt's Spectre | Mortimer Collins | 600 | |
Casey at the Bat | Ernest Lawrence Thayer | 601 | |
The Pied Piper of Hamelin | Robert Browning | 603 | |
The Goose | Lord Tennyson | 611 | |
The Ballad of Charity | Charles Godfrey Leland | 613 | |
The Post Captain | Charles E. Carryl | 615 | |
Robinson Crusoe's Story | Charles E. Carryl | 617 | |
Ben Bluff | Thomas Hood | 619 | |
The Pilgrims and the Peas | John Wolcot | 621 | |
Tam O'Shanter | Robert Burns | 623 | |
That Gentleman from Boston Town | Joaquin Miller | 629 | |
The Yarn of the "Nancy Bell" | W. S. Gilbert | 632 | [Pg xix] |
Ferdinando and Elvira | W. S. Gilbert | 635 | |
Gentle Alice Brown | W. S. Gilbert | 639 | |
The Story of Prince Agib | W. S. Gilbert | 641 | |
Sir Guy the Crusader | W. S. Gilbert | 644 | |
Kitty Wants to Write | Gelett Burgess | 646 | |
Dighton is Engaged | Gelett Burgess | 647 | |
Plain Language from Truthful James | Bret Harte | 648 | |
The Society Upon the Stanisalaus | Bret Harte | 650 | |
"Jim" | Bret Harte | 652 | |
William Brown of Oregon | Joaquin Miller | 653 | |
Little Breeches | John Hay | 657 | |
The Enchanted Shirt | John Hay | 658 | |
Jim Bludso | John Hay | 661 | |
Wreck of the "Julie Plante" | William Henry Drummond | 662 | |
The Alarmed Skipper | James T. Fields | 664 | |
The Elderly Gentleman | George Canning | 665 | |
Saying Not Meaning | William Basil Wake | 666 | |
Hans Breitmann's Party | Charles Godfrey Leland | 668 | |
Ballad by Hans Breitmann | Charles Godfrey Leland | 669 | |
Grampy Sings a Song | Holman F. Day | 670 | |
The First Banjo | Irwin Russell | 672 | |
The Romance of the Carpet | Robert J. Burdette | 674 | |
Hunting of the Snark, The | Lewis Carroll | 676 | |
The Old Man and Jim | James Whitcomb Riley | 678 | |
A Sailor's Yarn | James Jeffrey Roche | 680 | |
The Converted Cannibals | G. E. Farrow | 683 | |
The Retired Pork-Butcher and the Spook | G. E. Farrow | 685 | |
Skipper Ireson's Ride | John Greenleaf Whittier | 688 | |
Darius Green and His Flying-Machine | John Townsend Trowbridge | 690 | |
A Great Fight | Robert H. Newell | 697 | |
The Donnybrook Jig | Viscount Dillon | 700 | |
Unfortunate Miss Bailey | Unknown | 702 | |
The Laird o' Cockpen | Lady Nairne | 703 | |
A Wedding | Sir John Suckling | 704 | |
XI: TRIBUTE | |||
The Ahkond of Swat | Edward Lear | 708 | |
The Ahkoond of Swat | George Thomas Lanigan | 710 | |
Dirge of the Moolla of Kotal | George Thomas Lanigan | 712 | |
The Ballad of Bouillabaisse | W. M. Thackeray | 714 | |
Ould Doctor Mack | Alfred Perceval Graves | 717 | |
Father O'Flynn | Alfred Perceval Graves | 719 | |
The Bald-headed Tyrant | Vandyne, Mary E. | 720 | |
Barney McGee | Richard Hovey | 721 | |
Address to the Toothache | Robert Burns | 724 | |
A Farewell to Tobacco | Charles Lamb | 726 | |
John Barleycorn | Robert Burns | 730 | |
Stanzas to Pale Ale | Unknown | 732 | |
Ode to Tobacco | Charles Stuart Calverley | 732 | |
Sonnet to a Clam | John G. Saxe | 734 | |
To a Fly | John Wolcot | 734 | |
Ode to a Bobtailed Cat | Unknown | 737 | |
XII: WHIMSEY | |||
An Elegy | Oliver Goldsmith | 740 | |
Parson Gray | Oliver Goldsmith | 741 | |
The Irishman and the Lady | William Maginn | 742 | [Pg xx] |
The Cataract of Lodore | Robert Southey | 743 | |
Lay of the Deserted Influenzaed | H. Cholmondeley-Pennell | 746 | |
Bellagcholly Days | Unknown | 747 | |
Rhyme of the Rail | John G. Saxe | 748 | |
Echo | John G. Saxe | 750 | |
Song | Joseph Addison | 751 | |
A Gentle Echo on Woman | Dean Swift | 752 | |
Lay of Ancient Rome | Thomas R. Ybarra | 753 | |
A New Song | John Gay | 754 | |
The American Traveller | Robert H. Newell | 757 | |
The Zealless Xylographer | Mary Mapes Dodge | 759 | |
The Old Line Fence | A. W. Bellaw | 760 | |
O-U-G-H | Charles Battell Loomis | 761 | |
Enigma on the Letter H | Catherine M. Fanshawe | 762 | |
Travesty of Miss Fanshawe's Enigma | Horace Mayhew | 763 | |
An Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog | Oliver Goldsmith | 764 | |
An Epitaph | Matthew Prior | 765 | |
Old Grimes | Albert Gorton Greene | 766 | |
The Endless Song | Ruth McEnery Stuart | 768 | |
The Hundred Best Books | Mostyn T. Pigott | 769 | |
The Cosmic Egg | Unknown | 771 | |
Five Wines | Robert Herrick | 772 | |
A Rhyme for Musicians | E. Lemke | 772 | |
My Madeline | Walter Parke | 773 | |
Susan Simpson | Unknown | 774 | |
The March to Moscow | Robert Southey | 775 | |
Half Hours with the Classics | H. J. DeBurgh | 779 | |
On the Oxford Carrier | John Milton | 780 | |
Ninety-Nine in the Shade | Rossiter Johnson | 781 | |
The Triolet | William Ernest Henley | 782 | |
The Rondeau | Austin Dobson | 782 | |
Life | Unknown | 783 | |
Ode to the Human Heart | Laman Blanchard | 784 | |
A Strike Among the Poets | Unknown | 785 | |
Whatever Is, Is Right | Laman Blanchard | 786 | |
Nothing | Richard Porson | 786 | |
Dirge | Unknown | 787 | |
O D V | Unknown | 788 | |
A Man of Words | Unknown | 790 | |
Similes | Unknown | 791 | |
No! | Thomas Hood | 792 | |
Faithless Sally Brown | Thomas Hood | 792 | |
Tim Turpin | Thomas Hood | 795 | |
Faithless Nelly Gray | Thomas Hood | 797 | |
Sally Simpkin's Lament | Thomas Hood | 800 | |
Death's Ramble | Thomas Hood | 801 | |
Panegyric on the Ladies | Unknown | 803 | |
Ambiguous Lines | Unknown | 804 | |
Surnames | James Smith | 804 | |
A Ternary of Littles, Upon a Pipkin of Jelly Sent to a Lady | Robert Herrick | 806 | |
A Carman's Account of a Law Suit | Sir David Lindesay | 807 | |
Out of Sight, Out of Mind | Barnaby Googe | 807 | |
Nongtongpaw | Charles Dibdin | 808 | |
Logical English | Unknown | 809 | |
Logic | Unknown | 809 | |
The Careful Penman | Unknown | 810 | |
Questions with Answers | Unknown | 810 | |
Conjugal Conjugations | A. W. Bellaw | 810 | |
Love's Moods and Senses | Unknown | 812 | |
The Siege of Belgrade | Unknown | 813 | [Pg xxi] |
The Happy Man | Gilles Ménage | 814 | |
The Bells | Unknown | 816 | |
Takings | Thomas Hood, Jr. | 817 | |
A Bachelor's Mono-Rhyme | Charles Mackay | 817 | |
The Art of Bookkeeping | Laman Blanchard | 818 | |
An Invitation to the Zoological Gardens | Unknown | 822 | |
A Nocturnal Sketch | Thomas Hood | 823 | |
Lovelilts | Marion Hill | 824 | |
Jocosa Lyra | Austin Dobson | 824 | |
To a Thesaurus | Franklin P. Adams | 825 | |
The Future of the Classics | Unknown | 826 | |
Cautionary Verses | Theodore Hook | 828 | |
The War: A-Z | John R. Edwards | 829 | |
Lines to Miss Florence Huntingdon | Unknown | 830 | |
To My Nose | Alfred A. Forrester | 832 | |
A Polka Lyric | Barclay Philips | 832 | |
A Catalectic Monody | Unknown | 833 | |
Ode for a Social Meeting | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 833 | |
The Jovial Priest's Confession | Leigh Hunt | 834 | |
Limericks | Carolyn Wells | 835 | |
XIII: NONSENSE | |||
Lunar Stanzas | Henry Coggswell Knight | 841 | |
The Whango Tree | Unknown | 842 | |
Three Children | Unknown | 843 | |
'Tis Midnight | Unknown | 843 | |
Cossimbazar | Henry S. Leigh | 843 | |
An Unexpected Fact | Edward Cannon | 844 | |
The Cumberbunce | Paul West | 844 | |
Mr. Finney's Turnip | Unknown | 847 | |
Nonsense Verses | Charles Lamb | 848 | |
Like to the Thundering Tone | Bishop Corbet | 848 | |
Aestivation | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 849 | |
Uncle Simon and Uncle Jim | Charles Farrar Browne ["Artemus Ward"] | 849 | |
A Tragic Story | W. M. Thackeray | 850 | |
Sonnet Found in a Deserted Mad House | Unknown | 851 | |
The Jim-Jam King of the Jou-Jous | Alaric Bertrand Stuart | 851 | |
To Marie | John Bennett | 852 | |
My Dream | Unknown | 853 | |
The Rollicking Mastodon | Arthur Macy | 853 | |
The Invisible Bridge | Gelett Burgess | 855 | |
The Lazy Roof | Gelett Burgess | 855 | |
My Feet | Gelett Burgess | 855 | |
Spirk Troll-Derisive | James Whitcomb Riley | 855 | |
The Man in the Moon | James Whitcomb Riley | 856 | |
The Lugubrious Whing-Whang | James Whitcomb Riley | 858 | |
The Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo | Edward Lear | 859 | |
The Jumbles | Edward Lear | 862 | |
The Pobble Who Has no Toes | Edward Lear | 865 | |
The New Vestments | Edward Lear | 866 | |
The Two Old Bachelors | Edward Lear | 868 | |
Jabberwocky | Lewis Carroll | 869 | |
Ways and Means | Lewis Carroll | 870 | |
Humpty Dumpty's Recitation | Lewis Carroll | 872 | |
Some Hallucinations | Lewis Carroll | 874 | |
Sing for the Garish Eye | W. S. Gilbert | 875 | |
The Shipwreck | E. H. Palmer | 876 | [Pg xxii] |
Uffia | Harriet R. White | 877 | |
'Tis Sweet to Roam | Unknown | 878 | |
Three Jovial Huntsmen | Unknown | 878 | |
King Arthur | Unknown | 879 | |
Hyder Iddle | Unknown | 879 | |
The Ocean Wanderer | Unknown | 879 | |
Scientific Proof | J. W. Foley | 880 | |
The Thingumbob | Unknown | 882 | |
Wonders of Nature | Unknown | 882 | |
Lines by an Old Fogy | Unknown | 882 | |
A Country Summer Pastoral | Unknown | 883 | |
Turvey Top | William Sawyer | 884 | |
A Ballad of Bedlam | Unknown | 886 | |
XIV: NATURAL HISTORY | |||
The Fastidious Serpent | Henry Johnstone | 887 | |
The Legend of the First Cam-u-el | Arthur Guiterman | 888 | |
Unsatisfied Yearning | R. K. Munkittrick | 889 | |
Kindly Advice | Unknown | 890 | |
Kindness to Animals | J. Ashby-Sterry | 891 | |
To Be or Not To Be | Unknown | 891 | |
The Hen | Matthew Claudius | 892 | |
Of Baiting the Lion | Owen Seaman | 893 | |
The Flamingo | Lewis Gaylord Clark | 894 | |
Why Doth a Pussy Cat? | Burges Johnson | 895 | |
The Walrus and the Carpenter | Lewis Carroll | 896 | |
Nirvana | Unknown | 900 | |
The Catfish | Oliver Herford | 900 | |
War Relief | Oliver Herford | 901 | |
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat | Edward Lear | 901 | |
Mexican Serenade | Arthur Guiterman | 902 | |
Orphan Born | Robert J. Burdette | 903 | |
Divided Destinies | Rudyard Kipling | 904 | |
The Viper | Hilaire Belloc | 906 | |
The Llama | Hilaire Belloc | 906 | |
The Yak | Hilaire Belloc | 906 | |
The Frog | Hilaire Belloc | 907 | |
The Microbe | Hilaire Belloc | 907 | |
The Great Black Crow | Philip James Bailey | 907 | |
The Colubriad | William Cowper | 909 | |
The Retired Cat | William Cowper | 910 | |
A Darwinian Ballad | Unknown | 913 | |
The Pig | Robert Southey | 914 | |
A Fish Story | Henry A. Beers | 916 | |
The Cameronian Cat | Unknown | 917 | |
The Young Gazelle | Walter Parke | 918 | |
The Ballad of the Emeu | Bret Harte | 921 | |
The Turtle and Flamingo | James Thomas Fields | 923 | |
XV: JUNIORS | |||
Prior to Miss Belle's Appearance | James Whitcomb Riley | 925 | |
There Was a Little Girl | Unknown | 926 | |
The Naughty Darkey Boy | Unknown | 927 | |
Dutch Lullaby | Eugene Field | 928 | |
The Dinkey-Bird | Eugene Field | 929 | |
The Little Peach | Eugene Field | 931 | |
Counsel to Those that Eat | Unknown | 932 | |
Home and Mother | Mary Mapes Dodge | 932 | |
Little Orphant Annie | James Whitcomb Riley | 934 | [Pg xxiii] |
A Visit From St. Nicholas | Clement Clarke Moore | 935 | |
A Nursery Legend | Henry S. Leigh | 937 | |
A Little Goose | Eliza Sproat Turner | 938 | |
Leedle Yawcob Strauss | Charles Follen Adams | 940 | |
A Parental Ode to My Son, Aged Three Years and Five Months | Thomas Hood | 941 | |
Little Mamma | Charles Henry Webb | 943 | |
The Comical Girl | M. Pelham | 946 | |
Bunches of Grapes | Walter Ramal | 947 | |
XVI: IMMORTAL STANZAS | |||
The Purple Cow | Gelett Burgess | 948 | |
The Young Lady of Niger | Unknown | 948 | |
The Laughing Willow | Oliver Herford | 948 | |
Said Opie Reed | Julian Street and James Montgomery Flagg | 948 | |
Manila | Eugene F. Ware | 949 | |
On the Aristocracy of Harvard | Dr. Samuel G. Bushnell | 949 | |
On the Democracy of Yale | Dean Jones | 949 | |
The Herring | Sir Walter Scott | 949 | |
If the Man | Samuel Johnson | 949 | |
The Kilkenny Cats | Unknown | 950 | |
Poor Dear Grandpapa | D'Arcy W. Thompson | 950 | |
More Walks | Richard Harris Barham ["Thomas Ingoldsby"] | 950 | |
Indifference | Unknown | 950 | |
Madame Sans Souci | Unknown | 950 | |
A Riddle | Unknown | 951 | |
If | Unknown | 951 |
Quixotic is his enterprise and hopeless his adventure is, W. S. Gilbert. |
Oh, what a fund of joy jocund lies hid in harmless hoaxes! What keen enjoyment springs From cheap and simple things! What deep delight from sources trite inventive humour coaxes, That pain and trouble brew For every one but you! Gunpowder placed inside its waist improves a mild Havana, Its unexpected flash Burns eyebrows and moustache. When people dine no kind of wine beats ipecacuanha, But common sense suggests You keep it for your guests— Then naught annoys the organ boys like throwing red hot coppers. And much amusement bides In common butter slides; And stringy snares across the stairs cause unexpected croppers. Coal scuttles, recollect, Produce the same effect. A man possessed Of common sense Need not invest At great expense— It does not call For pocket deep, These jokes are all Extremely cheap. If you commence with eighteenpence—it's all you'll have to pay; You may command a pleasant and a most instructive day. A good spring gun breeds endless fun, and makes men jump like rockets— And turnip heads on posts Make very decent ghosts. Then hornets sting like anything, when placed in waistcoat pockets— Burnt cork and walnut juice Are not without their use. No fun compares with easy chairs whose seats are stuffed with needles— Live shrimps their patience tax When put down people's backs. Surprising, too, what one can do with a pint of fat black beetles— And treacle on a chair Will make a Quaker swear! Then sharp tin tacks And pocket squirts— And cobbler's wax For ladies' skirts— And slimy slugs On bedroom floors— And water jugs On open doors— Prepared with these cheap properties, amusing tricks to play Upon a friend a man may spend a most delightful day. W. S. Gilbert. [Pg 28] |
"Gentle, modest little flower, W. S. Gilbert. |
Malbrouck, the prince of commanders, |
Well I recall how first I met Oliver Herford. |
In days of peace my fellow-men A. A. Milne. |
I have felt the thrill of passion in the poet's mystic book Unknown. |
When that old joke was new, W. M. Thackeray. [Pg 34] |
When moonlike ore the hazure seas W. M. Thackeray. |
When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock, James Whitcomb Riley. |
There be two men of all mankind Edwin Arlington Robinson. |
Yes, write if you want to—there's nothing like trying; Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
I wrote some lines once on a time Oliver Wendell Holmes. [Pg 40] |
I
I have a bookcase, which is what II
Shake was a dramatist of note; III
Mulleary's line was quite the same; IV
Go-ethe wrote in the German tongue: V
They sit there, on their chests, as bland H. C. Bunner. |
Man is for woman made, Peter A. Motteux. [Pg 42] |
The prospect is bare and white, R. K. Munkittrick. |
My dear young friend, whose shining wit John G. Saxe. |
"God bless the man who first invented sleep!" John G. Saxe. [Pg 46] |
"Speak, O man less recent! Bret Harte. |
Oh, would that working I might shun, Thomas R. Ybarra. |
If I go to see the play, Bert Leston Taylor. |
My temples throb, my pulses boil, Thomas Hood. |
Out rode from his wild, dark castle Charles Godfrey Leland. |
It is very aggravating Eugene Field. |
Celestine Silvousplait Justine de Mouton Rosalie, Charles Battell Loomis. |
Sam Brown was a fellow from way down East, Harlan Hoge Ballard. |
Alone I sit at eventide; Nathan Haskell Dole. |
"The proper way for a man to pray," Sam Walter Foss. |
"If I have erred, I err in company with Abraham Lincoln."—Theodore Roosevelt.
If e'er my rhyming be at fault, Franklin P. Adams. |
Why was Cupid a boy, William Blake. [Pg 57] |
Life would be an easy matter Nixon Waterman. [Pg 58] |
To you, my purse, and to none other wight, Geoffrey Chaucer. |
On the eighth day of March it was, some people say, Samuel Lover. |
Her little feet! ... Beneath us ranged the sea, William Ernest Henley. [Pg 60] |
If there is a vile, pernicious, James Kenneth Stephen. |
As long I dwell on some stupendous —Robert Browning.
James Kenneth Stephen. |
A speech, both pithy and concise, Lady T. Hastings. [Pg 63] |
I know not of what we ponder'd Charles Stuart Calverley. |
O what harper could worthily harp it, Charles Stuart Calverley. [Pg 66] |
The sextant of the meetinouse, which sweeps Arabella Willson. |
Do not worry if I scurry from the grill room in a hurry, Unknown. |
I've been trying to fashion a wifely ideal, Owen Seaman. [Pg 70] |
The Pope he leads a happy life, Charles Lever. |
I saw a certain sailorman who sat beside the sea, Frederick Moxon. |
I am an ancient Jest! ENVOY:
Prince, you may storm and ban— Andrew Lang. [Pg 73] |
These are the things that make me laugh— Gelett Burgess. |
When you slice a Georgy melon you mus' know what you is at Frank Libby Stanton. |
Perchance it was her eyes of blue, Walter Parke. [Pg 75] |
He stood on his head by the wild seashore, Walter Parke. [Pg 76] |
Of all life's plagues I recommend to no man Unknown. |
Take a robin's leg Unknown. |
In these days of indigestion Roy Atwell. |
On the downtown side of an uptown street William Johnston. |
If, in the month of dark December, Lord Byron. |
Oh, the fisherman is a happy wight! F. C. Burnand. |
Between Nose and Eyes a strange contest arose, William Cowper. |
A man sat on a rock and sought
"Nature abhors imperfect work, David Law Proudfit. |
I
Whene'er with haggard eyes I view |
[Weeps, and pulls out a blue kerchief, with which he wipes his eyes; gazing tenderly at it, he proceeds—
II
Sweet kerchief, check'd with heavenly blue, |
[At the repetition of this line he clanks his chains in cadence.
III
Barbs! Barbs! alas! how swift you flew, IV
This faded form! this pallid hue! V
There first for thee my passion grew, VI
Sun, moon and thou, vain world, adieu, |
[During the last stanza he dashes his head repeatedly against the walls of his prison; and, finally, so hard as to produce a visible contusion; he then throws himself on the floor in an agony. The curtain drops; the music still continuing to play till it is wholly fallen.
George Canning. |
I do confess, in many a sigh, Thomas Moore. |
The Antiseptic Baby and the Prophylactic Pup Arthur Guiterman. [Pg 88] |
Air—"The days we went a-gipsying."
I would all womankind were dead,
I've heard her thoroughly described William E. Aytoun. |
They told him gently he was made
They asked him whether he could bear Unknown. |
A soldier of the Russians W. J. Lampton. |
The Food Scientist tells us: "A deficiency of iron, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and the other mineral salts, colloids and vitamines of vegetable origin leads to numerous forms of physical disorder."
I yearn to bite on a Colloid Unknown. [Pg 92] |
It is told, in Buddhi-theosophic schools, Unknown. |
Philosophy shows us 'twixt monkey and man
The tail was a rudder—a capital thing William Sawyer. |
To make this condiment, your poet begs Sydney Smith. |
The man who invented the women's waists that button down behind, And the man who invented the cans with keys and the strips that will never wind, Were put to sea in a leaky boat and with never a bite to eat But a couple of dozen of patent cans in which was their only meat. And they sailed and sailed o'er the ocean wide and never they had a taste Of aught to eat, for the cans stayed shut, and a peek-a-boo shirtwaist Was all they had to bale the brine that came in the leaky boat; And their tongues were thick and their throats were dry, and they barely kept afloat. They came at last to an island fair, and a man stood on the shore. So they flew a signal of distress and their hopes rose high once more, And they called to him to fetch a boat, for their craft was sinking fast, And a couple of hours at best they knew was all their boat would last. So he called to them a cheery call and he said he would make haste, But first he must go back to his wife and button up her waist, Which would only take him an hour or so and then he would fetch a boat. And the man who invented the backstairs waist, he groaned in his swollen throat. The hours passed by on leaden wings and they saw another man In the window of a bungalow, and he held a tin meat can In his bleeding hands, and they called to him, not once but twice and thrice, And he said: "Just wait till I open this and I'll be there in a trice!" And the man who invented the patent cans he knew what the promise meant, So he leaped in air with a horrid cry and into the sea he went, And the bubbles rose where he sank and sank and a groan choked in the throat Of the man who invented the backstairs waist and he sank with the leaky boat! J. W. Foley. |
Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa!
Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa, John Kendrick Bangs. |
Before a Turkish town
They got up close Eugene Fitch Ware. |
The poet is, or ought to be, a hater of the city,
No matter; in the future, when I celebrate the beauty Anthony C. Deane. |
'Twas raw, and chill, and cold outside, Tudor Jenks. [Pg 99] |
Three score and ten by common calculation J. R. Planché. [Pg 100] |
He girded on his shining sword, Hilda Johnson. [Pg 101] |
A fig for St. Denis of France— William Maginn. [Pg 103] |
"Come here, my boy; hould up your head,
"You're right, my boy; hould up your head, James A. Sidey. |
So that's Cleopathera's Needle, bedad, Cormac O'Leary. |
With due condescension, I'd call your attention
But Jove, the great janius, looked down and saw Vanus, Unknown. |
I remember, I remember, Unknown. [Pg 108] |
In form and feature, face and limb, Henry S. Leigh. [Pg 109] |
When I am dead you'll find it hard, Eugene Fitch Ware. |
"What other men have dared, I dare," Tom Masson. |
God makes sech nights, all white an' still James Russell Lowell. |
Where the Moosatockmaguntic Bayard Taylor. |
When I was young and full o' pride, Wallace Irwin. |
O my earliest love, who, ere I number'd Charles Stuart Calverley. |
A woman is like to—but stay— Unknown. |
All day she hurried to get through, Albert Bigelow Paine. [Pg 120] |
"I love you, my lord!" Paul T. Gilbert. |
'Twas April when she came to town; Samuel Minturn Peck. |
Its eyes are gray; Arthur Guiterman. |
Since for kissing thee, Minguillo, Unknown. |
One stormy morn I chanced to meet Samuel Minturn Peck. |
Tying her bonnet under her chin, Nora Perry. |
Over the way, over the way, Mary Mapes Dodge. [Pg 126] |
They're always abusing the women, Aristophanes. |
Did you hear of the Widow Malone Charles Lever. |
A district school, not far away, William Pitt Palmer. |
I wus mighty good-lookin' when I wus young— Bessie Morgan. [Pg 130] |
As beautiful Kitty one morning was tripping, Edward Lysaght. |
Why don't the men propose, mamma? Thomas Haynes Bayly. [Pg 132] |
Oh, I know a certain woman who is reckoned with the good, Ella Wheeler Wilcox. |
"You have heard," said a youth to his sweetheart, who stood Unknown. |
I
Scene: A wayside shrine in France. II
Pierre: I made a perfect landing over there Oliver Herford. |
"You gave me the key of your heart, my love; John Boyle O'Reilly. |
It worries me to beat the band John Edward Hazzard. [Pg 139] |
Oh, Wing Tee Wee J. P. Denison. |
Beside a Primrose 'broider'd Rill Oliver Herford. |
Werther had a love for Charlotte W. M. Thackeray. [Pg 141] |
Tom's album was filled with the pictures of belles Harry Romaine. |
Young Rory O'More, courted Kathleen Bawn, Samuel Lover. |
"Le temps le mieux employé est celui qu' on perd." —Claude Tillier.
I'd read three hours. Both notes and text Austin Dobson. |
"The case is proceeding."
From the tragic-est novels at Mudie's— (Afterthought)
But, perhaps, if a third (say a Nora), Austin Dobson. [Pg 146] |
NELLIE
If I were you, when ladies at the play, Sir, FRANK
If I were you, when persons I affected, NELLIE
If I were you, when ladies are so lavish, FRANK
If I were you, who vow you cannot suffer NELLIE
If I were you, I would not, Sir, be bitter, FRANK
No, I should doubtless find flirtation fitter, NELLIE
Really! You would? Why, Frank, you're quite delightful,— FRANK
"It is the cause." I mean your chaperon is NELLIE
Go, if you will. At once! And by express, Sir! FRANK
No—I remain. To stay and fight a duel NELLIE
One does not like one's feelings to be doubted,— FRANK
One does not like one's friends to misconstrue,— NELLIE
If I confess that I a wee-bit pouted? FRANK
I should admit that I was piqué, too. NELLIE
Ask me to dance. I'd say no more about it, [Waltz—Exeunt.] Austin Dobson. [Pg 148] |
Miss Flora McFlimsey, of Madison Square, William Allen Butler. |
They nearly strike me dumb, Frederick Locker-Lampson. [Pg 155] |
Last year I trod these fields with Di, Frederick Locker-Lampson. |
I recollect a nurse call'd Ann, Frederick Locker-Lampson. [Pg 157] |
He dropt a tear on Susan's bier, Frederick Locker-Lampson. |
Perhaps you may a-noticed I been soht o' solemn lately, REFRAIN
Oh, I didn't like his clo'es, REFRAIN
Oh, I didn't like his trade; Harry B. Smith. |
She kept her secret well, oh, yes, Refrain
My Angeline! My Angeline! Refrain
My Angeline! My Angeline! Harry B. Smith. |
Hear what Highland Nora said,— Sir Walter Scott. |
O'er the men of Ethiopia she would pour her cornucopia, And shower wealth and plenty on the people of Japan, Send down jelly cake and candies to the Indians of the Andes, And a cargo of plum pudding to the men of Hindoostan; And she said she loved 'em so, Bushman, Finn, and Eskimo. If she had the wings of eagles to their succour she would fly Loaded down with jam and jelly, Succotash and vermicelli, Prunes, pomegranates, plums and pudding, peaches, pineapples, and pie. She would fly with speedy succour to the natives of Molucca With whole loads of quail and salmon, and with tons of fricassee [Pg 161]And give cake in fullest measure To the men of Australasia And all the Archipelagoes that dot the southern sea; And the Anthropophagi, All their lives deprived of pie, She would satiate and satisfy with custards, cream, and mince; And those miserable Australians And the Borrioboolighalians, She would gorge with choicest jelly, raspberry, currant, grape, and quince. But like old war-time hardtackers, her poor husband lived on crackers, Bought at wholesale from a baker, eaten from the mantelshelf; If the men of Madagascar, And the natives of Alaska, Had enough to sate their hunger, let him look out for himself. And his coat had but one tail And he used a shingle nail To fasten up his galluses when he went out to his work; And she used to spend his money To buy sugar-plums and honey For the Terra del Fuegian and the Turcoman and Turk. Sam Walter Foss. |
'Twas a pretty little maiden Arthur Reed Ropes. |
They've got a brand-new organ, Sue, Will Carteton. |
Now the Widow McGee, William W. Fink. |
No fault in women, to refuse Robert Herrick. [Pg 167] |
She went round and asked subscriptions Unknown. [Pg 168] |
When Mary Ann Dollinger got the skule daown thar on Injun Bay, I was glad, for I like ter see a gal makin' her honest way. I heerd some talk in the village abaout her flyin' high, Tew high for busy farmer folks with chores ter do ter fly; But I paid no sorter attention ter all the talk ontell She come in her reg'lar boardin' raound ter visit with us a spell. My Jake an' her had been cronies ever since they could walk, An' it tuk me aback to hear her kerrectin' him in his talk. Jake ain't no hand at grammar, though he hain't his beat for work; But I sez ter myself, "Look out, my gal, yer a-foolin' with a Turk!" Jake bore it wonderful patient, an' said in a mournful way, He p'sumed he was behindhand with the doin's at Injun Bay. I remember once he was askin' for some o' my Injun buns, An' she said he should allus say, "them air," stid o' "them is" the ones. Wal, Mary Ann kep' at him stiddy mornin' an' evenin' long, Tell he dassent open his mouth for fear o' talkin' wrong. One day I was pickin' currants daown by the old quince-tree, When I heerd Jake's voice a-saying', "Be yer willin' ter marry me?" An' Mary Ann kerrectin', 'Air ye willin' yeou sh'd say"; Our Jake he put his foot daown in a plum, decided way, "No wimmen-folks is a-goin' ter be rearrangin' me, Hereafter I says 'craps,' 'them is,' 'I calk'late,' an' 'I be.' Ef folks don't like my talk they needn't hark ter what I say:. But I ain't a-goin' to take no sass from folks from Injun Bay. I ask you free an' final, 'Be ye goin' ter marry me?'" An' Mary Ann says, tremblin, yet anxious-like, "I be." Florence E. Pratt. [Pg 169] |
A maiden once, of certain age, Unknown. [Pg 170] |
There were three young maids of Lee; Frederic E. Weatherly. [Pg 171] |
Years—years ago,—ere yet my dreams Winthrop Mackworth Praed. [Pg 174] |
Old Nick, who taught the village school, George Pope Morris. |
Behave yoursel' before folk, Alexander Rodger. |
Margarita first possess'd, Abraham Cowley. [Pg 179] |
A soldier and a sailor, William Congreve. [Pg 180] |
Oh, my Geraldine, F. C. Burnand. |
I don't know any greatest treat The Envoy
I don't know any greatest treat E. H. Palmer. |
"Oh, 'tis time I should talk to your mother, Samuel Lover. [Pg 182] |
Of all the girls that are so smart, Henry Carey. |
THE DISCONSOLATE My heart will break—I'm sure it will: THE COMFORTER
Ah! silly sorrower, weep no more; Laman Blanchard. [Pg 184] |
O, if my love offended me, J. Ashby-Sterry. |
Lady, very fair are you, Mortimer Collins. |
Careless rhymer, it is true, Mortimer Collins. |
It was a millinger most gay, Fred W. Loring. [Pg 188] |
One morning when Spring was in her teens— Unknown. |
Nay, I cannot come into the garden just now, Henry S. Leigh. |
"Are women fair?" Ay, wondrous fair to see, too. Francis Davison. |
Upon ane stormy Sunday, Charles Sibley. [Pg 191] |
LAURA
On me he shall ne'er put a ring, MAMMA
He's but in his thirty-sixth year, LAURA
His figure, I grant you, will pass, Charles Graham Halpine. |
When swallows Northward flew George F. Warren. |
Oh, yes, we've be'n fixin' up some sence we sold that piece o' groun' Fer a place to put a golf-lynx to them crazy dudes from town. (Anyway, they laughed like crazy when I had it specified, Ef they put a golf-lynx on it, thet they'd haf to keep him tied.) But they paid the price all reg'lar, an' then Sary says to me, "Now we're goin' to fix the parlor up, an' settin'-room," says she. [Pg 193]Fer she 'lowed she'd been a-scrimpin' an' a-scrapin' all her life, An' she meant fer once to have things good as Cousin Ed'ard's wife. Well, we went down to the city, an' she bought the blamedest mess; An' them clerks there must 'a' took her fer a' Astoroid, I guess; Fer they showed her fancy bureaus which they said was shiffoneers, An' some more they said was dressers, an' some curtains called porteers. An' she looked at that there furnicher, an' felt them curtains' heft; Then she sailed in like a cyclone an' she bought 'em right an' left; An' she picked a Bress'ls carpet thet was flowered like Cousin Ed's, But she drawed the line com-pletely when we got to foldin'-beds. Course, she said, 't 'u'd make the parlor lots more roomier, she s'posed; But she 'lowed she'd have a bedstid thet was shore to stay un-closed; An' she stopped right there an' told us sev'ral tales of folks she'd read Bein' overtook in slumber by the "fatal foldin'-bed." "Not ef it wuz set in di'mon's! Nary foldin'-bed fer me! I ain't goin' to start fer glory in a rabbit-trap!" says she. "When the time comes I'll be ready an' a-waitin'; but ez yet, I shan't go to sleep a-thinkin' that I've got the triggers set." Well, sir, shore as yo''re a-livin', after all thet Sary said, 'Fore we started home that evenin' she hed bought a foldin'-bed; An' she's put it in the parlor, where it adds a heap o' style; An' we're sleepin' in the settin'-room at present fer a while. [Pg 194]Sary still maintains it's han'some, "an' them city folks'll see That we're posted on the fashions when they visit us," says she; But it plagues her some to tell her, ef it ain't no other use, We can set it fer the golf-lynx ef he ever sh'u'd get loose. Albert Bigelow Paine. |
Far, oh, far is the Mango island, Wallace Irwin. |
O reverend sir, I do declare Frances Miriam Whitcher. [Pg 196] |
She stood beneath the mistletoe George Francis Shults. |
It was a Moorish maiden was sitting by a well, William E. Aytoun. [Pg 198] |
"You must give back," her mother said, Walter Savage Landor. [Pg 199] |
There once was a Shah had a second son Clinton Scollard. [Pg 200] |
There was once a little man, and his rod and line he took, Frederic E. Weatherly. |
Oh, what's the way to Arcady, H. C. Bunner. [Pg 204] |
Oh, the days were ever shiny Henry S. Leigh. [Pg 205] |
She flung the parlour window wide Frederick Langbridge. [Pg 206] |
I
If you become a nun, dear, II
If you become a nun, dear, Leigh Hunt. |
I love thee, Mary, and thou lovest me— Unknown. |
I sat one night beside a blue-eyed girl— Unknown. |
Lanty was in love, you see, Samuel Lover. |
Her heart she locked fast in her breast, Ellis Parker Butler. |
We climbed to the top of Goat Point hill, H. H. Porter. |
Beauties, have ye seen this toy, Ben Jonson. |
I shall not ask Jean Jacques Rousseau MORAL
Misses, the tale that I relate William Cowper. [Pg 214] |
Do you know why the rabbits are caught in the snare H. P. Stevens. |
I
'Twas on a windy night, II
Oh! list to what I say, III
I've got a pig and a sow, IV
I've got an acre of ground, V
You've got a charming eye, VI
For a wife till death Father Prout. |
I hae laid a herring in saut— James Tytler. |
Quoth John to Joan, will thou have me; Unknown. [Pg 218] |
Out upon it, I have loved Sir John Suckling. |
I lately lived in quiet case, James Hogg. [Pg 220] |
Knitting is the maid o' the kitchen, Milly, John Vance Cheney. |
Lady mine, most fair thou art H. E. Clarke. |
In the "foursome" some would fain ENVOY
Comrades all who golfing go, Clinton Scollard. |
Some poets sing of sweethearts dead, ENVOI
Sweetheart, why foolish fears betray? Arthur Grissom. [Pg 224] |
The gallows in my garden, people say, ENVOI
Prince, I can hear the trump of Germinal, G. K. Chesterton. |
Superintendent wuz Flannigan;
Wan da-ay, on the siction av Finnigin, S. W. Gillinan. |
Potiphar Gubbins, C. E., Rudyard Kipling. |
From the madding crowd they stand apart,
Long they worshiped; but no one broke James Jeffrey Roche. [Pg 229] |
Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn, Edwin Arlington Robinson. |
Sez Corporal Madden to Private McFadden: Robert W. Chambers. [Pg 232] |
I
Sez Alderman Grady II
Sez Alderman Grady III
Sez Alderman Grady IV
Sez Alderman Grady V
Sez Alderman Grady Robert W. Chambers. [Pg 235] |
I cannot tell you how I love Bert Leston Taylor. [Pg 236] |
It may be so—perhaps thou hast Oliver Wendell Holmes. [Pg 238] |
If all the trees in all the woods were men, Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
Little I ask; my wants are few; Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
Baby's brain is tired of thinking James Jeffrey Roche. [Pg 241] |
Of all the wimming doubly blest Wallace Irwin. |
Why should you swear I am forsworn, Richard Lovelace. [Pg 242] |
Zack Bumstead useter flosserfize Sam Walter Foss. [Pg 244] |
I
He was the Chairman of the Guild II
She was Grand Worthy Prophetess III
Once to a crowded social fête Sam Walter Foss. [Pg 246] |
We've lived for forty years, dear wife, Sam Walter Foss. [Pg 247] |
Wisely a woman prefers to a lover a man who neglects her. This one may love her some day; some day the lover will not. There are three species of creatures who when they seem coming are going, When they seem going they come: Diplomats, women, and crabs. As the meek beasts in the Garden came flocking for Adam to name them, Men for a title to-day crawl to the feet of a king. What is a first love worth except to prepare for a second? What does the second love bring? Only regret for the first. John Hay. |
De Hen-roost Man he'll preach about Paul, Ruth McEnery Stuart. |
Charm is a woman's strongest arm; Alice Duer Miller. |
A man said to the universe, Stephen Crane. |
If all the harm that women have done [Pg 249] |
The fable which I now present, Tomaso de Yriarte. |
Friend of Humanity
"Needy Knife-grinder! whither are you going? Knife-grinder
"Story! God bless you! I have none to tell, sir, Friend of Humanity
"I give thee sixpence! I will see thee damn'd first— |
[Kicks the Knife-grinder, overturns his wheel, and exit in a transport of Republican enthusiasm and universal philanthropy.]
George Canning.
Saint Anthony at church Abraham á Sancta-Clara. |
It was a summer's evening; Robert Southey. |
Two honest tradesmen meeting in the Strand, John Byrom. [Pg 256] |
Roll on, thou ball, roll on! W. S. Gilbert. |
The Ballyshannon foundered off the coast of Cariboo, W. S. Gilbert. [Pg 260] |
A supercilious nabob of the East— Selleck Osborn. |
Thou shalt have one God only, who Arthur Hugh Clough. [Pg 262] |
Dear Thomas, didst thou never pop Matthew Prior. |
I sent my love a parcel George R. Sims. [Pg 264] |
A friend of mine was married to a scold, Unknown. [Pg 265] |
In London I never know what I'd be at, Captain C. Morris. |
In a Devonshire lane as I trotted along John Marriott. |
Delmonico's is where he dines H. C. Dodge. |
If a man could live a thousand years, H. C. Dodge. |
One evening while reclining Parmenas Mix. |
Dear mother, dear mother, the Church is cold; William Blake. |
A knight and a lady once met in a grove Reginald Heber. [Pg 271] |
For his religion it was fit Samuel Butler. |
O thou wha in the heavens dost dwell, Robert Burns. |
There was a negro preacher, I have heard, Unknown. |
I'll sing you a song, not very long, F. C. Burnand. |
When these things following be done to our intent, Unknown. |
What motley cares Corilla's mind perplex, Richard Brinsley Sheridan. [Pg 279] |
I
Lest it may more quarrels breed, II
By disputing, I will never, III
When a paradox you stick to, IV
When I talk and you are heedless, V
When your speeches are absurd, VI
When you furious argue wrong, VII
Not a jest or humorous story VIII
Never more will I suppose, IX
You no more at me shall fret, X
You shall never hear me thunder, XI
Show your poverty of spirit, XII
Never will I give advice, Dean Swift. |
In a church which is furnish'd with mullion and gable, Edmund Yates. |
A brow austere, a circumspective eye. Mark Lemon. [Pg 281] |
"Scorn not the sonnet," though its strength be sapped, Russell Hilliard Loines. |
A Hindoo died—a happy thing to do George Birdseye. [Pg 282] |
I am a friar of orders gray, John O'Keefe. |
There was (not certain when) a certain preacher Sir John Harrington. [Pg 283] |
What! not know our Clean Clara? W. B. Rands. |
Little Penelope Socrates, Unknown. |
The frugal crone, whom praying priests attend, Alexander Pope. |
What, he on whom our voices unanimously ran, Robert Browning. |
A shabby fellow chanced one day to meet John Wolcot. |
A country curate, visiting his flock, Unknown. |
We rode the tawny Texan hills, Joaquin Miller. |
The mountain and the squirrel Ralph Waldo Emerson. [Pg 291] |
Der Kaiser of dis Faterland Rodney Blake. [Pg 292] |
Gineral B. is a sensible man; James Russell Lowell. [Pg 294] |
I du believe in Freedom's cause, James Russell Lowell. [Pg 297] |
A fellow in a market town, John Wolcot. |
From his brimstone bed at break of day Robert Southey. |
Paddy McCabe was dying one day, Samuel Lover. [Pg 309] |
"Who stuffed that white owl?" No one spoke in the shop, James Thomas Fields. |
What will we do when the good days come— Robert J. Burdette. |
Given a roof, and a taste for rations, Mary Mapes Dodge. |
The woodchuck told it all about. L. J. Bridgman. |
You may notch it on de palin's as a mighty resky plan Unknown. |
The sun was setting, and vespers done; Frederick E. Weatherly. |
Just take a trifling handful, O philosopher, Mortimer Collins. |
Life and the Universe show spontaneity: Mortimer Collins. |
Exquisite wines and comestibles, Mortimer Collins. |
"... Sing, heavenly Muse!
Happy the man, who, void of cares and strife, John Philips. |
What asks the Bard? He prays for nought A. D. Godley. [Pg 322] |
A tailor, a man of an upright dealing, Sir John Harrington. [Pg 323] |
Who money has, well wages the campaign; Jehan du Pontalais. [Pg 324] |
RHYME FOR A GEOLOGICAL BABY
Trilobite, Grapholite, Nautilus pie; RHYME FOR ASTRONOMICAL BABY
Bye Baby Bunting, RHYME FOR BOTANICAL BABY
Little bo-peepals RHYME FOR A CHEMICAL BABY
Oh, sing a song of phosphates, Rev. Joseph Cook. [Pg 325] |
You Wi'yum, cum 'ere, suh, dis minute. Wut dat you got under dat box? I don't want no foolin'—you hear me? Wut you say? Ain't nu'h'n but rocks? 'Peahs ter me you's owdashus perticler. S'posin' dey's uv a new kine. I'll des take a look at dem rocks. Hi yi! der you think dat I's bline? I calls dat a plain water-million, you scamp, en I knows whah it growed; It come fum de Jimmerson cawn fiel', dah on ter side er de road. You stole it, you rascal—you stole it! I watched you fum down in de lot. En time I gits th'ough wid you, nigger, you won't eb'n be a grease spot! I'll fix you. Mirandy! Mirandy! go cut me a hick'ry—make 'ase! En cut me de toughes' en keenes' you c'n fine anywhah on de place. I'll larn you, Mr. Wi'yum Joe Vetters, ter steal en ter lie, you young sinner, Disgracin' yo' ole Christian mammy, en makin' her leave cookin' dinner! Now ain't you ashamed er yo'se'f, suh? I is. I's 'shamed you's my son! En de holy accorjun angel he's 'shamed er wut you has done; En he's tuk it down up yander in coal-black, blood-red letters— "One water-million stoled by Wi'yum Josephus Vetters." En wut you s'posin' Brer Bascom, yo' teacher at Sunday school, 'Ud say ef he knowed how you's broke de good Lawd's Gol'n Rule? [Pg 326]Boy, whah's de raisin' I give you? Is you boun' fuh ter be a black villiun? I's s'prised dat a chile er yo' mammy 'ud steal any man's water-million. En I's now gwiner cut it right open, en you shain't have narry bite, Fuh a boy who'll steal water-millions—en dat in de day's broad light— Ain't—Lawdy! it's GREEN! Mirandy; Mi-ran-dy! come on wi' dat switch! Well, stealin' a g-r-e-e-n water-million! who ever heered tell er des sich? Cain't tell w'en dey's ripe? W'y, you thump 'um, en w'en dey go pank dey is green; But when dey go punk, now you mine me, dey's ripe—en dat's des wut I mean. En nex' time you hook water-millions—you heered me, you ign'ant young hunk, Ef you don't want a lickin' all over, be sho dat dey allers go "punk"! Harrison Robertson. |
John Grumlie swore by the light o' the moon Allan Cunningham. |
Lady, I loved you all last year, Winthrop Mackworth Praed. [Pg 330] |
Go and catch a falling star, John Donne. |
It was an hairy oubit, sae proud he crept alang; Charles Kingsley. |
He lived in a cave by the seas, ENVOY
Max, proudly your Aryans pose, Andrew Lang. |
How old may Phillis be, you ask, Matthew Prior. [Pg 334] |
Good Luck is the gayest of all gay girls; John Hay. |
"Gimme my scarlet tie," Barry Pain. |
When the landlord wants the rent A. D. Godley. |
They spoke of Progress spiring round, ENVOI
Prince, Bayard would have smashed his sword G. K. Chesterton. |
In the age that was golden, the halcyon time, Newton Mackintosh. [Pg 339] |
You prefer a buffoon to a scholar, Charles Mackay. |
It once might have been, once only: Robert Browning. [Pg 342] |
My pipe is lit, my grog is mixed, Thomas Hood. |
I know when milk does flies contain; ENVOY
Prince, I know all things 'neath the sky, François Villon. |
How uneasy is his life, Charles Cotton. [Pg 345] |
If I were thine, I'd fail not of endeavour Madeline Bridges. |
Though I met her in the summer, when one's heart lies round at ease, As it were in tennis costume, and a man's not hard to please, Yet I think that any season to have met her was to love, While her tones, unspoiled, unstudied, had the softness of the dove. At request she read us poems in a nook among the pines, And her artless voice lent music to the least melodious lines; [Pg 346]Though she lowered her shadowing lashes, in an earnest reader's wise, Yet we caught blue, gracious glimpses of the heavens which were her eyes. As in paradise I listened—ah, I did not understand That a little cloud, no larger than the average human hand, Might, as stated oft in fiction, spread into a sable pall, When she said that she should study Elocution in the fall! I admit her earliest efforts were not in the Ercles vein; She began with "Little Maaybel, with her faayce against the payne And the beacon-light a-t-r-r-remble"—which, although it made me wince, Is a thing of cheerful nature to the things she's rendered since. Having heard the Soulful Quiver, she acquired the Melting Mo-o-an, And the way she gave "Young Grayhead" would have liquefied a stone. Then the Sanguinary Tragic did her energies employ, And she tore my taste to tatters when she slew "The Polish Boy." It's not pleasant for a fellow when the jewel of his soul Wades through slaughter on the carpet, while her orbs in frenzy roll; What was I that I should murmur? Yet it gave me grievous pain That she rose in social gatherings, and Searched among the Slain. I was forced to look upon her in my desperation dumb, Knowing well that when her awful opportunity was come She would give us battle, murder, sudden death at very least, As a skeleton of warning, and a blight upon the feast. [Pg 347]Once, ah! once I fell a-dreaming; some one played a polonaise I associated strongly with those happier August days; And I mused, "I'll speak this evening," recent pangs forgotten quite— Sudden shrilled a scream of anguish: "Curfew shall not ring to-night!" Ah, that sound was as a curfew, quenching rosy, warm romance— Were it safe to wed a woman one so oft would wish in France? Oh, as she "cul-limbed" that ladder, swift my mounting hope came down, I am still a single cynic; she is still Cassandra Brown! Helen Gray Cone. |
In letters large upon the frame,
That night as in his atelier R. K. Munkittrick. |
"Ah! si la jeunesse savait,—si la vieillesse pouvait!" Fitz Hugh Ludlow. [Pg 350] |
I gaed to spend a week in Fife— George Outram. |
What poor short-sighted worms we be; Frances M. Whitcher. |
Dosn't thou 'ear my 'erse's legs, as they canters awaäy? Lord Tennyson. [Pg 357] |
Life is a gift that most of us hold dear: Unknown. |
Jim Bowker, he said, ef he'd had a fair show, Sam Walter Foss. |
Nothing to do but work, Ben King. |
My coachman, in the moonlight there, James Russell Lowell. |
History, and nature, too, repeat themselves, they say; Harry B. Smith. [Pg 362] |
Men, dying, make their wills, but wives John G. Saxe. |
You wrote a line too much, my sage, James Kenneth Stephen. |
Ah! Matt, old age has brought to me James Kenneth Stephen. |
You beat your pate, and fancy wit will come: Alexander Pope. [Pg 363] |
Sir, I admit your general rule, Alexander Pope. |
Jem writes his verses with more speed Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
What? rise again with all one's bones, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
In Köln, a town of monks and bones, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. [Pg 364] |
Your poem must eternal be, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
Swans sing before they die:—'twere no bad thing, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
Sly Beelzebub took all occasions Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
If all be true that I do think, Dr. Henry Aldrich. [Pg 365] |
All smatterers are more brisk and pert Samuel Butler. |
Hypocrisy will serve as well Samuel Butler. |
When men a dangerous disease did 'scape, Ben Jonson. |
I sent for Ratcliffe; was so ill, Matthew Prior. [Pg 366] |
Lord Erskine, at women presuming to rail, Richard Brinsley Sheridan. |
The honey-moon is very strange. Walter Savage Landor. |
When Dido found Æneas would not come, Richard Parson. |
A lovely young lady I mourn in my rhymes: George John Cayley. [Pg 367] |
"Come, come," said Tom's father, "at your time of life, Thomas Moore. |
Between Adam and me the great difference is, Thomas Moore. |
Some ladies now make pretty songs, Frederick Locker-Lampson. |
He cannot be complete in aught Frederick Locker-Lampson. [Pg 368] |
I cannot praise the Doctor's eyes; George Outram. |
Here lies my wife: here let her lie! John Dryden. |
In all thy humors, whether grave or mellow, Joseph Addison. |
"God bless the King! God bless the faith's defender! John Byrom. [Pg 369] |
"Immortal Newton never spoke Lord Chesterfield. |
"Had Cain been Scot, God would have changed his doom; Cleveland. |
See yonder goes old Mendax, telling lies Lessing. |
So slowly you walk, and so quickly you eat, Lessing. [Pg 370] |
Quest.—Why is a Pump like Viscount Castlereagh? Thomas Moore. |
Of all the men one meets about, Thomas Moore. |
While Butler, needy wretch, was yet alive, Rev. Samuel Wesley. [Pg 371] |
Which is of greater value, prythee, say, Unknown. [Pg 372] |
In moss-prankt dells which the sunbeams flatter Charles Stuart Calverley. [Pg 374] |
At morning's call Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
A Russian sailed over the blue Black Sea Robert J. Burdette. |
Calm and implacable, Anthony C. Deane. |
Come mighty Must! W. S. Gilbert. [Pg 377] |
I am a hearthrug— Unknown. |
From Arranmore the weary miles I've come; Arthur Guiterman. |
[1] A Shrawn is a pure Gaelic noise, something like a groan, more like a shriek, and most like a sigh of longing.
[2] Eire was daughter of Carne, King of Connaught. Her lover, Murdh of the Open Hand, was captured by Greatcoat Mackintosh, King of Ulster, on the plain of Carrisbool, and made into soup. Eire's grief on this sad occasion has become proverbial.
[3] Garnim was second cousin to Manannan MacLir. His sons were always sad about something. There were twenty-two of them, and they were all unfortunate in love at the same time, just like a chorus at the opera. "Blitherin' their drool" is about the same as "dreeing their weird."
[4] The Shee (or "Sidhe," as I should properly spell it if you were not so ignorant) were, as everybody knows, the regular, stand-pat, organization fairies of Erin. The Crowdie was their annual convention, at which they made melancholy sounds. The Itt and Himm were the irregular, or insurgent, fairies. They never got any offices or patronage. See MacAlester, Polity of the Sidhe of West Meath, page 985.
[5] The Barryhoo is an ancient Celtic bird about the size of a Mavis, with lavender eyes and a black-crape tail. It continually mourns its mate (Barrywhich, feminine form), which has an hereditary predisposition to an early and tragic demise and invariably dies first.
[6] Magraw, a Gaelic term of endearment, often heard on the baseball fields of Donnybrook.
[7] These last six words are all that tradition has preserved of the original incantation by means of which Irish rats were rhymed to death. Thereby hangs a good Celtic tale, which I should be glad to tell you in this note; but the publishers say that being prosed to death is as bad as being rhymed to death, and that the readers won't stand for any more.
Lilies, lilies, white lilies and yellow— Lilies, lilies, purple lilies and golden— Calla lilies, tiger lilies, lilies of the valley— Lilies, lilies, lilies— Bulb, bud and blossom— What made them lilies? If they were not lilies they would have to be something else, would they not? What was it that made them lilies instead of making them violets or roses or geraniums or petunias? What was it that made you yourself and me myself? What? Alas! I do not know! Don Marquis. |
No usual words can bear the woe I feel, |
The thing we like about that poem is its recognition of all the sorrow there is in the universe ... its unflinching recognition, we might say, if we were not afraid of praising our own work too highly ... combined with its happy ending.
One feels, upon reading it, that, although everything everywhere is very sad, and all wrong, one has only to have patience and after a while everything everywhere will be quite right and very sweet.
No matter how interested one may be in these literary problems, one must cease discussing them at times or one will be late to one's meals.
Don Marquis.
I am numb from world-pain— I sway most violently as the thoughts course through me, And athwart me, And up and down me— Thoughts of cosmic matters, Of the mergings of worlds within worlds, [Pg 381]And unutterabilities And room-rent, And other tremendously alarming phenomena, Which stab me, Rip me most outrageously; (Without a semblance, mind you, of respect for the Hague Convention's rules governing soul-slitting.) Aye, as with the poniard of the Finite pricking the rainbow-bubble of the Infinite! (Some figure, that!) (Some little rush of syllables, that!)— And make me—(are you still whirling at my coat-tails, reader?) Make me—ahem, where was I?—oh, yes—make me, In a sudden, overwhelming gust of soul-shattering rebellion, Fall flat on my face! Thomas R. Ybarra. |
Oh! young Lochinvar has come out of the West, Unknown. |
I love my lady with a deep purple love; Unknown. |
Or ever a lick of Art was done, Bert Leston Taylor. |
O mickle yeuks the keckle doup, Unknown. |
Oh, I want to win me hame James Jeffrey Roche. |
Wan from the wild and woful West— Charles Battell Loomis. [Pg 387] |
I BY H—-Y W. L-NGF——W
Back in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarch II BY J-HN GR—NL—F WH—T—R
My Native Land, thy Puritanic stock III BY DR. OL-V-R W-ND-L H-LMES
A diagnosis of our hist'ry proves IV BY R-LPH W-LDO EM-R—N
Source immaterial of material naught, V BY W-LL—M C-LL-N B-Y-NT
The sun sinks softly to his Ev'ning Post, VI BY N. P. W-LL-IS
One hue of our Flag is taken VII BY TH-M—S B-IL-Y ALD—CH
The little brown squirrel hops in the corn, Robert H. Newell. |
We love thee, Ann Maria Smith, Robert H. Newell. |
[Spoken in the character of Nancy Lake, a girl eight years of age, who is drawn upon the stage in a child's chaise by Samuel Hughes, her uncle's porter.]
My brother Jack was nine in May, James Smith. |
[1] "The author does not, in this instance, attempt to copy any of the higher attributes of Mr. Wordsworth's poetry; but has succeeded perfectly in the imitation of his mawkish affectations of childish simplicity and nursery stammering. We hope it will make him ashamed of his Alice Fell, and the greater part of his last volumes—of which it is by no means a parody, but a very fair, and indeed we think a flattering, imitation."—Edinburg Review.
Side by side in the crowded streets, Bayard Taylor. [Pg 394] |
A young man once was sitting (Change to Minor)
He turned to her in sorrow and CHORUS
Never forget your father, (Change to Minor)
The waitress she wept bitterly CHORUS
Never forget your father, Franklin P. Adams. |
Matilda Maud Mackenzie frankly hadn't any chin, THE MORAL
In one's language one conservative should be; Guy Wetmore Carryl. |
I
I would that all men my hard case might know; II
One night and one day have I wept my woe; III
Miss Amabel Jones is musical, and so IV
Yea! she forgets the arm was wont to go V
Thou, for whose fear the figurative crow ENVOY
Boarders! the worst I have not told to ye: H. C. Bunner. |
"Tout aux tavernes et aux fiells"
Suppose you screeve? or go cheap-jack? THE MORAL
It's up the spout and Charley Wag William Ernest Henley. |
Inscribed to an Intense Poet
I. RONDEAU
"O crikey, Bill!" she ses to me, she ses. II. VILLANELLE
Now ain't they utterly too-too III. BALLADE
I often does a quiet read ENVOY
I'm on for any Art that's 'Igh; William Ernest Henley. |
Whereas, on certain boughs and sprays Henry Howard Brownell. |
Oh! I have been North, and I have been South, and the East hath seen me pass, And the West hath cradled me on her breast, that is circled round with brass, And the world hath laugh'd at me, and I have laugh'd at the world alone, With a loud hee-haw till my hard-work'd jaw is stiff as a dead man's bone! Oh! I have been up and I have been down and over the sounding sea, And the sea-birds cried as they dropp'd and died at the terrible sight of me, For my head was bound with a star, and crown'd with the fire of utmost hell, And I made this song with a brazen tongue and a more than fiendish yell: "Oh! curse you all, for the sake of men who have liv'd and died for spite, And be doubly curst for the dark ye make where there ought to be but light, [Pg 404]And be trebly curst by the deadly spell of a woman's lasting hate,— And drop ye down to the mouth of hell who would climb to the Golden Gate!" Then the world grew green, and grim and grey at the horrible noise I made, And held up its hands in a pious way when I call'd a spade a spade; But I cared no whit for the blame of it, and nothing at all for its praise, And the whole consign'd with a tranquil mind to a sempiternal blaze! All this have I sped, and have brought me back to work at the set of sun, And I set my seal to the thoughts I feel in the twilight one by one, For I speak but sooth in the name of Truth when I write such things as these; And the whole I send to a critical friend who is learnèd in Kiplingese! Unknown. |
What lightning shall light it? What thunder shall tell it? Barry Pain. |
The hale John Sprat—oft called for shortness, Jack— Unknown. |
And this reft house is that the which he built, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
I lay i' the bosom of the sun, Bayard Taylor. |
To yow, my Purse, and to noon other wighte, Godfrey Turner. |
Power to thine elbow, thou newest of sciences, Herman C. Merivale. |
DISENCHANTMENT
My Love has sicklied unto Loath, ABASEMENT
With matted head a-dabble in the dust, STANZA WRITTEN IN DEPRESSION NEAR DULWICH
The lark soars up in the air; TO MY LADY
Twine, lanken fingers, lily-lithe, THE MONSTER
Uprears the monster now his slobberous head, A TRUMPET BLAST
Pale Patricians, sunk in self-indulgence, F. Anstey. |
'Tis midnight, and the moonbeam sleeps
That night the corse was found. Henry S. Leigh. |
Lady Clara Vere de Vere! Thomas Hood, Jr. [Pg 413] |
I count it true which sages teach— Thomas Hood, Jr. |
I cannot sing the old songs, Robert J. Burdette. |
Being an Ode in further "Contribution to the Song of French History," dedicated, without malice or permission to Mr. George Meredith.
I
Rooster her sign, II
Mark where her Equatorial Pioneer III
Infuriate she kicked against Imperial fact; IV
More pungent yet the esoteric pain V
Behold her, pranked with spurs for bloody sport, Owen Seaman. |
Spontaneous Us! O my Camarados! I have no delicatesse as a diplomat, but I go blind on Libertad! Give me the flap-flap of the soaring Eagle's pinions! Give me the tail of the British lion tied in a knot inextricable, not to be solved anyhow! Give me a standing army (I say "give me," because just at present we want one badly, armies being often useful in time of war). I see our superb fleet (I take it that we are to have a superb fleet built almost immediately); I observe the crews prospectively; they are constituted of various nationalities, not necessarily American; I see them sling the slug and chew the plug; I hear the drum begin to hum; Both the above rhymes are purely accidental, and contrary to my principles. We shall wipe the floor of the mill-pond with the scalps of able-bodied British tars! I see Professor Edison about to arrange for us a torpedo-hose on wheels, likewise an infernal electro-semaphore; I see Henry Irving dead sick and declining to play Corporal Brewster; Cornell, I yell! I yell Cornell! I note the Manhattan boss leaving his dry-goods store and investing in a small Gatling-gun and a ten-cent banner; I further note the Identity evolved out of forty-four spacious and thoughtful States; I note Canada as shortly to be merged in that Identity; similarly Van Diemen's Land, Gibraltar, and Stratford-on-Avon; Briefly, I see creation whipped! O ye Colonels! I am with you (I too am a Colonel and on the pension-list); I drink to the lot of you; to Colonels Cleveland, Hitt, Vanderbilt, Chauncey M. Depew, O'Donovan Rossa, and the late Colonel Monroe; I drink an egg-flip, a morning-caress, an eye-opener, a maiden-bosom, a vermuth-cocktail, three sherry-cobblers, and a gin-sling! Good old Eagle! Owen Seaman. |
When as to shoot my Julia goes, Owen Seaman. |
"Farewell!" Another gloomy word Bert Leston Taylor. |
Here is the tale—and you must make the most of it! Now Jack looked up—it was time to sup, and the bucket was yet to fill, And Jack looked round for a space and frowned, then beckoned his sister Jill, And twice he pulled his sister's hair, and thrice he smote her side; "Ha' done, ha' done with your impudent fun—ha' done with your games!" she cried; "You have made mud-pies of a marvellous size—finger and face are black, You have trodden the Way of the Mire and Clay—now up and wash you, Jack! Or else, or ever we reach our home, there waiteth an angry dame— Well you know the weight of her blow—the supperless open shame! Wash, if you will, on yonder hill—wash, if you will, at the spring,— Or keep your dirt, to your certain hurt, and an imminent walloping!" "You must wash—you must scrub—you must scrape!" growled Jack, "you must traffic with cans and pails, Nor keep the spoil of the good brown soil in the rim of your finger-nails! [Pg 422]The morning path you must tread to your bath—you must wash ere the night descends, And all for the cause of conventional laws and the soap-makers' dividends! But if 'tis sooth that our meal in truth depends on our washing, Jill, By the sacred right of our appetite—haste—haste to the top of the hill!" They have trodden the Way of the Mire and Clay, they have toiled and travelled far, They have climbed to the brow of the hill-top now, where the bubbling fountains are, They have taken the bucket and filled it up—yea, filled it up to the brim; But Jack he sneered at his sister Jill, and Jill she jeered at him: "What, blown already!" Jack cried out (and his was a biting mirth!) "You boast indeed of your wonderful speed—but what is the boasting worth? Now, if you can run as the antelope runs and if you can turn like a hare, Come, race me, Jill, to the foot of the hill—and prove your boasting fair!" "Race? What is a race" (and a mocking face had Jill as she spake the word) "Unless for a prize the runner tries? The truth indeed ye heard, For I can run as the antelope runs, and I can turn like a hare:— The first one down wins half-a-crown—and I will race you there!" "Yea, if for the lesson that you will learn (the lesson of humbled pride) The price you fix at two-and-six, it shall not be denied; Come, take your stand at my right hand, for here is the mark we toe: Now, are you ready, and are you steady? Gird up your petticoats! Go!" [Pg 423]And Jill she ran like a winging bolt, a bolt from the bow released, But Jack like a stream of the lightning gleam, with its pathway duly greased; He ran down hill in front of Jill like a summer-lightning flash— Till he suddenly tripped on a stone, or slipped, and fell to the earth with a crash. Then straight did rise on his wondering eyes the constellations fair, Arcturus and the Pleiades, the Greater and Lesser Bear, The swirling rain of a comet's train he saw, as he swiftly fell— And Jill came tumbling after him with a loud triumphant yell: "You have won, you have won, the race is done! And as for the wager laid— You have fallen down with a broken crown—the half-crown debt is paid!" They have taken Jack to the room at the back where the family medicines are, And he lies in bed with a broken head in a halo of vinegar; While, in that Jill had laughed her fill as her brother fell to earth, She had felt the sting of a walloping—she hath paid the price of her mirth! Here is the tale—and now you have the whole of it, Here is the story—well and wisely planned, Beauty—Duty—these make up the soul of it— But, ah, my little readers, will you mark and understand? Anthony C. Deane. |
The skies they were ashen and sober, Bret Harte. |
As I was walkin' the jungle round, a-killin' of tigers an' time; I seed a kind of an author man a writin' a rousin' rhyme; 'E was writin' a mile a minute an' more, an' I sez to 'im, "'Oo are you?" Sez 'e, "I'm a poet—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor, too!" An 'is poem began in Ispahan an' ended in Kalamazoo, It 'ad army in it, an' navy in it, an' jungle sprinkled through, For 'e was a poet—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor, too! An' after, I met 'im all over the world, a doin' of things a host; 'E 'ad one foot planted in Burmah, an' one on the Gloucester coast; 'Es 'alf a sailor an' 'alf a whaler, 'e's captain, cook and crew, But most a poet—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor too! 'E's often Scot an' 'e's often not, but 'is work is never through For 'e laughs at blame, an' 'e writes for fame, an' a bit for revenoo,— Bein' a poet—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor too! 'E'll take you up to the Artic zone, 'e'll take you down to the Nile, 'E'll give you a barrack ballad in the Tommy Atkins style, Or 'e'll sing you a Dipsy Chantey, as the bloomin' bo'suns do, For 'e is a poet—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor too. An' there isn't no room for others, an' there's nothin' left to do; [Pg 427]'E 'as sailed the main from the 'Orn to Spain, 'e 'as tramped the jungle through, An' written up all there is to write—soldier an' sailor, too! There are manners an' manners of writin', but 'is is the proper way, An' it ain't so hard to be a bard if you'll imitate Rudyard K.; But sea an' shore an' peace an' war, an' everything else in view— 'E 'as gobbled the lot!—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor, too. 'E's not content with 'is Indian 'ome, 'e's looking for regions new, In another year 'e'll ave swept 'em clear, an' what'll the rest of us do? 'E's crowdin' us out!—'er majesty's poet—soldier an' sailor too! Guy Wetmore Carryl. |
Being a lyric translation of Heine's "Du bist wie eine Blume," as it is usually done.
Thou art like unto a Flower, Franklin P. Adams. |
Rain on the face of the sea, Rudyard Kipling. |
I, Angelo, obese, black-garmented, Bayard Taylor. |
In the lonesome latter years Bayard Taylor. |
Everywhere, everywhere, following me; Taking me by the buttonhole, pulling off my boots, hustling me with the elbows; Sitting down with me to clams and the chowder-kettle; [Pg 431]Plunging naked at my side into the sleek, irascible surges; Soothing me with the strain that I neither permit nor prohibit; Flocking this way and that, reverent, eager, orotund, irrepressible; Denser than sycamore leaves when the north-winds are scouring Paumanok; What can I do to restrain them? Nothing, verily nothing, Everywhere, everywhere, crying aloud for me; Crying, I hear; and I satisfy them out of my nature; And he that comes at the end of the feast shall find something over. Whatever they want I give; though it be something else, they shall have it. Drunkard, leper, Tammanyite, small-pox and cholera patient, shoddy and codfish millionnaire, And the beautiful young men, and the beautiful young women, all the same, Crowding, hundreds of thousands, cosmical multitudes, Buss me and hang on my hips and lean up to my shoulders, Everywhere listening to my yawp and glad whenever they hear it; Everywhere saying, say it, Walt, we believe it: Everywhere, everywhere. Bayard Taylor. |
When I had firmly answered "No," James Kenneth Stephen. |
Who am I? I have been reading Walt Whitman, and know not whether he be me, or me he;— Or otherwise! Oh, blue skies! oh, rugged mountains! oh, mighty, rolling Niagara! O, chaos and everlasting bosh! I am a poet; I swear it! If you do not believe it you are a dolt, a fool, an idiot! Milton, Shakespere, Dante, Tommy Moore, Pope, never, but Byron, too, perhaps, and last, not least, Me, and the Poet Close. We send our resonance echoing down the adamantine cañons of the future! We live forever! The worms who criticise us (asses!) laugh, scoff, jeer, and babble—die! Serve them right. What is the difference between Judy, the pride of Fleet Street, the glory of Shoe Lane, and Walt Whitman? Start not! 'Tis no end of a minstrel show who perpends this query; 'Tis no brain-racking puzzle from an inner page of the Family Herald, No charade, acrostic (double or single), conundrum, riddle, rebus, anagram, or other guess-work. I answer thus: We both write truths—great, stern, solemn, unquenchable truths—couched in more or less ridiculous language. [Pg 435]I, as a rule use rhyme, he does not; therefore, I am his Superior (which is also a lake in his great and glorious country). I scorn, with the unutterable scorn of the despiser of pettiness, to take a mean advantage of him. He writes, he sells, he is read (more or less); why then should I rack my brains and my rhyming dictionary? I will see the public hanged first! I sing of America, of the United States, of the stars and stripes of Oskhosh, of Kalamazoo, and of Salt Lake City. I sing of the railroad cars, of the hotels, of the breakfasts, the lunches, the dinners, and the suppers; Of the soup, the fish, the entrées, the joints, the game, the puddings and the ice-cream. I sing all—I eat all—I sing in turn of Dr. Bluffem's Anti-bilious Pills. No subject is too small, too insignificant, for Nature's poet. I sing of the cocktail, a new song for every cocktail, hundreds of songs, hundreds of cocktails. It is a great and a glorious land! The Mississippi, the Missouri, and a million other torrents roll their waters to the ocean. It is a great and glorious land! The Alleghanies, the Catskills, the Rockies (see atlas for other mountain ranges too numerous to mention) pierce the clouds! And the greatest and most glorious product of this great and glorious land is Walt Whitman; This must be so, for he says it himself. There is but one greater than he between the rising and the setting sun. There is but one before whom he meekly bows his humbled head. Oh, great and glorious land, teeming producer of all things, creator of Niagara, and inventor of Walt Whitman, Erase your national advertisements of liver pads and cures for rheumatism from your public monuments, and inscribe thereon in letters of gold the name Judy. Unknown. [Pg 436] |
O cool in the summer is salad, Mortimer Collins. |
If life were never bitter, Mortimer Collins. |
'Twas gilbert. The kchesterton Harry Persons Taber. |
The town of Nice! the town of Nice! Herman C. Merivale. |
Long by the willow-trees MORAL
Hey diddle diddlety, W. M. Thackeray. |
In Ballades things always contrive to get lost, ENVOY
Poets, your readers have much to bear, Augustus M. Moore. [Pg 443] |
There's somewhat on my breast, father, Richard Harris Barham. [Pg 444] |
Good reader! if you e'er have seen, Thomas Moore. |
It ripen'd by the river banks, Frederick Locker-Lampson. [Pg 445] |
The jackals prowl, the serpents hiss Arthur Guiterman. |
If thou would'st stand on Etna's burning brow, Henry Cholmondeley-Pennell. |
Be brave, faint heart, Newton Mackintosh. |
Twas late, and the gay company was gone, N. P. Willis. |
The editor sat with his head in his hands Parmenas Mix. [Pg 449] |
Ah! why those piteous sounds of woe, Richard Harris Barham. [Pg 450] |
'Tis sweet at dewy eve to rove Unknown. |
His eye was stern and wild—his cheek was pale and cold as clay; Unknown. |
The sun is in the sky, mother, the flowers are springing fair, William E. Aytoun. [Pg 453] |
"Wherefore starts my bosom's lord? William E. Aytoun. |
Come hither, my heart's darling, William E. Aytoun. [Pg 456] |
Stiff are the warrior's muscles, Unknown. |
I have watch'd thee with rapture, and dwelt on thy charms, Unknown. |
Oh, solitude! thou wonder-working fay, Unknown. [Pg 458] |
One, who is not, we see; but one, whom we see not, is; Algernon Charles Swinburne. [Pg 459] |
From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through a notable nimbus of nebulous moonshine, Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flower that flickers with fear of the flies as they float, Are they looks of our lovers that lustrously lean from a marvel of mystic miraculous moonshine, These that we feel in the blood of our blushes that thicken and threaten with throbs through the throat? Thicken and thrill as a theatre thronged at appeal of an actor's appalled agitation, Fainter with fear of the fires of the future than pale with the promise of pride in the past; Flushed with the famishing fulness of fever that reddens with radiance of rathe recreation, Gaunt as the ghastliest of glimpses that gleam through the gloom of the gloaming when ghosts go aghast? Nay, for the nick of the tick of the time is a tremulous touch on the temples of terror, Strained as the sinews yet strenuous with strife of the dead who is dumb as the dust-heaps of death; Surely no soul is it, sweet as the spasm of erotic emotional exquisite error, Bathed in the balms of beatified bliss, beatific itself by beatitude's breath. Surely no spirit or sense of a soul that was soft to the spirit and soul of our senses Sweetens the stress of surprising suspicion that sobs in the semblance and sound of a sigh; Only this oracle opens Olympian, in mystical moods and triangular tenses,— "Life is the lust of a lamp for the light that is dark till the dawn of the day when we die." Mild is the mirk and monotonous music of memory, melodiously mute as it may be, While the hope in the heart of a hero is bruised by the breach of men's rapiers, resigned to the rod; Made meek as a mother whose bosom-beats bound with the bliss-bringing bulk of a balm-breathing baby, [Pg 460]As they grope through the grave-yard of creeds, under skies growing green at a groan for the grimness of God. Blank is the book of his bounty beholden of old, and its binding is blacker than bluer: Out of blue into black is the scheme of the skies, and their dews are the wine of the bloodshed of things: Till the darkling desire of delight shall be free as a fawn that is freed from the fangs that pursue her, Till the heart-beats of hell shall be hushed by a hymn from the hunt that has harried the kennel of kings. Algernon Charles Swinburne. |
I
Hi! Just you drop that! Stop, I say! II
For the sea's debt leaves wet the sand; III
I'm blest if I do. Sigh? be blowed! IV
Stowed, by Jove, right and tight, away. V
Sea sprinkles wrinkles, tinkles light VI
See, fore and aft, life's craft undone! VII
Not bright, at best, his jest to these VIII
Could God's rods bruise God's Jews? Their jowls IX
Well, I suppose God knows—I don't. X
One never should think good impossible. XI
But gold bells chime in time there, coined— XII
I rose with dawn, to pawn, no doubt, XIII
Such men lay traps, perhaps—and I'm Algernon Charles Swinburne. [Pg 463] |
We seek to know, and knowing seek; Cuthbert Bede. |
Poor Lucy Lake was overgrown, Newton Mackintosh. |
You see this pebble-stone? It's a thing I bought Charles Stuart Calverley. |
The auld wife sat at her ivied door, PART II
She sat with her hands 'neath her dimpled cheeks, Charles Stuart Calverley. [Pg 469] |
'Twas ever thus from childhood's hour! Charles Stuart Calverley. |
I walked and came upon a picket fence, Unknown. [Pg 471] |
Out of the clothes that cover me Edith Daniell. |
The Messed Damozel leaned out Charles Hanson Towne. |
Strange pie that is almost a passion, Richard Le Gallienne. |
In heaven a Spirit doth dwell Unknown. [Pg 474] |
"Why do you wear your hair like a man, |
"Look in my face. My name is Used-to-was; H. D. Traill. [Pg 476] |
Come into the Whenceness Which, Unknown. |
Scintillate, scintillate, globule orific, Unknown. |
Oh, Mary had a little Lamb, regarding whose cuticular Unknown. |
Slim feet than lilies tenderer,— Unknown. [Pg 479] |
There were two of us left in the berry-patch; Louis Untermeyer. |
Of all the mismated pairs ever created Louis Untermeyer. [Pg 482] |
He killed the noble Mudjokivis. Unknown. |
'Twas brussels, and the loos liège F. G. Hartswick. |
Gin a body meet a body J. C. Maxwell. [Pg 484] |
Ah Night! blind germ of days to be, Unknown. [Pg 485] |
"You are old, Father William," the young man said, Lewis Carroll. [Pg 486] |
1—(Macaulay, who made it)
Pour, varlet, pour the water, 2—(Tennyson, who took it hot)
I think that I am drawing to an end: 3—(Swinburne, who let it get cold)
As the sin that was sweet in the sinning 4—(Cowper, who thoroughly enjoyed it)
The cosy fire is bright and gay, 5—(Browning, who treated it allegorically)
Tut! Bah! We take as another case— 6—(Wordsworth, who gave it away)
"Come, little cottage girl, you seem 7—(Poe, who got excited over it)
Here's a mellow cup of tea, golden tea! 8—(Rossetti, who took six cups of it)
The lilies lie in my lady's bower 9—(Burns, who liked it adulterated)
Weel, gin ye speir, I'm no inclined, 10—(Walt Whitman, who didn't stay more than a minute)
One cup for myself-hood, Barry Pain. |
They stood on the bridge at midnight, Ben King. |
If I should die to-night Ben King. |
The day is done, and darkness Phœbe Cary. |
He dwelt among "Apartments let," Phœbe Cary. |
We were crowded in the cabin, Phœbe Cary. [Pg 493] |
There's a bower of bean-vines in Benjamin's yard, Phœbe Cary. |
That very time I saw, (but thou couldst not), Phœbe Cary. [Pg 494] |
Her washing ended with the day, Phœbe Cary. |
When lovely woman wants a favor, Phœbe Cary. |
A fellow near Kentucky's clime Phœbe Cary. |
He is to weet a melancholy carle: John Keats. |
'Twas more than a million years ago, Stanley Huntley. |
FANTASIA I The original theme as John Howard Payne wrote it:
'Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam, II |
('Mid pleasures and palaces—) |
III
Brown o' San Juan, |
IV
RONDEAU
At home alone, O Nomades, |
V
Home! at the word, what blissful visions rise, |
VI
IYou over there, young man with the guide-book, red-bound, covered flexibly with red linen, Come here, I want to talk with you; I, Walt, the Manhattanese, citizen of these States, call you. Yes, and the courier, too, smirking, smug-mouthed, with oil'd hair; a garlicky look about him generally; him, too, I take in, just as I would a coyote or a king, or a toad-stool, or a ham-sandwich, or anything, or anybody else in the world. Where are you going? You want to see Paris, to eat truffles, to have a good time; in Vienna, London, Florence, Monaco, to have a good time; you want to see Venice. Come with me. I will give you a good time; I will give you all the Venice you want, and most of the Paris. I, Walt, I call to you. I am all on deck! Come and loafe with me! Let me tote you around by your elbow and show you things. You listen to my ophicleide! Home! Home, I celebrate. I elevate my fog-whistle, inspir'd by the thought of home. Come in!—take a front seat; the jostle of the crowd not minding; there is room enough for all of you. This is my exhibition—it is the greatest show on earth—there is no charge for admission. All you have to pay me is to take in my romanza. [Pg 504] II 1. The brown-stone house; the father coming home worried
from a bad day's business; the wife meets him in the
marble pav'd vestibule; she throws her arms about
him; she presses him close to her; she looks him full
in the face with affectionate eyes; the frown from his
brow disappearing.
2. The mechanic's dark little third-story room, seen in a
flash from the Elevated Railway train; the sewing-machine
in a corner; the small cook-stove; the whole
family eating cabbage around a kerosene lamp; of the
clatter and roar and groaning wail of the Elevated
train unconscious; of the smell of the cabbage unconscious.
3. The French Flat; the small rooms, all right-angles, un-individual; the narrow halls; the gaudy, cheap decorations everywhere. The janitor and the cook exchanging compliments up and down the elevator-shaft; the refusal to send up more coal, the solid splash of the water upon his head, the language he sends up the shaft, the triumphant laughter of the cook, to her kitchen retiring. 4. The widow's small house in the suburbs of the city; the widow's boy coming home from his first day down town; he is flushed with happiness and pride; he is no longer a school-boy, he is earning money; he takes on the airs of a man and talks learnedly of business. 5. The room in the third-class boarding-house; the mean little hard-coal fire, the slovenly Irish servant-girl making it, the ashes on the hearth, the faded furniture, the private provender hid away in the closet, the dreary backyard out the window; the young girl at the glass, with her mouth full of hairpins, doing up her hair to go downstairs and flirt with the young fellows in the parlor. [Pg 505]6. The kitchen of the old farm-house; the young convict just returned from prison—it was his first offense, and the judges were lenient on him. He is taking his first meal out of prison; he has been received back, kiss'd, encourag'd to start again; his lungs, his nostrils expand with the big breaths of free air; with shame, with wonderment, with a trembling joy, his heart too, expanding. The old mother busies herself about the table; she has ready for him the dishes he us'd to like; the father sits with his back to them, reading the newspaper, the newspaper shaking and rustling much; the children hang wondering around the prodigal—they have been caution'd: Do not ask where our Jim has been; only say you are glad to see him. The elder daughter is there, palefac'd, quiet; her young man went back on her four years ago; his folks would not let him marry a convict's sister. She sits by the window, sewing on the children's clothes, the clothes not only patching up; her hunger for children of her own invisibly patching up. The brother looks up; he catches her eye, he fearful, apologetic; she smiles back at him, not reproachfully smiling, with loving pretence of hope smiling—it is too much for him; he buries his face in the folds of the mother's black gown. 7. The best room of the house, on the Sabbath only open'd; the smell of horse-hair furniture and mahogany varnish; the ornaments on the what-not in the corner; the wax fruit, dusty, sunken, sagged in, consumptive-looking, under a glass globe, the sealing-wax imitation of coral; the cigar boxes with shells plastered over, the perforated card-board motto. The kitchen; the housewife sprinkling the clothes for the fine ironing to-morrow—it is the Third-day night, and the plain things are ready iron'd, now in cupboards, in drawers stowed away. The wife waiting for the husband—he is at the tavern, jovial, carousing; she, alone in the kitchen sprinkling clothes—the little red wood clock with peaked top, with pendulum [Pg 506] wagging behind a pane of gayly painted glass, strikes twelve. The sound of the husband's voice on the still night air—he is singing: "We won't go home until morning!"—the wife arising, toward the wood-shed hastily going, stealthily entering, the voice all the time coming nearer, inebriate, chantant. The husband passing the door of the wood-shed; the club over his head, now with his head in contact; the sudden cessation of the song; the benediction of peace over the domestic foyer temporarily resting. I sing the soothing influences of home. You, young man, thoughtlessly wandering, with courier, with guide-book wandering, You hearken to the melody of my steam-calliope Yawp! H. C. Bunner. |
Mary had a little lamb, (As Austin Dobson writes it.) TRIOLET
A little lamb had Mary, sweet, (As Mr. Browning has it.)
You knew her?—Mary the small, (As Longfellow might have done it.)
Fair the daughter known as Mary, (How Andrew Lang sings it.) RONDEAU
A wonderful lass was Marie, petite, (Mr. Algernon C. Swinburne's idea.) VILLANELLE Dewy-eyed with shimmering hair, A. C. Wilkie. [Pg 509] |
To outer senses they are geese, Oscuro Wildgoose. |
(Our nurseries will soon lie too cultured to admit the old rhymes in their Philistine and unæsthetic garb. They may be redressed somewhat on this model.)
Oh, but she was dark and shrill, POSTSCRIPT
Then blame me not, altho' my verse Unknown. |
My lank limp lily, my long lithe lily, Unknown. |
Jack and Jille Unknown. |
Wake! for the Hack can scatter into flight Gelett Burgess. [Pg 515] |
"I never saw a Purple Cow, |
Hence, vain, deluding cows. |
MR. P. BYSSHE SHELLEY:
Hail to thee, blithe spirit! |
Mr. W. WORDSWORTH:
She dwelt among the untrodden ways |
MR. T. GRAY:
The curfew tolls the knell of parting day, |
MR. J. W. RILEY:
There, little Cow, don't cry! |
LORD A. TENNYSON:
Ask me no more. A cow I fain would see |
MR. R. BROWNING:
All that I know |
MR. J. KEATS:
A cow of purple is a joy forever. |
MR. D. G. ROSSETTI:
The Purple Cow strayed in the glade; |
MR. T. ALDRICH:
Somewhere in some faked nature place, |
MR. E. ALLAN POE:
Open then I flung a shutter, |
MR. H. LONGFELLOW:
The day is done, and the darkness |
MR. A. SWINBURNE:
Oh, Cow of rare rapturous vision, |
MR. A. DOBSON:
I'd love to see |
MR. O. HERFORD:
Children, observe the Purple Cow, |
MR. H. C. BUNNER:
Oh, what's the way to Arcady, |
MR. A. SWINBURNE:
(Who was so enthused that he made a second attempt.) Only in dim, drowsy depths of a dream do I dare to delight in deliciously dreaming Cows there may be of a passionate purple,—cows of a violent violet hue; Ne'er have I seen such a sight, I am certain it is but a demi-delirious dreaming— Ne'er may I happily harbour a hesitant hope in my heart that my dream may come true. Sad is my soul, and my senses are sobbing so strong is my strenuous spirit to see one. Dolefully, drearily doomed to despair as warily wearily watching I wait; Thoughts thickly thronging are thrilling and throbbing; to see is a glorious gain—but to be one! That were a darker and direfuller destiny, that were a fearfuller, frightfuller fate! |
MR R. KIPLING:
In the old ten-acre pasture, Carolyn Wells. |
ALICE BEN BOLT
I couldn't help weeping with delight THE BLESSED DAMOZEL
I was one of those long, lanky, loose-jointed girls ENOCH ARDEN
Yes, it was the eternal triangle, LITTLE EVA
To be honest, LUCY
Yes, I am in my grave, OPHELIA
No, it wasn't suicide, CASABLANCA
I played to the Grand Stand! ANNABEL LEE
They may say all they like ANGUS MCPHAIRSON
Oh, of course, Carolyn Wells. [Pg 526] |
Shall I, mine affections slack, Ben Jonson. |
O Season supposed of all free flowers, Unknown. |
Half a bar, half a bar, Unknown. |
John Alcohol, my foe, John, Unknown. |
Singee a songee sick a pence, Unknown. |
"You are old, Father William," the young man said, Unknown. [Pg 532] |
It was many and many a year ago, C. F. Lummis. [Pg 533] |
How do the daughters H. Cholmondeley Pennell. |
Ask me no more: I've had enough Chablis; Unknown. |
To Urn, or not to Urn? that is the question: William Sawyer. |
There is a river clear and fair, Catharine M. Fanshawe. |
Comrades, you may pass the rosy. With permission of the chair, Aytoun and Martin. [Pg 543] |
I marvell'd why a simple child, POSTSCRIPT
To borrow Wordsworth's name was wrong, Henry S. Leigh. |
I never rear'd a young gazelle, Henry S. Leigh. |
O nymph with the nicest of noses; Walter Parke. [Pg 546] |
There were three sailors of Bristol City W. M. Thackeray. |
With ganial foire W. M. Thackeray. [Pg 552] |
An igstrawnary tail I vill tell you this veek— W. M. Thackeray. [Pg 554] |
An ancient story Ile tell you anon From Percy's Reliques. |
'Twas on a lofty vase's side, Thomas Gray. |
MR. SIMPKINSON (loquitur)
I was in Margate last July, I walk'd upon the pier, Next morning I was up betimes—I sent the Crier round, MORAL
Remember, then, what when a boy I've heard my Grandma' tell, Richard Harris Barham. |
In Broad Street Buildings on a winter night, Horace Smith. |
John Gilpin was a citizen of credit and renown; William Cowper. [Pg 571] |
Paddy, in want of a dinner one day, Samuel Lover. |
Two Yankee wags, one summer day, "Here she goes, and there she goes!"
"Here!—where?"—the lady in surprise "Here she goes, and there she goes!"
His wife surveyed him with alarm, "Here she goes, and there she goes!"
"Lawks! he is mad! What made him thus? "Here she goes, and there she goes!" "You are all fools!" the lady said,— "There she goes!"
"A woman is no judge of physic, James Nack. |
A traveller wended the wilds among, Samuel Lover. |
One of the Kings of Scanderoon, Horace Smith. [Pg 580] |
A Logical Story
Have you heard of the wonderful one-hoss shay, Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
It was a tall young oysterman lived by the river-side; Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
A well there is in the west country, Robert Southey. |
The Jackdaw sat on the Cardinal's chair! Richard Harris Barham. |
The Lady Jane was tall and slim, MORAL
All middle-aged gentlemen let me advise, Richard Harris Barham. |
My William was a soldier, and he says to me, says he, H. M. Paull. |
They tell me (but I really can't Mortimer Collins. |
It looked extremely rocky for the Mudville nine that day, Ernest Lawrence Thayer. |
Hamelin Town's in Brunswick, Robert Browning. |
I knew an old wife lean and poor, Lord Tennyson. |
It was in a pleasant deepô, sequestered from the rain, Charles Godfrey Leland. |
When they heard the Captain humming and beheld the dancing crew, Charles E. Carryl. |
The night was thick and hazy Charles E. Carryl. [Pg 619] |
Ben Bluff was a whaler, and many a day Thomas Hood. |
A brace of sinners, for no good, John Wolcot. |
When chapman billies leave the street, Robert Burns. |
Two webfoot brothers loved a fair Joaquin Miller. |
'Twas on the shores that round our coast "And I never larf, and I never smile, W. S. Gilbert. |
PART I At a pleasant evening party I had taken down to supper One whom I will call Elvira, and we talked of love and Tupper. Mr. Tupper and the Poets, very lightly with them dealing, For I've always been distinguished for a strong poetic feeling. Then we let off paper crackers, each of which contained a motto, And she listened while I read them, till her mother told her not to. Then she whispered, "To the ballroom we had better, dear, be walking; If we stop down here much longer, really people will be talking." There were noblemen in coronets, and military cousins, There were captains by the hundred, there were baronets by dozens. Yet she heeded not their offers, but dismissed them with a blessing; Then she let down all her back hair, which had taken long in dressing. Then she had convulsive sobbings in her agitated throttle, Then she wiped her pretty eyes and smelt her pretty smelling bottle. So I whispered, "Dear Elvira, say,—what can the matter be with you? Does anything you've eaten, darling Popsy, disagree with you?" But spite of all I said, her sobs grew more and more distressing, And she tore her pretty back hair, which had taken long in dressing. Then she gazed upon the carpet, at the ceiling, then above me, And she whispered, "Ferdinando, do you really, really love me?" "Love you?" said I, then I sighed, and then I gazed upon her sweetly— For I think I do this sort of thing particularly neatly. "Send me to the Arctic regions, or illimitable azure, On a scientific goose-chase, with my Coxwell or my Glaisher! "Tell me whither I may hie me—tell me, dear one, that I may know— Is it up the highest Andes? down a horrible volcano?" But she said, "It isn't polar bears, or hot volcanic grottoes; Only find out who it is that writes those lovely cracker mottoes!" PART II "Tell me, Henry Wadsworth, Alfred, Poet Close, or Mister Tupper, Do you write the bon-ton mottoes my Elvira pulls at supper?" But Henry Wadsworth smiled, and said he had not had that honor; And Alfred, too, disclaimed the words that told so much upon her. "Mister Martin Tupper, Poet Close, I beg of you inform us;" But my question seemed to throw them both into a rage enormous. Mister Close expressed a wish that he could only get anigh to me; And Mister Martin Tupper sent the following reply to me: "A fool is bent upon a twig, but wise men dread a bandit,"— Which I know was very clever; but I didn't understand it. Seven weary years I wandered—Patagonia, China, Norway, Till at last I sank exhausted at a pastrycook his doorway. There were fuchsias and geraniums, and daffodils and myrtle; So I entered, and I ordered half a basin of mock turtle. He was plump and he was chubby, he was smooth and he was rosy, And his little wife was pretty and particularly cosy. And he chirped and sang, and skipped about, and laughed with laughter hearty— He was wonderfully active for so very stout a party. And I said, "O gentle pieman, why so very, very merry? Is it purity of conscience, or your one-and-seven sherry?" But he answered, "I'm so happy—no profession could be dearer— If I am not humming 'Tra la la' I'm singing 'Tirer, lirer!' "First I go and make the patties, and the puddings, and the jellies, Then I make a sugar bird-cage, which upon a table swell is: "Then I polish all the silver, which a supper-table lacquers: Then I write the pretty mottoes which you find inside the crackers—" "Found at last!" I madly shouted. "Gentle pieman, you astound me!" Then I waved the turtle soup enthusiastically round me. And I shouted and I danced until he'd quite a crowd around him, And I rushed away, exclaiming, "I have found him! I have found him!" And I heard the gentle pieman in the road behind me trilling, "'Tira! lira!' stop him, stop him! 'Tra! la! la!' the soup's a shilling!" But until I reached Elvira's home, I never, never waited, And Elvira to her Ferdinand's irrevocably mated! W. S. Gilbert. [Pg 639] |
It was a robber's daughter, and her name was Alice Brown. W. S. Gilbert. |
Strike the concertina's melancholy string! W. S. Gilbert. |
Sir Guy was a doughty crusader, W. S. Gilbert. |
Kitty wants to write! Kitty intellectual! Gelett Burgess. |
Dighton is engaged! Think of it and tremble! Gelett Burgess. |
Which I wish to remark— Bret Harte. |
I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James; Bret Harte. [Pg 652] |
Say there! P'r'aps Bret Harte. |
They called him Bill, the hired man, Joaquin Miller. [Pg 657] |
I don't go much on religion, By this, the torches was played out, John Hay. |
The King was sick. His cheek was red, Wide o'er the realm the couriers rode,
Each day to the King the reports came in John Hay. [Pg 661] |
Wal, no! I can't tell whar he lives, John Hay. |
On wan dark night on Lac St. Pierre, MORAL
Now, all good wood scow sailor man William Henry Drummond. |
Many a long, long year ago, James Thomas Fields. |
By the side of a murmuring stream an elderly gentleman sat. On the top of his head was a wig, and a-top of his wig was his hat. The wind it blew high and blew strong, as the elderly gentleman sat; And bore from his head in a trice, and plunged in the river his hat. The gentleman then took his cane which lay by his side as he sat; And he dropped in the river his wig, in attempting to get out his hat. His breast it grew cold with despair, and full in his eye madness sat; So he flung in the river his cane to swim with his wig, and his hat. [Pg 666]Cool reflection at last came across while this elderly gentleman sat; So he thought he would follow the stream and look for his cane, wig, and hat. His head being thicker than common, o'er-balanced the rest of his fat; And in plumped this son of a woman to follow his wig, cane, and hat. George Canning. |
Two gentlemen their appetite had fed, William Basil Wake. [Pg 668] |
Hans Breitmann gife a barty; Charles Godfrey Leland. |
Der noble Ritter Hugo Charles Godfrey Leland. |
Row-diddy, dow de, my little sis, Holman F. Day. |
Go 'way, fiddle; folks is tired o' hearin' you a-squawkin'— Keep silence fur yo' betters!—don't you heah de banjo talkin'? About de 'possum's tail she's gwine to lecter—ladies, listen!— About de ha'r whut isn't dar, an' why de ha'r is missin': "Dar's gwine to be a' oberflow," said Noah, lookin' solemn— Fur Noah tuk the "Herald," an' he read de ribber column— An' so he sot his hands to wuk a-cl'arin' timber-patches, An' 'lowed he's gwine to build a boat to beat de steamah Natchez. Ol' Noah kep' a-nailin' an' a-chippin' an' a-sawin'; An' all de wicked neighbours kep' a-laughin' an' a-pshawin'; But Noah didn't min' 'em, knowin' whut wuz gwine to happen: An' forty days an' forty nights de rain it kep' a-drappin'. Now, Noah had done cotched a lot ob ebry sort o' beas'es— Ob all de shows a-trabbelin', it beat 'em all to pieces! He had a Morgan colt an' sebral head o' Jarsey cattle— An' druv 'em 'board de Ark as soon's he heered de thunder rattle. Den sech anoder fall ob rain!—it come so awful hebby, De ribber riz immejitly, an' busted troo de lebbee; De people all wuz drownded out—'cep' Noah an' de critters, An' men he'd hired to work de boat—an' one to mix de bitters. De Ark she kep' a-sailin' an' a-sailin', an' a-sailin'; De lion got his dander up, an' like to bruk de palin'; [Pg 673]De sarpints hissed; de painters yelled; tell, whut wid all de fussin', You c'u'dn't hardly heah de mate a-bossin' round' an' cussin'. Now, Ham, he only nigger whut wuz runnin' on de packet, Got lonesome in de barber-shop, and c'u'dn't stan' de racket; An' so, fur to amuse he-se'f, he steamed some wood an' bent it, An' soon he had a banjo made—de fust dat wuz invented. He wet de ledder, stretched it on; made bridge an' screws an aprin; An' fitted in a proper neck—'twas berry long and tap'rin'; He tuk some tin, an' twisted him a thimble fur to ring it; An' den de mighty question riz: how wuz he gwine to string it? De 'possum had as fine a tail as dis dat I's a-singin'; De ha'r's so long an' thick an' strong,—des fit fur banjo-stringin'; Dat nigger shaved 'em off as short as wash-day-dinner graces; An' sorted ob 'em by de size, f'om little E's to basses. He strung her, tuned her, struck a jig,—'twus "Nebber min' de wedder,"— She soun' like forty-lebben bands a-playin' all togedder; Some went to pattin'; some to dancin': Noah called de figgers; An' Ham he sot an' knocked de tune, de happiest ob niggers! Now, sence dat time—it's mighty strange—dere's not de slightes' showin' Ob any ha'r at all upon de 'possum's tail a-growin'; An' curi's, too, dat nigger's ways: his people nebber los' 'em— Fur whar you finds de nigger—dar's de banjo an' de 'possum! Irwin Russell. [Pg 674] |
Basking in peace in the warm spring sun, Robert J. Burdette. |
"Come, listen, my men, while I tell you again "The fourth is its fondness for bathing-machines, Lewis Carroll. |
Old man never had much to say— James Whitcomb Riley. |
This is the tale that was told to me, James Jeffrey Roche. [Pg 683] |
Upon an island, all alone, G. E. Farrow. [Pg 685] |
I may as well G. E. Farrow. [Pg 688] |
Of all the rides since the birth of time, J. G. Whittier. |
If ever there lived a Yankee lad, John Townsend Trowbridge. |
"There was a man in Arkansaw Robert Henry Newell. |
Oh! 'twas Dermot O'Nolan M'Figg, Viscount Dillon. [Pg 702] |
A captain bold from Halifax who dwelt in country quarters, Unknown. [Pg 703] |
The last two stanzas were added by Miss Ferrier.
The Laird o' Cockpen, he's proud and he's great; Lady Nairne. |
I tell thee, Dick, where I have been; Sir John Suckling. [Pg 708]XITRIBUTETHE AHKOND OF SWAT
Who, or why, or which, or what, Edward Lear. |
"The Ahkoond of Swat is dead."—London Papers of Jan. 22, 1878.
What, what, what, George Thomas Lanigan. |
I
Alas, unhappy land; ill-fated spot II
When sorrows come, they come not single spies, III
His rival, but in what? George Thomas Lanigan. |
A street there is in Paris famous,
I drink it as the Fates ordain it. W. M. Thackeray. [Pg 717] |
Ye may tramp the world over
He and his wig wid the curls so carroty,
And as if by a meracle,
Thin, his doctherin' done,
He and his wig wid the curls so carroty, Alfred Perceval Graves. [Pg 719] |
Of priests we can offer a charmin' variety,
Here's a health to you, Father O'Flynn,
Och! Father O'Flynn, you've the wonderful way wid you,
And though quite avoidin' all foolish frivolity,
Alfred Perceval Graves. |
O the quietest home in earth had I, Mary E. Vandyne. |
Barney McGee, there's no end of good luck in you, Richard Hovey. |
My curse upon your venom'd stang, Robert Burns. [Pg 726] |
May the Babylonish curse Charles Lamb. [Pg 730] |
There were three kings into the east, Robert Burns. [Pg 732] |
Oh! I have loved thee fondly, ever Unknown. |
Thou who, when fears attack, Charles Stuart Calverley. [Pg 734] |
Inglorious friend! most confident I am John G. Saxe. |
Ah! poor intoxicated little knave, John Wolcot. |
Felis Infelix! Cat unfortunate, Unknown. |
And so our royal relative is dead! William Augustus Croffut. [Pg 740]XIIWHIMSEYAN ELEGYON THE GLORY OF HER SEX, MRS. MARY BLAIZE
Good people all, with one accord, Oliver Goldsmith. |
A quiet home had Parson Gray, Oliver Goldsmith. |
There was a lady liv'd at Leith, A lady very stylish, man; And yet, in spite of all her teeth, She fell in love with an Irishman— A nasty, ugly Irishman, A wild, tremendous Irishman, A tearing, swearing, thumping, bumping, ranting, roaring Irishman. His face was no ways beautiful, For with small-pox 'twas scarr'd across; And the shoulders of the ugly dog Were almost double a yard across. Oh, the lump of an Irishman, The whiskey-devouring Irishman, The great he-rogue with his wonderful brogue—the fighting, rioting Irishman! One of his eyes was bottle-green, And the other eye was out, my dear; And the calves of his wicked-looking legs Were more than two feet about, my dear. Oh, the great big Irishman, The rattling, battling Irishman— The stamping, ramping, swaggering, staggering, leathering swash of an Irishman! He took so much of Lundy-foot That he used to snort and snuffle—O! And in shape and size the fellow's neck Was as bad as the neck of a buffalo. [Pg 743]Oh, the horrible Irishman, The thundering, blundering Irishman— The slashing, dashing, smashing, lashing, thrashing, hashing Irishman! His name was a terrible name, indeed, Being Timothy Thady Mulligan; And whenever he emptied his tumbler of punch He'd not rest till he fill'd it full again. The boosing, bruising Irishman, The 'toxicated Irishman— The whiskey, frisky, rummy, gummy, brandy, no dandy Irishman! This was the lad the lady lov'd, Like all the girls of quality; And he broke the skulls of the men of Leith, Just by the way of jollity. Oh, the leathering Irishman, The barbarous, savage Irishman— The hearts of the maids, and the gentlemen's heads, were bothered, I'm sure, by this Irishman! William Maginn. |
"How does the water Robert Southey. |
Doe, doe! H. Cholmondeley-Pennell. |
Chilly Dovebber with his boadigg blast Unknown. |
Singing through the forests, John G. Saxe. |
I asked of Echo, t'other day John G. Saxe. |
Echo, tell me, while I wander Joseph Addison. |
Shepherd. Echo, I ween, will in the woods reply, Dean Swift. |
Oh, the Roman was a rogue, Thomas R. Ybarra. |
My passion is as mustard strong; John Gay. [Pg 757] |
To Lake Aghmoogenegamook Robert H. Newell. |
A xylographer started to cross the sea Mary Mapes Dodge. [Pg 760] |
Zig-zagging it went A. W. Bellow. |
I'm taught p-l-o-u-g-h Charles Battell Loomis. |
'Twas whispered in heaven, 'twas muttered in hell, Catherine Fanshawe. |
I dwells in the Hearth, and I breathes in the Hair; Horace Mayhew. [Pg 764] |
Good people all, of every sort, Oliver Goldsmith. [Pg 765] |
Interred beneath this marble stone Matthew Prior. |
Old Grimes is dead; that good old man Albert Gorton Greene. |
Oh, I used to sing a song, Ruth McEnery Stuart. [Pg 769] |
First there's the Bible, Mostyn T. Pigott. |
Upon a rock, yet uncreate, Unknown. |
Brisk methinks I am, and fine Robert Herrick. |
Händel, Bendel, Mendelssohn, E. Lemke. |
My Madeline! my Madeline! Walter Parke. |
Sudden swallows swiftly skimming,
Six Septembers Susan swelters; Unknown. [Pg 775] |
The Emperor Nap he would set off Robert Southey. [Pg 779] |
Ah, those hours when by-gone sages L'ENVOI
Ancient sages, pardon these H. I. DeBurgh. |
Here lieth one, who did most truly prove John Milton. |
O for a lodge in a garden of cucumbers! Rossiter Johnson. [Pg 782] |
Easy is the triolet, William Ernest Henley. |
You bid me try, Blue-eyes, to write Austin Dobson. [Pg 783] |
1. Why all this toil for triumphs of an hour? Unknown. [1] 1. Young; 2. Dr. Johnson; 3. Pope; 4. Prior; 5. Sewell; 6. Spenser; 7. Daniell; 8. Sir Walter Raleigh; 9. Longfellow; 10. Southwell; 11. Congreve; 12. Churchill; 13. Rochester; 14. Armstrong; 15. Milton; 16. Bailey; 17. Trench; 18. Somerville; 19. Thomson; 20. Byron; 21. Smollett; 22. Crabbe; 23. Massinger; 24. Cowley; 25. Beattie; 26. Cowper; 27. Sir Walter Davenant; 28. Gray; 29. Willis; 30. Addison; 31. Dryden; 32. Francis Quarles; 33. Watkins; 34. Herrick; 35. William Mason; 36. Hill; 37. Dana; 38. Shakespeare. |
Blind Thamyris, and blind Mæonides, Laman Blanchard. [Pg 785] |
In his chamber, weak and dying, Unknown. [Pg 786] |
Lives there a man with soul so dead Laman Blanchard. |
Mysterious Nothing! how shall I define Richard Porson. [Pg 787] |
Peerless yet hapless maid of Q! Unknown. |
"True 'tis P T, and P T 'tis, 'tis true." MORAL
I'll not S A to preach and prate, Unknown. |
A man of words and not of deeds, Unknown. [Pg 791] |
As wet as a fish—as dry as a bone; Unknown. [Pg 792] |
No sun—no moon! Thomas Hood. |
Young Ben he was a nice young man, Thomas Hood. [Pg 795] |
Tim Turpin he was gravel blind, Thomas Hood. |
Ben Battle was a soldier bold, Thomas Hood. [Pg 800] |
"Oh! what is that comes gliding in, Thomas Hood. |
One day the dreary old King of Death Thomas Hood. |
That man must lead a happy life Unknown. [Pg 804] |
I saw a peacock with a fiery tail Unknown. |
Men once were surnamed for their shape or estate James Smith. |
A little saint best fits a little shrine, Robert Herrick. [Pg 807] |
Marry, I lent my gossip my mare, to fetch home coals, Sir David Lindesay. |
The oft'ner seen, the more I lust, Barnaby Googe. |
John Bull for pastime took a prance, Charles Dibdin. |
I said, "This horse, sir, will you shoe?" Unknown. |
I have a copper penny and another copper penny, Unknown. [Pg 810] |
A Persian penman named Aziz, Unknown. |
What is earth, sexton?—A place to dig graves; Unknown. |
Dear maid, let me speak A. W. Bellow. |
Sally Salter, she was a young lady who taught, And her friend Charley Church was a preacher who praught! Though his enemies called him a screecher who scraught. His heart when he saw her kept sinking and sunk, And his eye, meeting hers, began winking and wunk; While she in her turn fell to thinking, and thunk. He hastened to woo her, and sweetly he wooed, For his love grew until to a mountain it grewed, And what he was longing to do then he doed. In secret he wanted to speak, and he spoke, To seek with his lips what his heart long had soke; So he managed to let the truth leak, and it loke. He asked her to ride to the church, and they rode, They so sweetly did glide, that they both thought they glode, And they came to the place to be tied, and were tode. Then, "homeward" he said, "let us drive" and they drove, And soon as they wished to arrive, they arrove; For whatever he couldn't contrive she controve. The kiss he was dying to steal, then he stole: At the feet where he wanted to kneel, then he knole, And said, "I feel better than ever I fole." So they to each other kept clinging, and clung; While time his swift circuit was winging, and wung; And this was the thing he was bringing, and brung: The man Sally wanted to catch, and had caught— That she wanted from others to snatch, and had snaught— Was the one that she now liked to scratch and she scraught. And Charley's warm love began freezing and froze, While he took to teasing, and cruelly toze The girl he had wished to be squeezing and squoze. "Wretch!" he cried, when she threatened to leave him, and left, "How could you deceive me, as you have deceft?" And she answered, "I promised to cleave, and I've cleft!" Unknown. |
An Austrian army, awfully array'd, Unknown. |
La Galisse now I wish to touch; Gilles Ménage. |
Oh, it's H-A-P-P-Y I am, and it's F-R-double-E, Unknown. |
He took her fancy when he came, Thomas Hood, Jr. |
Do you think I'd marry a woman Charlts Mackay. |
How hard, when those who do not wish Laman Blanchard. |
I have found out a gig-gig-gift for my fuf-fuf-fair, I have found where the rattlesnakes bub-bub-breed; Will you co-co-come, and I'll show you the bub-bub-bear, And the lions and tit-tit-tigers at fuf-fuf-feed. I know where the co-co-cockatoo's song Makes mum-mum-melody through the sweet vale; Where the mum-monkeys gig-gig-grin all the day long, Or gracefully swing by the tit-tit-tit-tail. You shall pip-play, dear, some did-did-delicate joke With the bub-bub-bear on the tit-tit-top of his pip-pip-pip-pole; But observe, 'tis forbidden to pip-pip-poke At the bub-bub-bear with your pip-pip-pink pip-pip-pip-pip-parasol! You shall see the huge elephant pip-pip-play, You shall gig-gig-gaze on the stit-stit-stately raccoon; And then, did-did-dear, together we'll stray To the cage of the bub-bub-blue-faced bab-bab-boon. You wished (I r-r-remember it well, And I lul-lul-loved you the m-m-more for the wish) To witness the bub-bub-beautiful pip-pip-pelican swallow the l-l-live little fuf-fuf-fish! Unknown. [Pg 823] |
Even is come; and from the dark Park, hark, Thomas Hood. [Pg 824] |
Thine eyes, dear one, dot dot, are like, dash, what? Marion Hill. |
In our hearts is the Great One of Avon Austin Dobson. |
O precious code, volume, tome,
Though I could keep this up all day, Franklin P. Adams. |
No longer, O scholars, shall Plautus Unknown. |
My little dears, who learn to read, pray early, learn to shun That very silly thing indeed which people call a pun; Read Entick's rules, and 'twill be found how simple an offence It is to make the selfsame sound afford a double sense. For instance, ale may make you ail, your aunt an ant may kill, You in a vale may buy a veil and Bill may pay the bill. Or if to France your bark you steer, at Dover it may be A peer appears upon the pier, who blind, still goes to sea. Thus, one might say, when, to a treat, good friends accept our greeting, 'Tis meet that men who meet to eat should eat their meat when meeting; Brawn on the board's no bore indeed, although from boar prepared; Nor can the fowl on which we feed, foul feeding be declared. Thus one ripe fruit may be a pear, and yet be pared again, And still be one, which seemeth rare until we do explain. It therefore should be all your aim to speak with ample care, For who, however fond of game, would choose to swallow hair? A fat man's gait may make us smile, who have no gate to close; The farmer sitting on his stile no stylish person knows. Perfumers men of scents must be; some Scilly men are bright; A brown man oft deep read we see, a black a wicked wight. Most wealthy men good manors have, however vulgar they; And actors still the harder slave the oftener they play; So poets can't the baize obtain, unless their tailors choose; While grooms and coachmen, not in vain, each evening seek the Mews. The dyer, who by dyeing lives, a dire life maintains; The glazier, it is known, receives his profits for his panes; By gardeners thyme is tied, 'tis true, when spring is in its prime, But time or tide won't wait for you if you are tied for time. Then now you see, my little dears, the way to make a pun; A trick which you, through coming years, should sedulously shun; The fault admits of no defence; for wheresoe'er 'tis found, You sacrifice for sound the sense; the sense is never sound. So let your words and actions too, one single meaning prove, And, just in all you say or do, you'll gain esteem and love; In mirth and play no harm you'll know when duty's task is done, But parents ne'er should let you go unpunished for a pun! Theodore Hook. |
An Austrian Archduke, assaulted and assailed, John R. Edwards. |
Sweet maiden of Passamaquoddy Unknown. [Pg 832] |
Knows he that never took a pinch, Albert A. Forrester (Alfred Crowquill). |
Qui nunc dancere vult modo, Barclay Philips. [Pg 833] |
A cat I sing, of famous memory, Cruikshank's Omnibus. |
Come! fill a fresh bumper—for why should we go Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
I devise to end my days—in a tavern drinking, May some Christian hold for me—the glass when I am shrinking, That the cherubim may cry—when they see me sinking, God be merciful to a soul—of this gentleman's way of thinking. A glass of wine amazingly—enlighteneth one's internals; 'Tis wings bedewed with nectar—that fly up to supernals; Bottles cracked in taverns—have much the sweeter kernels, Than the sups allowed to us—in the college journals. Every one by nature hath—a mold which he was cast in; I happen to be one of those—who never could write fasting; By a single little boy—I should be surpass'd in Writing so: I'd just as lief—be buried; tomb'd and grass'd in. Every one by nature hath—a gift too, a dotation: I, when I make verses—do get the inspiration Of the very best of wine—that comes into the nation: It maketh sermons to astound—for edification. Just as liquor floweth good—floweth forth my lay so; But I must moreover eat—or I could not say so; Naught it availeth inwardly—should I write all day so; But with God's grace after meat—I beat Ovidius Naso. Neither is there given to me—prophetic animation, Unless when I have eat and drank—yea, ev'n to saturation, Then in my upper story—hath Bacchus domination, And Phœbus rushes into me, and beggareth all relation. Leigh Hunt. |
There was an old man of Tobago, Carolyn Wells. RECITED BY A CHINESE INFANT
If-itty-teshi-mow Jays Translation
Infinitesimal James Edward Lear.
There was an Old Man of St. Bees W. S. Gilbert.
There was an old man of the Rhine, Oliver Herford.
There was a young lady of Lynn, Gelett Burgess.
There was a young fellow named Clyde; Robert J. Burdette.
There is a young artist called Whistler, Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
There is a creator named God, J. M. Whistler.
There was a young lady of station, Lewis Carroll.
There was a young lady of Twickenham, Oliver Herford.
"It's a very warm day," observed Billy. Tudor Jenks.
There was a young man from Cornell, |
Night saw the crew like pedlers with their packs Henry Coggswell Knight. |
The woggly bird sat on the whango tree, Unknown. [Pg 843] |
Three children sliding on the ice Unknown. |
'Tis midnight, and the setting sun Unknown. |
Come fleetly, come fleetly, my hookabadar, Henry S. Leigh. |
If down his throat a man should choose Edward Cannon. |
I strolled beside the shining sea, Paul West. |
Mr. Finney had a turnip Unknown. [Pg 848] |
Lazy-bones, lazy-bones, wake up and peep! Charles Lamb. |
Like to the thundering tone of unspoke speeches, Bishop Corbet in 17th century. |
In candent ire the solar splendour flames; Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
Uncle Simon he Charles Farrar Browne (Artemus Ward). |
There lived a sage in days of yore, W. M. Thackeray. [Pg 851] |
Oh that my soul a marrow-bone might seize! Unknown. |
Translated from the Arabic
Far off in the waste of desert sand, Alaric Bertrand Stuart. |
When the breeze from the bluebottle's blustering blim L'ENVOI
It is pilly-po-doddle and aligobung John Bennett. |
I dreamed a dream next Tuesday week, Unknown. |
A rollicking Mastodon lived in Spain, Arthur Macy. |
NONSENSE VERSES
I'd Never Dare to Walk across |
The Roof it has a Lazy Time |
My feet, they haul me Round the House, Gelett Burgess. |
The Crankadox leaned o'er the edge of the moon, James Whitcomb Riley. |
Said the Raggedy Man on a hot afternoon, James Whitcomb Riley. |
Out on the margin of moonshine land, James Whitcomb Riley. |
I
On the Coast of Coromandel II
Once, among the Bong-trees walking III
"Lady Jingly! Lady Jingly! IV
"On this Coast of Coromandel V
Lady Jingly answered sadly, VI
"Mr. Jones (his name is Handel,— VII
"Though you've such a tiny body, VIII
Down the slippery slopes of Myrtle, IX
Through the silent roaring ocean X
From the Coast of Coromandel Edward Lear. |
I
They went to sea in a sieve, they did; II
They sailed away in a sieve, they did, III
The water it soon came in, it did; IV
And all night long they sailed away; V
They sailed to the Western Sea, they did,— VI
And in twenty years they all came back,— Edward Lear. |
The Pobble who has no toes Edward Lear. |
There lived an old man in the kingdom of Tess, Edward Lear. [Pg 868] |
Two old Bachelors were living in one house; One caught a Muffin, the other caught a Mouse. Said he who caught the Muffin to him who caught the Mouse, "This happens just in time, for we've nothing in the house, Save a tiny slice of lemon and a teaspoonful of honey, And what to do for dinner,—since we haven't any money? And what can we expect if we haven't any dinner But to lose our teeth and eyelashes and keep on growing thinner?" Said he who caught the Mouse to him who caught the Muffin, "We might cook this little Mouse if we only had some Stuffin'! If we had but Sage and Onions we could do extremely well, But how to get that Stuffin' it is difficult to tell!" And then those two old Bachelors ran quickly to the town And asked for Sage and Onions as they wandered up and down; They borrowed two large Onions, but no Sage was to be found In the Shops or in the Market or in all the Gardens round. But some one said, "A hill there is, a little to the north, And to its purpledicular top a narrow way leads forth; And there among the rugged rocks abides an ancient Sage,— An earnest Man, who reads all day a most perplexing page. Climb up and seize him by the toes,—all studious as he sits,— And pull him down, and chop him into endless little bits! Then mix him with your Onion (cut up likewise into scraps), And your Stuffin' will be ready, and very good—perhaps." And then those two old Bachelors, without loss of time, The nearly purpledicular crags at once began to climb; And at the top among the rocks, all seated in a nook, They saw that Sage a-reading of a most enormous book. [Pg 869]"You earnest Sage!" aloud they cried, "your book you've read enough in! We wish to chop you into bits and mix you into Stuffin'!" But that old Sage looked calmly up, and with his awful book At those two Bachelors' bald heads a certain aim he took; And over crag and precipice they rolled promiscuous down,— At once they rolled, and never stopped in lane or field or town; And when they reached their house, they found (besides their want of Stuffin') The Mouse had fled—and previously had eaten up the Muffin. They left their home in silence by the once convivial door; And from that hour those Bachelors were never heard of more. Edward Lear. |
'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Lewis Carroll. |
I'll tell thee everything I can; Lewis Carroll. |
"In winter, when the fields are white, Lewis Carroll. |
He thought he saw an Elephant, Lewis Carroll. |
Sing for the garish eye, W. S. Gilbert. |
Upon the poop the captain stands, E. H. Palmer. |
When sporgles spanned the floreate mead Harriet R. White. [Pg 878] |
'Tis sweet to roam when morning's light Unknown. |
There were three jovial huntsmen, Unknown. [Pg 879] |
When good King Arthur ruled the land, Unknown. |
Hyder iddle diddle dell, Unknown. |
Bright breaks the warrior o'er the ocean wave Unknown. |
If we square a lump of pemmican J. W. Foley. [Pg 882] |
The Thingumbob sat at eventide, Unknown. |
Ah! who has seen the mailèd lobster rise, The Anti-Jacobin. |
I'm thankful that the sun and moon Unknown. |
As written by a learned scholar of the city from knowledge derived from etymological deductions rather than from actual experience.
I would flee from the city's rule and law, Unknown. [Pg 884] |
'Twas after a supper of Norfolk brawn William Sawyer. [Pg 886] |
O lady wake!—the azure moon Unknown. [Pg 887] |
There was a snake that dwelt in Skye, Henry Johnstone. [Pg 888] |
Across the sands of Syria, Or, possibly, Algeria, Or some benighted neighbourhood of barrenness and drouth, There came the Prophet Sam-u-el Upon the Only Cam-u-el— A bumpy, grumpy Quadruped of discontented mouth. The atmosphere was glutinous; The Cam-u-el was mutinous; He dumped the pack from off his back; with horrid grunts and squeals He made the desert hideous; With strategy perfidious He tied his neck in curlicues, he kicked his paddy heels. Then quoth the gentle Sam-u-el, "You rogue, I ought to lam you well! Though zealously I've shielded you from every grief and woe, It seems, to voice a platitude, You haven't any gratitude. I'd like to hear what cause you have for doing thus and so!" To him replied the Cam-u-el, "I beg your pardon, Sam-u-el. I know that I'm a Reprobate, I know that I'm a Freak; But, oh! this utter loneliness! My too-distinguished Onliness! Were there but other Cam-u-els I wouldn't be Unique." The Prophet beamed beguilingly. "Aha," he answered, smilingly, "You feel the need of company? I clearly understand. We'll speedily create for you The corresponding mate for you— Ho! presto, change-o, dinglebat!"—he waved a potent hand, And, lo! from out Vacuity A second Incongruity, To wit, a Lady Cam-u-el was born through magic art. Her structure anatomical, Her form and face were comical; She was, in short, a Cam-u-el, the other's counterpart. As Spaniards gaze on Aragon, Upon that Female Paragon So gazed the Prophet's Cam-u-el, that primal Desert Ship. A connoisseur meticulous, He found her that ridiculous He grinned from ear to auricle until he split his lip! Because of his temerity That Cam-u-el's posterity Must wear divided upper lips through all their solemn lives! A prodigy astonishing Reproachfully admonishing Those, wicked, heartless married men who ridicule their wives. Arthur Guiterman. |
Down in the silent hallway R. K. Munkittrick. [Pg 890] |
Be kind to the panther! for when thou wert young, Unknown. [Pg 891] |
Speak gently to the herring and kindly to the calf, Be blithesome with the bunny, at barnacles don't laugh! Give nuts unto the monkey, and buns unto the bear, Ne'er hint at currant jelly if you chance to see a hare! Oh, little girls, pray hide your combs when tortoises draw nigh, And never in the hearing of a pigeon whisper Pie! But give the stranded jelly-fish a shove into the sea,— Be always kind to animals wherever you may be! Oh, make not game of sparrows, nor faces at the ram, And ne'er allude to mint sauce when calling on a lamb. Don't beard the thoughtful oyster, don't dare the cod to crimp, Don't cheat the pike, or ever try to pot the playful shrimp. Tread lightly on the turning worm, don't bruise the butterfly, Don't ridicule the wry-neck, nor sneer at salmon-fry; Oh, ne'er delight to make dogs fight, nor bantams disagree,— Be always kind to animals wherever you may be! Be lenient with lobsters, and ever kind to crabs, And be not disrespectful to cuttle-fish or dabs; Chase not the Cochin-China, chaff not the ox obese, And babble not of feather-beds in company with geese. Be tender with the tadpole, and let the limpet thrive, Be merciful to mussels, don't skin your eels alive; When talking to a turtle don't mention calipee— Be always kind to animals wherever you may be. J. Ashby-Sterry. |
I
I sometimes think I'd rather crow II
A rooster he can roost also, III
Crows should be glad of one thing, though; IV
There are lots of tough old roosters, though, Unknown. |
Was once a hen of wit not small Matthew Claudius. |
Remembering his taste for blood
Years hence, at home, when talk is tall, Owen Seaman. |
FIRST VOICE Oh! tell me have you ever seen a red, long-leg'd Flamingo? Oh! tell me have you ever yet seen him the water in go? SECOND VOICE Oh! yes at Bowling-Green I've seen a red long-leg'd Flamingo, Oh! yes at Bowling-Green I've there seen him the water in go. FIRST VOICE Oh! tell me did you ever see a bird so funny stand-o When forth he from the water comes and gets upon the land-o? SECOND VOICE No! in my life I ne'er did see a bird so funny stand-o When forth he from the water comes and gets upon the land-o. FIRST VOICE He has a leg some three feet long, or near it, so they say, Sir. Stiff upon one alone he stands, t'other he stows away, Sir. SECOND VOICE And what an ugly head he's got! I wonder that he'd wear it. But rather more I wonder that his long, thin neck can bear it. FIRST VOICE And think, this length of neck and legs (no doubt they have their uses) Are members of a little frame, much smaller than a goose's! BOTH Oh! isn't he a curious bird, that red, long-leg'd Flamingo? A water bird, a gawky bird, a sing'lar bird, by jingo! Lewis Gaylord Clark. |
Why doth a pussy cat prefer, Burges Johnson. |
The sun was shining on the sea, Lewis Carroll. [Pg 900] |
I am Unknown. |
The saddest fish that swims the briny ocean, Oliver Herford. |
"Can you spare a Threepenny bit, Oliver Herford. |
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat went to sea Edward Lear. |
When the little armadillo Arthur Guiterman. |
I am a lone, unfathered chick, Robert J. Burdette. |
It was an artless Bandar, and he danced upon a pine, And much I wondered how he lived, and where the beast might dine, And many, many other things, till, o'er my morning smoke, I slept the sleep of idleness and dreamed that Bandar spoke. He said: "Oh, man of many clothes! sad crawler on the Hills! Observe, I know not Ranken's shop, nor Ranken's monthly bills! I take no heed to trousers or the coats that you call dress; Nor am I plagued with little cards for little drinks at Mess. "I steal the bunnia's grain at morn, at noon and eventide (For he is fat and I am spare), I roam the mountainside, I follow no man's carriage, and no, never in my life Have I flirted at Peliti's with another Bandar's wife. "Oh, man of futile fopperies—unnecessary wraps; I own no ponies in the Hills, I drive no tall-wheeled traps; I buy me not twelve-button gloves, 'short-sixes' eke, or rings, Nor do I waste at Hamilton's my wealth on pretty things. "I quarrel with my wife at home, we never fight abroad; But Mrs. B. has grasped the fact I am her only lord. I never heard of fever—dumps nor debts depress my soul; And I pity and despise you!" Here he pouched my breakfast-roll. His hide was very mangy and his face was very red, And undisguisedly he scratched with energy his head. His manners were not always nice, but how my spirit cried To be an artless Bandar loose upon the mountainside! So I answered: "Gentle Bandar, an inscrutable Decree Makes thee a gleesome, fleasome Thou, and me a wretched Me. Go! Depart in peace, my brother, to thy home amid the pine; Yet forget not once a mortal wished to change his lot with thine." Rudyard Kipling. [Pg 906] |
Yet another great truth I record in my verse, Hilaire Belloc. |
The Llama is a woolly sort of fleecy, hairy goat, Hilaire Belloc. |
As a friend to the children commend me the yak, |
Be kind and tender to the Frog, Hilaire Belloc. |
The Microbe is so very small Hilaire Belloc. |
The crow—the crow! the great black crow! Philip James Bailey. [Pg 909] |
Close by the threshold of a door nailed fast, William Cowper. |
A Poet's Cat, sedate and grave MORAL
Beware of too sublime a sense William Cowper. |
Oh, many have told of the monkeys of old, Unknown. |
Jacob! I do not like to see thy nose Robert Southey. |
A whale of great porosity MORAL
O, let this tale dramatic, Henry A. Beers. |
There was a Cameronian cat Unknown. |
In early youth, as you may guess, Walter Parke. |
O say, have you seen at the Willows so green— Bret Harte. [Pg 923] |
A lively young turtle lived down by the banks James Thomas Fields. [Pg 925] |
What makes you come here fer, Mister, James Whitcomb Riley. |
There was a little girl, Unknown. |
There was a cruel darkey boy, Unknown. |
Wynken, Blynken, and Nod one night Eugene Field. |
In an ocean, 'way out yonder Eugene Field. [Pg 931] |
A little peach in the orchard grew, Eugene Field. [Pg 932] |
With chocolate-cream that you buy in the cake Unknown. |
Sleep, my own darling, Mary Mapes Dodge. [Pg 934] |
Little Orphant Annie's come to our house to stay, An' wash the cups and saucers up, an' brush the crumbs away, An' shoo the chickens off the porch, an' dust the hearth, an' sweep, An' make the fire, an' bake the bread, an' earn her board-an'-keep; An' all us other children, when the supper things is done, We set around the kitchen fire an' has the mostest fun A-list'nin' to the witch-tales 'at Annie tells about, An' the Gobble-uns 'at gits you Ef you Don't Watch Out! Onc't there was a little boy wouldn't say his pray'rs— An' when he went to bed at night, away up stairs, His mammy heerd him holler, an' his daddy heerd him bawl, An' when they turn't the kivvers down, he wasn't there at all! An' they seeked him in the rafter-room, an' cubby-hole, an' press, An' seeked him up the chimbly-flue, an' ever'wheres, I guess; But all they ever found was thist his pants an' roundabout! An' the Gobble-uns'll git you Ef you Don't Watch Out! An' one time a little girl 'ud allus laugh an' grin, An' make fun of ever' one, an' all her blood-an'-kin; An' onc't when they was "company," an' ole folks was there, She mocked 'em an' shocked 'em, an' said she didn't care! An' thist as she kicked her heels, an' turn't to run an' hide, They was two great big Black Things a-standin' by her side, [Pg 935]An' they snatched her through the ceilin' 'fore she knowed what she's about! An' the Gobble-uns'll git you Ef you Don't Watch Out! An' little Orphant Annie says, when the blaze is blue, An' the lampwick sputters, an' the wind goes woo-oo! An' you hear the crickets quit, an' the moon is gray, An' the lightnin'-bugs in dew is all squenched away,— You better mind yer parents, and yer teachers fond and dear, An' churish them 'at loves you, an' dry the orphant's tear, An' he'p the pore an' needy ones 'at clusters all about, Er the Gobble-uns'll git you Ef you Don't Watch Out! James Whitcomb Riley. |
'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house Clement Clarke Moore. |
Oh! listen, little children, to a proper little song Of a naughty little urchin who was always doing wrong: He disobey'd his mammy, and he disobey'd his dad, And he disobey'd his uncle, which was very near as bad. He wouldn't learn to cipher, and he wouldn't learn to write, But he would tear up his copy-books to fabricate a kite; And he used his slate and pencil in so barbarous a way, That the grinders of his governess got looser ev'ry day. At last he grew so obstinate that no one could contrive To cure him of a theory that two and two made five And, when they taught him how to spell, he show'd his wicked whims By mutilating Pinnock and mislaying Watts's Hymns. Instead of all such pretty books, (which must improve the mind,) He cultivated volumes of a most improper kind; Directories and almanacks he studied on the sly, And gloated over Bradshaw's Guide when nobody was by. From such a course of reading you can easily divine The condition of his morals at the age of eight or nine. His tone of conversation kept becoming worse and worse, Till it scandalised his governess and horrified his nurse. He quoted bits of Bradshaw that were quite unfit to hear, And recited from the Almanack, no matter who was near: [Pg 938]He talked of Reigate Junction and of trains both up and down, And referr'd to men who call'd themselves Jones, Robinson, and Brown. But when this naughty boy grew up he found the proverb true, That Fate one day makes people pay for all the wrong they do. He was cheated out of money by a man whose name was Brown, And got crippled in a railway smash while coming up to town. So, little boys and little girls, take warning while you can, And profit by the history of this unhappy man. Read Dr. Watts and Pinnock, dears; and when you learn to spell, Shun Railway Guides, Directories, and Almanacks as well! Henry S. Leigh. |
The chill November day was done, Eliza Sproat Turner. |
I haf von funny leedle poy, Charles Follen Adams. |
Thou happy, happy elf! Thomas Hood. |
Why is it the children don't love me Charles Henry Webb. [Pg 946] |
There was a child, as I have been told, M. Pelham. [Pg 947] |
"Bunches of grapes," says Timothy, Walter Ramal. [Pg 948] |
I never saw a Purple Cow, Gelett Burgess. |
There was a young lady of Niger Unknown. |
To see the Kaiser's epitaph Oliver Herford. |
Said Opie Read to E. P. Roe, Julian Street and James Montgomery Flagg. [Pg 949] |
Oh, dewy was the morning, upon the first of May, Eugene F. Ware. |
I come from good old Boston, Dr. Samuel G. Bushnell. |
Here's to the town of New Haven, Dean Jones. |
"The Herring he loves the merry moonlight Sir Walter Scott. |
If the man who turnips cries, Samuel Johnson. [Pg 950] |
There wanst was two cats of Kilkenny, Unknown. |
What is the matter with Grandpapa? D'Arcy W. Thompson. |
Whene'er I take my walks abroad, Richard Harris Barham. |
The cat is in the parlour, |
"Bon jour, Madame Sans Souci; |
The man in the wilderness asked of me |
If all the land were apple-pie, |
page | ||
Authors Unknown | ||
All's Well That Ends Well | 264 | |
Amazing Facts About Food | 91 | |
Ambiguous Lines | 804 | |
Any One Will Do | 169 | |
As To The Weather | 107 | |
Ballad of Bedlam, A | 886 | |
Ballad of High Endeavor, A | 484 | |
Bellagcholly Days | 747 | |
Bells, The | 816 | |
Cameronian Cat, The | 917 | |
Careful Penman, The | 810 | |
Catalectic Monody, A | 833 | |
Categorical Courtship | 207 | |
Chemist to His Love, A | 206 | |
Christmas Chimes | 284 | |
Clown's Courtship, The | 217 | |
Conjugal Conundrum, A | 371 | |
Cosmic Egg, The | 771 | |
Cosmopolitan Woman, A | 167 | |
Counsel to Those That Eat | 932 | |
Country Summer Pastoral, A | 883 | |
Cupid's Darts | 67 | |
Darwinian Ballad | 913 | |
Dirge | 787 | |
Father William | 531 | |
Fin de Siècle | 357 | |
Fragment, A | 450 | |
Future of the Classics, The | 826 | |
Gillian | 511 | |
Homœopathic Soup | 76 | |
Hyder Iddle | 879 | |
Idyll of Phatte and Leene, An | 406 | |
If | 951 | |
Imagiste Love Lines | 383 | |
Imaginative Crisis, The | 451 | |
Imitations of Walt Whitman | 434 | |
Indifference | 950 | |
Invitation to the Zoological Gardens, An | 822 | |
Israfiddlestrings | 472 | |
Justice to Scotland | 384 | |
Kilkenny Cats, The | 950 | |
Kindly Advice | 890 | |
King John and the Abbot | 554 | |
King Arthur | 879 | |
Learned Negro, The | 274 | |
Life | 783 | |
Lines | 456 | |
Lines by an Old Fogy | 882 | |
Lines to Miss Florence Huntingdon | 830 | |
Lines Written After a Battle | 456 | |
Little Star, The | 476 | |
Logic | 809 | |
Logical English | 809 | |
Lost Spectacles, The | 287 | |
Love's Moods and Tenses | 812 | |
Man of Words, A | 790 | |
Man's Place in Nature | 89 | |
Maudle-in-Ballad, A | 510 | |
Midsummer Madness | 377 | |
Minguillo's Kiss | 122 | |
Mme. Sans Souci | 951 | |
Modern Hiawatha, The | 482 | |
Mr. Finney's Turnip | 847 | |
My Dream | 853 | |
My Foe | 529 | |
Naughty Darkey Boy, The | 927 | |
Nirvana | 900 | |
North, East, South and West | 403 | |
Nursery Rhymes à la Mode | 509 | |
Nursery Song in Pidgin English | 530 | |
Ocean Wanderer, The | 879 | |
Ode to a Bobtailed Cat | 736 | |
Odv | 788 | |
On a Deaf Housekeeper | 76 | |
Origin of Ireland, The | 106 | |
Original Lamb, The | 477 | |
Panegyric on the Ladies | 803 | |
Questions with Answers | 810 | |
Rev. Gabe Tucker's Remarks | 312 | |
Riddle, A | 951 | |
Rural Raptures | 450 | |
Sainte Margérie | 477 | |
Siege of Belgrade, The | 813 | |
Similes | 791 | |
Song of the Springtide | 527 | |
Sonnet Found in a Deserted Mad House | 851 | |
Stanzas to Pale Ale | 732 | |
Strike Among the Poets, A | 785 | |
Susan Simpson | 774 | |
There was a Little Girl | 926 | |
Thingumbob, The | 882 | |
Three Children | 843 | |
Three Jovial Huntsmen | 878 | |
'Tis Midnight | 843 | |
'Tis Sweet to Roam | 878 | |
To an Importunate Host | 534 | |
To Be or Not To Be | 891 | |
Transcendentalism | 92 | |
Trust in Women | 276 | |
Two Fishers | 188 | |
Ultimate Joy, The | 32 | |
Unfortunate Miss-Bailey | 702 | |
Village Choir, The | 528 | |
Whango Tree, The | 842 | |
What is a Woman Like? | 118 | |
Whenceness of the Which | 476 | |
Whistler, The | 133 | |
Wonders of Nature | 882 | |
Wordsworthian Reminiscence | 470 | |
Young Lady of Niger, The | 948 | |
Young Lochinvar | 381 | |
Adams, Charles Follen | ||
Leedle Yawcob Strauss | 940 | |
Adams, Franklin P. | ||
Erring in Company | 55 | |
Popular Ballad: "Never Forget Your Parents" | 394 [Pg 954] | |
To a Thesaurus | 825 | |
Translated Way | 427 | |
Addison, Joseph | ||
Song | 751 | |
To a Capricious Friend | 368 | |
Aldrich, Dr. Henry | ||
Reasons for Drinking | 364 | |
Anstey, F. | ||
Select Passages from a Coming Poet | 410 | |
Aristophanes | ||
Chorus of Women | 126 | |
Ashby-Sterry, J. | ||
Kindness to Animals | 891 | |
Pet's Punishment | 184 | |
Atwell, Roy | ||
Some Little Bug | 77 | |
Aytoun, William E. | ||
Bitter Bit, The | 451 | |
Broken Pitcher, The | 196 | |
Comfort in Affliction | 453 | |
Husband's Petition, The | 454 | |
Lay of the Lover's Friend, The | 88 | |
Aytoun, William E., and Martin | ||
Lay of the Love Lorn, The | 537 | |
Bailey, Philip James | ||
Great Black Crow, The | 908 | |
Ballard, Harlan Hoge | ||
In the Catacombs | 52 | |
Bangs, John Kendrick | ||
"Mona Lisa" | 95 | |
Barham, Richard Harris [Thomas Ingoldsby] | ||
Confession, The | 443 | |
Forlorn One, The | 449 | |
Jackdaw of Rheims, The | 586 | |
Knight and the Lady, The | 590 | |
Misadventures at Margate | 558 | |
More Walks | 950 | |
Bayly, Thomas Haynes | ||
Why Don't the Men Propose? | 130 | |
Bede, Cuthbert | ||
In Memoriam | 463 | |
Beers, Henry A. | ||
Fish Story, A | 916 | |
Bellaw, A. W. | ||
Conjugal Conjugations | 810 | |
Old Line Fence, The | 760 | |
Belloc, Hilaire | ||
Frog, The | 907 | |
Llama, The | 906 | |
Microbe, The | 907 | |
Viper, The | 906 | |
Yak, The | 906 | |
Bennett, John | ||
To Marie | 852 | |
Birdseye, George | ||
Paradise | 281 | |
Blake, Rodney | ||
Hoch! der Kaiser | 291 | |
Blake, William | ||
Cupid | 56 | |
Little Vagabond, The | 269 | |
Blanchard, Laman | ||
Art of Book-Keeping, The | 818 | |
False Love and True Logic | 183 | |
Ode to a Human Heart | 784 | |
Whatever is, is Right | 786 | |
Bridges, Madeline | ||
Third Proposition, The | 345 | |
Bridgman, L. J. | ||
On Knowing When to Stop | 312 | |
Browne, Charles Farrar [Artemus Ward] | ||
Uncle Simon and Uncle Jim | 849 | |
Brownell, Henry Howard | ||
Lawyer's Invocation to Spring, The | 402 | |
Browning, Robert | ||
Pied Piper of Hamelin, The | 603 | |
Pope and the Net, The | 286 | |
Youth and Art | 339 | |
Bunner, H. C. | ||
Behold the Deeds | 397 | |
Home Sweet Home with Variations | 498 | |
Shake, Mulleary and Go-Ethe | 40 | |
Way to Arcady, The | 201 | |
Burdette, Robert J. | ||
Orphan Born | 903 | |
Romance of the Carpet, The | 674 | |
"Soldier, Rest!" | 374 | |
"Songs without Words" | 413 | |
What Will We Do? | 311 | |
Burgess, Gelett | ||
Dighton is Engaged | 647 | |
Extracts from the Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne | 512 | |
Invisible Bridge, The | 855 | |
Kitty Wants to Write | 646 | |
Lazy Roof, The | 855 | |
My Feet | 855 | |
Purple Cow, The | 948 | |
Villanelle of Things Amusing | 73 | |
Burnand, F. C. | ||
Fisherman's Chant, The | 81 | |
Oh, My Geraldine | 180 | |
True to Poll | 275 | |
Burns, Robert | ||
Address to the Toothache | 724 | |
Holy Willie's Prayer | 272 | |
John Barleycorn | 730 | |
Tam O'Shanter | 623 | |
Bushnell, Dr. Samuel G. | ||
On the Aristocracy of Harvard | 949 | |
Butler, Ellis Parker | ||
Secret Combination, The | 209 | |
Butler, Samuel | ||
Hypocrisy | 365 | |
Religion of Hudibras, The | 271 | |
Smatterers | 365 | |
Butler, William Allen | ||
Nothing to Wear | 148 | |
Byron, John | ||
Three Black Crows | 254 | |
Which is Which | 368 | |
Byron, Lord | ||
Written After Swimming from Sestos to Abydos | 80 | |
Calverley, Charles Stuart | ||
Ballad | 467 | |
Cock and the Bull, The | 464 | |
Companions | 63 | |
Disaster | 469 | |
[Pg 955] | ||
First Love | 116 | |
Lovers and a Reflection | 372 | |
Ode to Tobacco | 732 | |
Schoolmaster, The | 64 | |
Cannan, Edward | ||
Unexpected Fact, An | 844 | |
Canning, George | ||
Elderly Gentlemen, The | 665 | |
Knife-grinder, The | 249 | |
Song | 84 | |
Carey, Henry | ||
Sally in Our Alley | 182 | |
Carleton, Will | ||
New Church Organ, The | 162 | |
Carroll, Lewis | ||
Father William | 485 | |
Humpty Dumpty's Recitation | 872 | |
Hunting of the Snark, The | 676 | |
Jabberwocky | 869 | |
Some Hallucinations | 874 | |
Walrus and the Carpenter, The | 896 | |
Ways and Means | 870 | |
Carryl, Charles E. | ||
Post Captain, The | 615 | |
Robinson Crusoe's Story | 617 | |
Carryl, Guy Wetmore | ||
Ballad, A | 426 | |
Girl was too Reckless of Grammar, A | 395 | |
Cary, Phoebe | ||
Ballad of the Canal | 492 | |
"The Day is Done" | 490 | |
Jacob | 491 | |
John Thomson's Daughter | 494 | |
There's a Bower of Bean-vines | 493 | |
Reuben | 493 | |
When Lovely Woman | 494 | |
Wife, The | 494 | |
Cayley, George John | ||
Epitaph, An | 366 | |
Chambers, Robert W. | ||
Officer Brady | 232 | |
Recruit, The | 230 | |
Chaucer, Geoffrey | ||
To My Empty Purse | 58 | |
Cheney, John Vance | ||
Kitchen Clock, The | 220 | |
Chesterfield, Lord | ||
On a Full-length Portrait of Beau Marsh | 369 | |
Chesterton, G. K. | ||
Ballade of an Anti-Puritan, A | 337 | |
Ballade of Suicide, A | 224 | |
Cholmondeley-Pennell, H. | ||
How the Daughters Come Down At Dunoon | 533 | |
Lay of the Deserted Influenzaed | 746 | |
Our Traveller | 445 | |
Clarke, H. E. | ||
Lady Mine | 221 | |
Clarke, Lewis Gaylord | ||
Flamingo, The | 894 | |
Claudius, Matthew | ||
Hen, The | 892 | |
Cleveland | ||
On Scotland | 369 | |
Clough, Arthur Hugh | ||
Latest Decalogue, The | 261 | |
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor | ||
Cologne | 363 | |
Eternal Poem, An | 364 | |
Giles's Hope | 363 | |
House that Jack Built, The | 407 | |
Job | 364 | |
On a Bad Singer | 364 | |
Rhymester, A | 363 | |
Collins, Mortimer | ||
Ad Chloen, M.A. | 184 | |
Chloe, M.A. | 185 | |
If | 436 | |
Martial in London | 316 | |
My Aunt's Spectre | 600 | |
Positivists, The | 315 | |
Salad | 436 | |
Sky-Making | 314 | |
Cone, Helen Gray | ||
Ballad of Cassandra Brown, The | 345 | |
Congreve, William | ||
Buxom Joan | 179 | |
Cook, Rev. Joseph | ||
Boston Nursery Rhymes | 324 | |
Corbet, Bishop | ||
Like to the Thundering Tone | 848 | |
Cotton, Charles | ||
Joys of Marriage, The | 344 | |
Cowley, Abraham | ||
Chronicle: A Ballad, The | 176 | |
Cowper, William | ||
Colubriad, The | 909 | |
Diverting History of John Gilpin, The | 564 | |
Pairing-Time Anticipated | 212 | |
Report of an Adjudged Case | 82 | |
Retired Cat, The | 910 | |
Crane, Stephen | ||
Man, The | 248 | |
Croffut, William Augustus | ||
Dirge, A | 737 | |
Cunningham, Allan | ||
John Grumlie | 326 | |
Daniell, Edith | ||
Inspect Us | 471 | |
Davison, Francis | ||
Are Women Fair? | 189 | |
Day, Holman F. | ||
Grampy Sings a Song | 670 | |
Deane, Anthony C. | ||
Here is the Tale | 421 | |
Imitation | 375 | |
Rural Bliss | 97 | |
DeBurgh, H. J. | ||
Half Hours with the Classics | 779 | |
Denison, J. P. | ||
Wing Tee Wee | 139 | |
Dibdin, Charles | ||
Nongtongpaw | 808 | |
Dillon, Viscount | ||
Donnybrook Jig, The | 700 | |
Dobson, Austin | ||
Dialogue From Plato, A | 142 | |
Dora Versus Rose | 144 | |
Jocosa Lyra | 824 | |
[Pg 956] | ||
Rondeau, The | 782 | |
Tu Quoque | 146 | |
Dodge, H. C. | ||
If | 268 | |
Splendid Fellow, A | 267 | |
Dodge, Mary Mapes | ||
Home and Mother | 932 | |
Life in Laconics | 311 | |
Over the Way | 125 | |
Zealless Xylographer, The | 759 | |
Dole, Nathan Haskell | ||
Our Native Birds | 53 | |
Donne, John | ||
Song | 330 | |
Drummond, William Henry | ||
Wreck of the "Julie Plante" | 662 | |
Dreyden, John | ||
Epitaph Intended for His Wife | 368 | |
Edwards, John R. | ||
War: A-Z, The | 829 | |
Emerson, Ralph Waldo | ||
Fable | 290 | |
Fanshawe, Catherine M. | ||
Enigma on the Letter H | 762 | |
Imitation of Wordsworth, An | 535 | |
Farrow, G. E. | ||
Converted Cannibals, The | 683 | |
Retired Pork-Butcher and the Spook, The | 685 | |
Field, Eugene | ||
Dinkey Bird, The | 929 | |
Dutch Lullaby | 928 | |
Little Peach, The | 931 | |
Truth About Horace, The | 50 | |
Fields, James Thomas | ||
Alarmed Skipper, The | 664 | |
Owl-Critic, The | 309 | |
Turtle and the Flamingo, The | 923 | |
Fink, William W. | ||
Larrie O'Dee | 165 | |
Flagg, James Montgomery [with Julian Street] | ||
Said Opie Reed | 948 | |
Foley, J. W. | ||
Nemesis | 94 | |
Scientific Proof | 880 | |
Forrester, Alfred A. [Alfred Croquill] | ||
To My Nose | 832 | |
Foss, Sam Walter | ||
Husband and Heather | 160 | |
Ideal Husband to His Wife, The | 246 | |
Meeting of the Clabberhuses, The | 244 | |
A Philosopher | 242 | |
Prayer of Cyrus Brown, The | 54 | |
Then Ag'in | 357 | |
Gallienne, Richard Le | ||
Melton Mowbray Pork-Pie, A | 472 | |
Gay, John | ||
New Song, A | 754 | |
Gilbert, Paul T. | ||
Triolet | 120 | |
Gilbert, W. S. | ||
Etiquette | 256 | |
Ferdinando and Elvira | 635 | |
Gentle Alice Brown | 639 | |
Mighty Must, The | 376 | |
Played-Out Humorist, The | 25 | |
Practical Joker, The | 26 | |
Sing for the Garish Eye | 875 | |
Sir Guy the Crusader | 644 | |
Story of Prince Agib, The | 641 | |
To Phoebe | 28 | |
To the Terrestrial Globe | 256 | |
Yarn of the "Nancy Bell" | 632 | |
Gillinan, S. W. | ||
Finnigin to Flannigan | 225 | |
Godley, A. D. | ||
After Horace | 320 | |
Pensées de Noël | 336 | |
Goldsmith, Oliver | ||
Elegy, An | 740 | |
Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An | 764 | |
Parson Gray | 741 | |
Googe, Barnaby | ||
Out of Sight, Out of Mind | 807 | |
Graves, Alfred Perceval | ||
Father O'Flynn | 719 | |
Ould Doctor Macke | 717 | |
Gray, Thomas | ||
On the Death of a Favorite Cat | 557 | |
Greene, Albert Gorton | ||
Old Grimes | 766 | |
Grissom, Arthur | ||
Ballade of Forgotten Loves | 223 | |
Guiterman, Arthur | ||
Elegy | 445 | |
Legend of the First Cam-u-el, The | 888 | |
Mavrone | 378 | |
Mexican Serenade | 902 | |
Sketch from the Life, A | 121 | |
Strictly Germ Proof | 87 | |
Halpine, Charles Graham | ||
Feminine Arithmetic | 191 | |
Harrington, Sir John | ||
Of a Certain Man | 282 | |
Of a Precise Tailor | 322 | |
Harte, Bret | ||
Ballad of the Emeu, The | 921 | |
"Jim" | 652 | |
Plain Language from Truthful James | 648 | |
Society Upon the Stanislaus, The | 650 | |
To the Pliocene Skull | 46 | |
Willows, The | 423 | |
Hartswick, F. G. | ||
Somewhere-in-Europe-Wodky | 482 | |
Hastings, Lady T. | ||
"Exactly So" | 61 | |
Hay, John | ||
Distichs | 247 | |
Enchanted Shirt, The | 658 | |
Good and Bad Luck | 334 | |
Jim Bludso | 661 | |
Little Breeches | 657 | |
[Pg 957] | ||
Hazzard, John Edward | ||
Ain't It Awful, Mabel? | 137 | |
Heber, Reginald | ||
Sympathy | 270 | |
Henley, William Ernest | ||
Culture in the Slums | 400 | |
Her Little Feet | 59 | |
Triolet, The | 782 | |
Villon's Straight Tip to All Cross Coves | 399 | |
Herford, Oliver | ||
Catfish, The | 900 | |
Cloud, The | 134 | |
Laughing Willow, The | 948 | |
Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream | 30 | |
Phyllis Lee | 139 | |
War Relief | 901 | |
Herrick, Robert | ||
Five Wives | 772 | |
No Fault in Women | 166 | |
Ternary of Littles Upon a Pipkin of Jelly Sent to a Lady, A | 806 | |
Hill, Marion | ||
Lovelilts | 824 | |
Hogg, James | ||
Love is Like a Dizziness | 218 | |
Holmes, Oliver Wendell | ||
Æstivation | 849 | |
Ballad of the Oysterman, The | 583 | |
Cacoethes Scribendi | 238 | |
Contentment | 238 | |
The Deacon's Masterpiece | 580 | |
Familiar Letter to Several Correspondents, A | 36 | |
Height of the Ridiculous, The | 38 | |
Ode for a Social Meeting | 833 | |
Our Hymn | 374 | |
To the Portrait of "A Gentleman" | 236 | |
Hood, Thomas | ||
Bachelor's Dream, The | 342 | |
Ben Bluff | 619 | |
Death's Ramble | 801 | |
Faithless Nellie Gray | 797 | |
Faithless Sally Brown | 792 | |
No! | 792 | |
Nocturnal Sketch, A | 823 | |
Parental Ode to my Son Aged Three Years and Five Months, A | 941 | |
Sally Simpkin's Lament | 800 | |
Tim Turpin | 795 | |
To Minerva | 49 | |
Hood, Thomas, Jr. | ||
In Memoriam Technicam | 413 | |
Takings | 817 | |
Wedding, The | 412 | |
Hook, Theodore | ||
Cautionary Verses | 828 | |
Hovey, Richard | ||
Barney McGee | 721 | |
Hunt, Leigh | ||
Jovial Priest's Confession, The | 834 | |
Nun, The | 206 | |
Huntley, Stanley | ||
Annabel Lee | 497 | |
Ingoldsby, Thomas [See Richard Harris Barham] | ||
Irwin, Wallace | ||
Blow Me Eyes! | 115 | |
Constant Cannibal Maiden, The | 194 | |
Grain of Salt, A | 241 | |
Jenks, Tudor | ||
Old Bachelor, An | 98 | |
Johnson, Burges | ||
Why Doth a Pussy Cat? | 895 | |
Johnson, Hilda | ||
Quest of the Purple Cow, The | 100 | |
Johnson, Rossiter | ||
Ninety-nine in the Shade | 781 | |
Johnson, Samuel | ||
If the Man | 949 | |
Johnston, William | ||
On the Downtown Side of an Uptown Street | 79 | |
Johnstone, Henry | ||
Fastidious Serpent, The | 887 | |
Jones, Dean | ||
On the Democracy of Yale | 949 | |
Jonson, Ben | ||
Answer to Master Wither's Song, "Shall I, Wasting in Despair?" | 526 | |
Cupid | 211 | |
To Doctor Empiric | 365 | |
Keats, John | ||
Portrait, A | 496 | |
Kerr, Orpheus [See Robert H. Newell] | ||
King, Ben | ||
How Often | 489 | |
If I Should Die To-night | 489 | |
Pessimist, The | 358 | |
Kingsley, Charles | ||
Oubit, The | 330 | |
Kipling, Rudyard | ||
Commonplaces | 427 | |
Divided Destinies | 904 | |
Study of an Elevation, in Indian Ink | 226 | |
Knight, Henry Coggswell | ||
Lunar Stanzas | 841 | |
Lamb, Charles | ||
Farewell to Tobacco, A | 726 | |
Nonsense Verses | 848 | |
Lampton, W. J. | ||
New Persion, The | 90 | |
Landor, Walter Savage | ||
Honey-moon, The | 366 | |
Gifts Returned | 198 | |
Lang, Andrew | ||
Ballad of the Primitive Jest | 72 | |
Double Ballad of Primitive Man | 331 | |
Langbridge, Frederick | ||
Quite By Chance | 205 | |
Lanigan, George Thomas | ||
Ahkoond of Swat, The | 710 | |
Dirge of the Moolla of Kotal | 712 | |
[Pg 958] | ||
Lear, Edward | ||
Ahkoond of Swat, The | 708 | |
Jumbles, The | 862 | |
New Vestments, The | 866 | |
Owl and the Pussy Cat, The | 901 | |
Pobble Who Has No Toes, The | 865 | |
Two Old Bachelors, The | 868 | |
Yongby-Bonghy-Bo, The | 859 | |
Leigh, Henry S. | ||
Cossimbazar | 843 | |
Maud | 188 | |
My Love and My Heart | 204 | |
Nursery Legend, A | 937 | |
Only Seven | 543 | |
Romanunt of Humpty Dumpty, The | 411 | |
'Twas Ever Thus | 544 | |
Twins, The | 108 | |
Leland, Charles Godfrey | ||
Ballad of Charity, A | 613 | |
Ballad of Hans Breitmann | 669 | |
Hans Breitmann's Party | 668 | |
Legend of Heinz Von Stein, The | 49 | |
Lemke, E. | ||
Rhyme of Musicians, A | 772 | |
Lemon, Mark | ||
How to Make a Man of Consequence | 280 | |
Lessing | ||
Mendax | 369 | |
To a Slow Walker and Quick Eater | 369 | |
Lever, Charles | ||
Pope, The | 70 | |
Widow Malone, The | 126 | |
Lindesay, Sir David | ||
Carman's Account of a Law Suit, A | 807 | |
Locker-Lampson, Frederick | ||
Circumstance | 444 | |
Mrs. Smith | 155 | |
My Mistress's Boots | 153 | |
On a Sense of Humor | 367 | |
Some Ladies | 367 | |
Susan | 157 | |
Terrible Infant, A | 156 | |
Loines, Russell Hilliard | ||
On a Magazine Sonnet | 281 | |
Loomis, Charles Battell | ||
O-u-g-h | 761 | |
Propinquity Needed | 51 | |
Song of Sorrow, A | 386 | |
Loring, Fred W. | ||
Fair Millinger, The | 186 | |
Lovelace, Richard | ||
Song | 241 | |
Lover, Samuel | ||
Birth of Saint Patrick, The | 58 | |
Father Malloy | 307 | |
How to Ask and Have | 181 | |
Lanty Leary | 208 | |
Paddy O'Rafther | 571 | |
Quaker's Meeting, The | 576 | |
Rory O'More; or, Good Omens | 141 | |
Lowell, James Russell | ||
Candidate's Creed, The | 294 | |
Courtin', The | 110 | |
What Mr. Robinson Thinks | 292 | |
Without and Within | 359 | |
Ludlow, Fitz Hugh | ||
Too Late | 348 | |
Lummis, C. F. | ||
Poe-'em of Passion, A | 532 | |
Lysaght, Edward | ||
Kitty of Coleraine | 130 | |
Mackay, Charles | ||
Bachelor's Mono-Rhyme, A | 817 | |
Cynical Ode to an Ultra-Cynical Public | 339 | |
Mackintosh, Newton | ||
Lucy Lake | 463 | |
Optimism | 445 | |
Pessimism | 338 | |
Macy, Arthur | ||
Rollicking Mastodon, The | 853 | |
Maginn, William | ||
Irishman and the Lady, The | 742 | |
St. Patrick, of Ireland, My Dear! | 101 | |
Marquis, Don | ||
For I Am Sad | 379 | |
Lilies | 379 | |
Marriott, John | ||
Devonshire Lane, The | 266 | |
Masson, Tom | ||
Kiss, The | 109 | |
Maxwell, J. C. | ||
Rigid Body Sings | 483 | |
Mayhew, Horace | ||
Travesty of Miss Fanshawe's Enigma | 763 | |
Ménage, Gilles | ||
Happy Man, The | 814 | |
Merivale, Herman C. | ||
Darwinity | 409 | |
Town of Nice, The | 438 | |
Miller, Alice Duer | ||
If They Meant All They Said | 247 | |
Miller, Joaquin | ||
That Gentle Man From Boston Town | 629 | |
That Texan Cattle Man | 288 | |
William Brown of Oregon | 653 | |
Milne, A. A. | ||
From a Full Heart | 31 | |
Milton, John | ||
On the Oxford Carrier | 780 | |
Mix, Parmenas | ||
Accepted and Will Appear | 268 | |
He Came to Pay | 447 | |
Moore, Augustus M. | ||
Ballade of Ballade-Mongers, A | 441 | |
Moore, Clement Clarke | ||
Visit from St. Nicholas, A | 935 | |
Moore, Thomas | ||
If you Have Seen | 444 | |
Lying | 86 | |
Of All the Men | 370 | |
On Taking a Wife | 367 | |
Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party | 367 | |
What's My Thought Like? | 370 | |
[Pg 959] | ||
Morgan, Bessie | ||
'Späcially Jim | 129 | |
Morris, Captain C. | ||
Contrast, The | 265 | |
Morris, George Pope | ||
Retort, The | 174 | |
Motteux, Peter A. | ||
Rondelay, A | 41 | |
Moxon, Frederick | ||
All at Sea | 70 | |
Munkittrick, R. K. | ||
Unsatisfied Yearning | 889 | |
What's in a Name? | 347 | |
Winter Dusk | 42 | |
Nack, James | ||
Here She Goes and There She Goes | 572 | |
Nairne, Lady | ||
The Laird o' Cockpen | 703 | |
Newell, Robert H. [Orpheus C. Kerr] | ||
American Traveller, The | 757 | |
Editor's Wooing, The | 389 | |
Great Fight, A | 697 | |
Rejected "National Hymns," The | 387 | |
O'Keefe, John | ||
Friar of Orders Gray, The | 282 | |
O'Leary, Cormac | ||
Reflections on Cleopathera's Needle | 105 | |
O'Reilly, John Boyle | ||
Constancy | 137 | |
Osborn, Selleck | ||
Modest Wit, A | 260 | |
Outram, George | ||
Annuity, The | 350 | |
On Hearing a Lady Praise a Certain Rev. Doctor's Eyes | 368 | |
Pain, Barry | ||
Bangkolidye | 334 | |
Martin Luther at Potsdam | 404 | |
Oh! Weary Mother | 000 | |
Poets at Tea, The | 486 | |
Paine, Albert Bigelow | ||
Mis' Smith | 119 | |
Sary "Fixes Up" Things | 192 | |
Palmer, E. H. | ||
Parterre, The | 180 | |
Shipwreck, The | 876 | |
Palmer, William Pitt | ||
Smack in School, The | 128 | |
Parke, Walter | ||
Foam and Fangs | 544 | |
His Mother-in-Law | 75 | |
My Madeline | 773 | |
Vague Story, A | 74 | |
Young Gazelle | 918 | |
Paull, H. M. | ||
Eastern Question, An | 598 | |
Peck, Samuel Minturn | ||
Bessie Brown, M.D. | 120 | |
Kiss in the Rain, A | 123 | |
Pelham, M. | ||
Comical Girl, The | 946 | |
Perry, Nora | ||
Love Knot, The | 124 | |
Philips, Barclay | ||
Polka Lyric, A | 832 | |
Philips, John | ||
Splendid Shilling, The | 316 | |
Piggot, Mostyn T. | ||
Hundred Best Books, The | 769 | |
Planché, J. R. | ||
Song | 99 | |
Pontalais, Jehan Du | ||
Money | 323 | |
Pope, Alexander | ||
Fool and the Poet, The | 363 | |
Ruling Passion, The | 285 | |
To a Blockhead | 362 | |
Porson, Richard | ||
Dido | 366 | |
Nothing | 786 | |
Porter, H. H. | ||
Forty Years After | 210 | |
Praed, Winthrop Mackworth | ||
Belle of the Ball, The | 171 | |
Song of Impossibilities, A | 327 | |
Pratt, Florence E. | ||
Courting in Kentucky | 168 | |
Prior, Matthew | ||
Epitaph, An | 765 | |
Phillis's Age | 332 | |
Remedy Worse Than the Disease, A | 365 | |
Simile, A | 262 | |
Proudfit, David Law | ||
Prehistoric Smith | 83 | |
Prout, Father | ||
Malbrouck | 28 | |
Sabine Farmer's Serenade, The | 214 | |
Ramal, Walter | ||
Bunches of Grapes | 947 | |
Rands, W. B. | ||
Clean Clara | 283 | |
Riley, James Whitcomb | ||
Little Orphant Annie | 934 | |
Lugubrious Whing-Whang, The | 858 | |
Man in the Moon, The | 856 | |
Old Man and Jim, The | 678 | |
Prior to Miss Belle's Appearance | 925 | |
Spirk Throll-Derisive | 855 | |
When the Frost Is on the Punkin | 34 | |
Robertson, Harrison | ||
Kentucky Philosophy | 325 | |
Robinson, Edwin Arlington | ||
Miniver Cheevy | 229 | |
Two Men | 35 | |
Roche, James Jeffrey | ||
Boston Lullaby, A | 240 | |
Lament of the Scotch Irish Exile | 385 | |
Sailor's Yarn, A | 680 | |
V-A-S-E, The | 227 | |
Rodger, Alexander | ||
Behave Yoursel' Before Folk | 174 | |
Romaine, Harry | ||
Unattainable, The | 141 | |
Ropes, Arthur Reed | ||
Lost Pleiad, The | 161 | |
[Pg 960] | ||
Russell, Irwin | ||
First Banjo, The | 672 | |
Sancta-Clara, á Abraham | ||
St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fishes | 251 | |
Saxe, John G. | ||
Comic Miseries | 42 | |
Early Rising | 44 | |
Echo | 750 | |
Rhyme of the Rail | 748 | |
Sonnet to a Clam | 734 | |
Woman's Will | 362 | |
Sawyer, William | ||
"Caudal" Lecture, A | 92 | |
Cremation | 534 | |
Turvey Top | 884 | |
Scollard, Clinton | ||
Ballade of the Golfer in Love | 222 | |
Noureddin, the Son of the Shah | 199 | |
Scott, Sir Walter | ||
Herring, The | 949 | |
Nora's Vow | 159 | |
Seaman, Owen | ||
At the Sign of the Cock | 414 | |
Of Baiting the Lion | 893 | |
Plea for Trigamy, A | 68 | |
Presto Furioso | 417 | |
To Julia in Shooting Togs | 418 | |
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley | ||
Literary Lady, The | 278 | |
Wife, A | 366 | |
Shults, George Francis | ||
Under the Mistletoe | 196 | |
Sibley, Charles | ||
Plaidie, The | 190 | |
Sidney, James A. | ||
Irish Schoolmaster, The | 103 | |
Sims, George R. | ||
By Parcels Post | 262 | |
Smith, Harry B. | ||
"I Didn't Like Him" | 157 | |
My Angeline | 158 | |
Same Old Story | 360 | |
Smith, Horace | ||
Gouty Merchant and the Stranger, The | 563 | |
Jester Condemned to Death, The | 378 | |
Smith, James | ||
Baby's Début, The | 390 | |
Surnames | 804 | |
Smith, Sydney | ||
Salad | 93 | |
Southey, Robert | ||
Battle of Blenheim, The | 252 | |
Cataract of Lodore, The | 743 | |
Devil's Walk on Earth, The | 298 | |
March to Moscow, The | 775 | |
Pig, The | 914 | |
Well of St. Keyne, The | 584 | |
Stanton, Frank Libby | ||
How to Eat Watermelons | 73 | |
Stephen, James Kenneth | ||
Cynicus to W. Shakespeare | 362 | |
Last Ride Together, The | 431 | |
Millennium, The | 60 | |
School | 60 | |
Senex to Matt. Prior | 362 | |
Thought, A | 248 | |
Stevens, H. P. | ||
Why | 214 | |
Street, Julian [with James Montgomery Flagg] | ||
Said Opie Reed | 948 | |
Stuart, Alaric Bertrand | ||
Jim-Jam King of the Jou-jous, The | 851 | |
Stuart, Ruth McEnery | ||
Endless Song, The | 768 | |
Hen-Roost Man, The | 247 | |
Suckling, Sir John | ||
Out Upon It | 218 | |
Wedding, A | 704 | |
Swift, Dean | ||
Gentle Echo On Woman, A | 752 | |
Twelve Articles | 279 | |
Swinburne, Algernon Charles | ||
Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The | 458 | |
Nephelidia | 459 | |
Up the Spout | 460 | |
Taber, Harry Parsons | ||
Jaberwocky of Authors, The | 437 | |
Taylor, Bayard | ||
Angelo Orders His Dinner | 428 | |
Camerados | 430 | |
Cantelope, The | 393 | |
Hiram Hover | 113 | |
Palabras Grandiosas | 407 | |
Promissory Note, The | 429 | |
Taylor, Bert Leston | ||
Bygones | 383 | |
Farewell | 419 | |
Old Stuff | 48 | |
Post-Impressionism | 235 | |
Tennyson, Lord | ||
Goose, The | 611 | |
Northern Farmer | 354 | |
Thackeray, W. M. | ||
Ballad of Bouillabaisse, The | 714 | |
Crystal Palace, The | 547 | |
Little Billee | 546 | |
Old Fashioned Fun | 33 | |
Sorrows of Werther, The | 140 | |
Tragic Story, A | 850 | |
When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas | 34 | |
Willow-Tree, The | 439 | |
Wofle New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The | 552 | |
Thayer, Ernest Lawrence | ||
Casey at the Bat | 601 | |
Thompson, D'Arcy W. | ||
Poor Dear Grandpapa | 950 | |
Towne, Charles Hanson | ||
Messed Damozel, The | 471 | |
Traill, H. D. | ||
After Dilettante Concetti | 474 | |
Trowbridge, John Townsend | ||
Darius Green and His Flying-Machine | 690 | |
Turner, Eliza Sproat | ||
Little Goose, A | 938 | |
Turner, Godfrey | ||
Love Playnt, A | 408 | |
Tytler, James | ||
I Hae Laid a Herring in Saut | 216 | |
[Pg 961] | ||
Untermeyer, Louis | ||
Owen Seaman | 480 | |
Robert Frost | 479 | |
Vandyne, Mary E. | ||
The Bald-headed Tyrant | 720 | |
Villon, François | ||
All Things Except Myself I Know | 343 | |
Wake, William Basil | ||
Saying Not Meaning | 666 | |
Ward, Artemus [See Charles Farrar Browne] | ||
Ware, Eugene Fitch | ||
He and She | 109 | |
Manila | 949 | |
Siege of Djklxprwbz, The | 96 | |
Warren, George F. | ||
Lord Guy | 191 | |
Waterman, Nixon | ||
If We Didn't Have to Eat | 57 | |
Weatherly, Frederic E. | ||
Bird in the Hand, A | 170 | |
Thursday | 313 | |
Usual Way, The | 200 | |
Webb, Charles Henry | ||
Little Mamma | 943 | |
Wells, Carolyn | ||
Diversions of the Re-Echo Club | 515 | |
Limericks | 835 | |
Styx River Anthology | 521 | |
West, Paul | ||
Cumberbunce, The | 844 | |
Wesley, Rev. Samuel | ||
On Butler's Monument | 370 | |
Witcher, Frances M. | ||
K. K.—Can't Calculate | 353 | |
Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles | 195 | |
White, Harriet R. | ||
Uffia | 877 | |
Whittier, John Greenleaf | ||
Skipper Ireson's Ride | 688 | |
Wilcox, Ella Wheeler | ||
Pin, A | 132 | |
Wildgoose, Oscuro | ||
More Impressions | 509 | |
Wilkie, A. C. | ||
Old Song By New Singers, An | 506 | |
Willis, N. P. | ||
Declaration, The | 446 | |
Willson, Arabella | ||
Appeal for Are to the Sextant of the Old Brick Meetinouse, A | 66 | |
Wolcot, John | ||
Actor, The | 287 | |
Pilgrims and the Peas, The | 621 | |
Razor Seller, The | 297 | |
To a Fly | 734 | |
Yates, Edmund | ||
All-Saints | 280 | |
Ybarra, Thomas R. | ||
Lay of Ancient Rome | 753 | |
Little Swirl of Vers Libre, A | 380 | |
Ode to Work in Springtime | 47 | |
Yriarte, Tomaso de | ||
Musical Ass, The | 249 |
page | |
A brace of sinners, for no good | 621 |
A brow austere, a circumspective eye | 280 |
A captain bold from Halifax who dwelt in country quarters | 702 |
A cat I sing, of famous memory | 833 |
A country curate visiting his flock | 287 |
A district school, not far away | 128 |
A fellow in a market town | 297 |
A fellow near Kentuck's clime | 494 |
A fig for St. Denis of France | 101 |
A friend of mine was married to a scold | 264 |
A hindoo died—a happy thing to do | 281 |
A knight and a lady once met in a grove | 270 |
A little peach in the orchard grew | 931 |
A little saint best fits a little shrine | 806 |
A lively young turtle lived down by the banks | 923 |
A lovely young lady I mourn in my rhymes | 366 |
A maiden once, of certain age | 169 |
A man of words and not of deeds | 790 |
A man said to the universe | 248 |
A man sat on a rock and sought | 83 |
A Persian penman named Aziz | 810 |
A Poet's Cat, sedate and grave | 910 |
A quiet home had Parson Gray | 741 |
A rollicking Mastodon lived in Spain | 853 |
A Russian sailed over the blue Black Sea | 374 |
A shabby fellow chanced one day to meet | 287 |
A soldier and a sailor | 179 |
A soldier of the Russians | 90 |
A speech, both pithy and concise | 61 |
A street there is in Paris famous | 714 |
A supercilious nabob of the East | 260 |
A tailor, a man of an upright dealing | 322 |
A traveller wended the wilds among | 576 |
A well there is in the west country | 584 |
A whale of great porosity | 916 |
A woman is like to—but stay | 118 |
A xylographer started to cross the sea | 759 |
A young man once was sitting | 394 |
Across the sands of Syria | 888 |
Ah! Matt, old age has brought to me | 362 |
Ah, Night! blind germ of days to be | 484 |
Ah! poor intoxicated little knave | 734 |
Ah, those hours when by-gone sages | 779 |
Ah! who has seen the mailed lobster rise | 882 |
Ah! why those piteous sounds of woe | 449 |
Alas, unhappy land; ill-fated spot | 712 |
All day she hurried to get through | 119 |
All smatterers are more brisk and pert | 365 |
Alone I sit at eventide | 53 |
An ancient story I'll tell you anon | 554 |
An Austrian Archduke, assaulted and assailed | 829 |
An Austrian army, awfully array'd | 813 |
An igstrawnary tail I vill tell you this week | 552 |
[Pg 963] | |
And so our royal relative was dead! | 737 |
And this reft house is that the which he built | 407 |
"Are women fair?" Ay, wondrous fair to see, too | 189 |
As a friend to the children commend me the yak | 906 |
As beautiful Kitty one morning was tripping | 130 |
As I was walkin' the jungle round, a-killin' of tigers an' time | 426 |
As long as I dwell on some stupendous | 60 |
As wet as a fish—as dry as a bone | 791 |
Ask me no more: I've had enough Chablis | 534 |
At a pleasant evening party I had taken down to supper | 635 |
At morning's call | 374 |
Baby's brain is tired of thinking | 240 |
Back in the years when Phlagstaff, the Dane, was monarch | 387 |
Barney McGee, there's no end of good luck in you | 721 |
Basking in peace in the warm spring sun | 674 |
Be brave, faint heart | 445 |
Be kind and tender to the Frog | 907 |
Be kind to the panther! for when thou wert young | 890 |
Beauties, have ye seen this toy | 211 |
Before a Turkish town | 96 |
Behave yoursel' before folk | 174 |
Ben Battle was a soldier bold | 797 |
Ben Bluff was a whaler, and many a day | 619 |
Beside a Primrose 'broider'd Rill | 139 |
Between Adam and me the great difference is | 367 |
Between Nose and Eyes a strange contest arose | 82 |
Blind Thamyris, and blind Maeonides | 784 |
"Bon jour, Madame Sans Souci | 950 |
Bright breaks the warrior o'er the ocean wave | 879 |
Brisk methinks I am, and fine | 772 |
"Bunches of grapes," says Timothy | 947 |
By the side of a murmuring stream an elderly gentleman sat | 665 |
Bye Baby Bunting | 324 |
Calm and implacable | 375 |
"Can you spare a Threepenny bit | 901 |
Careless rhymer, it is true | 185 |
Celestine Silvousplait Justine de Mouton Rosalie | 51 |
Charm is a woman's strongest arm | 247 |
Chilly Dovebber with his boadigg blast | 747 |
Close by the threshold of a door nailed fast | 909 |
"Come, come," said Tom's father, "at your time of life | 367 |
Come! fill a fresh bumper,—for why should we go | 833 |
Come fleetly, come fleetly, my hooksbadar | 843 |
"Come here, my boy; hould up your head | 103 |
Come hither, my heart's darling | 454 |
Come into the Whenceness Which | 476 |
"Come, listen, my men, while I tell you again | 676 |
Come mighty Must! | 376 |
Comrades, you may pass the rosy. With permission of the chair | 537 |
De Hen-roost Man he'll preach about Paul | 247 |
Dear maid, let me speak | 810 |
Dear mother, dear mother, the Church is cold | 269 |
Dear Thomas, didst thou never pop | 262 |
Delmonico's is where he dines | 267 |
Der Kaiser of dis Faterland | 291 |
Der noble Ritter Hugo | 669 |
Did you hear of the Widow Malone | 126 |
Dighton is engaged! Think of it and tremble! | 647 |
Do not worry if I scurry from the grill room in a hurry | 67 |
Do you know why the rabbits are caught in the snare | 214 |
Do you think I'll marry a woman | 817 |
Doe, doe! | 746 |
Dosn't thou 'ear my 'erse's legs, as they canters awaäy? | 354 |
Down in the silent hallway | 889 |
[Pg 964] | |
Easy is the triolet | 782 |
Echo, tell me, while I wander | 751 |
Even is come; and from the dark Park, hark | 823 |
Everywhere, everywhere, following me | 430 |
Exquisite wines and comestibles | 316 |
Far off in the waste of desert sand | 851 |
Far, oh, far is the Mango island | 194 |
"Farewell!" Another gloomy word | 419 |
Felis Infelix Cat unfortunate | 736 |
First there's the Bible | 769 |
For his religion it was fit | 271 |
From Arranmore the weary miles I've come | 378 |
From his brimstone bed at break of day | 298 |
From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through | 459 |
From the madding crowd they stand apart | 227 |
From the tragic-est novels at Mudie's | 144 |
"Gentle, modest little flower | 28 |
"Gimme my scarlet tie," | 334 |
Gin a body meet a body | 483 |
Gineral B. is a sensible man | 292 |
Given a roof, and a taste for rations | 311 |
Go and catch a falling star | 330 |
Go 'way, fiddle; folks is tired o' hearin' you a-squawkin' | 672 |
"God bless the King! God bless the faith's defender! | 368 |
"God bless the man who first invented sleep!" | 44 |
God makes sech nights, all white an' still | 110 |
Good Luck is the gayest of all gay girls | 334 |
Good people all, of every sort | 764 |
Good people all, with one accord | 740 |
Good reader! if you e'er have seen | 444 |
"Had Cain been Scot, God would have changed his doom | 369 |
Half a bar, half a bar | 528 |
Hamelin Town's in Brunswick | 603 |
Handel, Bendel, Mendelssohn | 772 |
Hans Breitmann gife a barty | 668 |
Happy the man, who, void of cares and strife | 316 |
Have you heard of the wonderful one-hoss shay | 580 |
He cannot be complete in aught | 367 |
He dropt a tear on Susan's bier | 157 |
He dwelt among "Apartments let," | 491 |
He girded on his shining sword | 100 |
He is too weet a melancholy carle | 496 |
He killed the noble Mudjokivis | 482 |
He lived in a cave by the seas | 331 |
He stood on his head by the wild seashore | 75 |
He thought he saw an Elephant | 874 |
He took her fancy when he came | 817 |
He was the chairman of the Guild | 244 |
Hear what Highland Nora said | 159 |
Her heart she locked fast in her breast | 209 |
Her little feet! ... Beneath us ranged the sea | 59 |
Her washing ended with the day | 494 |
Here lies my wife: here let her lie! | 368 |
Here lieth one, who did not most truly prove | 780 |
Here's to the town of New Haven | 949 |
Hi! Just you drop that! Stop, I say! | 460 |
His eye was stern and wild—his cheek was pale and cold as clay | 450 |
History, and nature, too, repeat themselves, they say | 360 |
How do the daughters | 533 |
"How does the water | 743 |
How hard, when those who do not wish | 818 |
How old may Philis be, you ask | 332 |
How uneasy is his life | 344 |
Hyder iddle didle dell | 879 |
[Pg 965] | |
Hypocrisy will serve as well | 365 |
I am | 900 |
I am a friar of orders gray | 282 |
I am an ancient Jest! | 72 |
I come from good old Boston | 949 |
I am a hearthrug | 377 |
I am a lone, unfeathered chick | 903 |
I am numb from world-pain | 380 |
I, Angelo, obese, black-garmented | 428 |
I asked of Echo, t'other day | 750 |
I cannot praise the doctor's eyes | 368 |
I cannot sing the old songs | 413 |
I cannot tell you how I love | 235 |
I couldn't help weeping with delight | 521 |
I count it true which sages teach | 413 |
I devise to end my days—in a tavern drinking | 834 |
I du believe in Freedom's cause | 294 |
I do confess, in many a sigh | 86 |
I don't go much on religion | 657 |
I don't know any greatest treat | 180 |
I dreamed a dream next Tuesday week | 853 |
I dwells in the Hearth, and I breathes in the Hair | 763 |
I gaed to spend a week in Fife | 350 |
I hae laid a herring in saut | 216 |
I haf von funny leedle poy | 940 |
I have a bookcase, which is what | 40 |
I have a copper penny and another copper penny | 809 |
I have felt the thrill of passion in the poet's mystic book | 32 |
I have found out a gig-gig-gift for my fuf-fuf-fair | 822 |
I have made me an end of the moods of maidens | 511 |
I have watch'd thee with rapture, and dwelt on thy charms | 456 |
I knew an old wife lean and poor | 611 |
I know not of what we ponder'd | 63 |
I know when milk does flies contain | 343 |
I lately lived in quiet ease | 218 |
I lay i' the bosom of the sun | 407 |
I love my lady with a deep purple love | 383 |
I love thee, Mary, and thou lovest me | 206 |
"I love you, my lord!" | 120 |
I marvell'd why a simple child | 543 |
I may as well | 685 |
I never rear'd a young gazelle | 544 |
I never saw a Purple Cow | 948 |
"I never saw a purple cow | 515 |
I recollect a nurse call'd Ann | 156 |
I remember, I remember | 107 |
I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James | 650 |
I said, "This horse, sir, will you shoe?" | 809 |
I sat one night beside a blue-eyed girl | 207 |
I saw a certain sailorman who sat beside the sea | 70 |
I saw a peacock with a fiery tail | 804 |
I sent for Ratcliffe; was so ill | 365 |
I sent my love a parcel | 262 |
I shall not ask Jean Jacques Rousseau | 212 |
I sometimes think I'd rather crow | 891 |
I strolled beside the shining sea | 844 |
I tell thee, Dick, where I have been | 704 |
I walked and came upon a picket fence | 470 |
I was in Margate last July. I walk'd upon the pier | 558 |
I wonder what your thoughts are, little cloud | 134 |
I would all womankind were dead | 88 |
I would flee from the city's rule and law | 883 |
I would that all men my hard case might know | 397 |
I wrote some lines once on a time | 38 |
[Pg 966] | |
I wus mighty good-lookin' when I was young | 129 |
I yearn to bite on a Colloid | 91 |
I'd Never Dare to Walk across | 855 |
I'd read three hours. Both notes and text | 142 |
If all be true that I do think | 364 |
If all the harm women have done | 248 |
If all the land were apple-pie | 951 |
If all the trees in all the woods were men | 238 |
If down his throat a man should choose | 844 |
If e'er my rhyming be at fault | 55 |
If ever there lived a Yankee lad | 690 |
If I go to see the play | 48 |
If I should die to-night | 489 |
If I were thine, I'd fail not of endeavour | 345 |
If I were you, when ladies at the play, Sir | 146 |
If, in the month of dark December | 80 |
If life were never bitter | 436 |
If the man who turnips cries | 949 |
If there is a vile, pernicious | 60 |
If thou wouldst stand on Etna's burning brow | 445 |
If we square a lump of pemmican | 880 |
If you become a nun, dear | 206 |
I'll sing you a song, not very long | 275 |
I'll tell thee everything I can | 870 |
I'm taught p-l-o-u-g-h | 761 |
I'm thankful that the sun and moon | 882 |
"Immortal Newton never spoke | 369 |
In a church which is furnish'd with mullion and gable, I | 280 |
In a Devonshire lane as I trotted along | 266 |
In all thy humors, whether grave or mellow | 368 |
In an ocean, 'way out yonder | 929 |
In Ballades things always contrive to get lost | 441 |
In Broad Street Buildings on a winter night | 563 |
In candent ire the solar splendour flames | 849 |
In days of peace my fellow-men | 31 |
In early youth, as you may guess | 918 |
In form and feature, face and limb | 108 |
In heaven a spirit doth dwell | 472 |
In his chamber, weak and dying | 785 |
In Köln, a town of monks and bones | 363 |
In letters large upon the frame | 347 |
In London I never know what I'd be at | 265 |
In our hearts is the Great One of Avon | 824 |
In the age that was golden, the halcyon time | 338 |
In the "Foursome" some would fain | 222 |
In the lonesome latter years | 429 |
In these days of indigestion | 77 |
"In winter, when the fields are white | 872 |
Inglorious friend! most confident I am | 734 |
Interred beneath this marble stone | 765 |
Is moss-prankt dells which the sunbeams flatter | 372 |
It is told, on Buddhi-theosophic schools | 92 |
It is very aggravating | 50 |
It looked extremely rocky for the Mudville nine that day | 601 |
It may be so—perhaps thou hast | 236 |
It once might have been, once only | 339 |
It was a millinger most gay | 186 |
It was a Moorish maiden was sitting by the well | 196 |
It was a robber's daughter, and her name was Alice Brown | 639 |
It was a summer's evening | 252 |
It was a tall young oysterman lived by the river-side | 583 |
It was an artless Bandar, and he danced upon a pine | 904 |
It was a hairy oubit, sac proud he crept alabg | 330 |
It was in a pleasant deepô, sequestered from the rain | 613 |
[Pg 967] | |
It was many and many a year ago | 532 |
It ripen'd by the river banks | 444 |
It worries me to beat the band | 137 |
Its eyes are gray | 121 |
I've been trying to fashion a wifely ideal | 68 |
Jacob! I do not like to see thy nose | 914 |
Jem writes his verses with more speed | 363 |
Jim Bowker, he said, if he'd had a fair show | 357 |
John Alcohol, my foe, John | 529 |
John Bull for pastime took a prance | 808 |
John Gilpin was a citizen of credit and renown | 564 |
John Grumlie Swore by the light o' the moon | 326 |
Just take a trifling handful, O philosopher | 314 |
Kitty wants to write! Kitty intellectual! | 646 |
Knitting is the maid o' the kitchen, Milly | 220 |
Knows he that never took a pinch | 832 |
La Galisse now I wish to touch | 814 |
Lady Clara Vere de Vere! | 412 |
Lady, I loved you all last year | 327 |
Lady mine, most fair thou art | 221 |
Lady, very fair are you | 184 |
Lanty was in love, you see | 208 |
Last year I trod these fields with Di | 155 |
Lazy-bones, lazy-bones, wake up and peep! | 848 |
Lest it may more quarrels breed | 279 |
Life and the Universe show spontaneity | 315 |
Life is a gift that most of us hold dear | 357 |
Life would be an easy matter | 57 |
Lilies, lilies, white lilies and yellow | 379 |
Like to the thundering tone of unspoke speeches | 848 |
Little bopeepals | 324 |
Little I ask; my wants are few | 238 |
Little Orphant Annie's come to our house to stay | 934 |
Little Penelope Socrates | 284 |
Lives there a man with a soul so dead | 786 |
Long by the willow-trees | 439 |
Lord Erskine, at women presuming to rail | 366 |
Malbrouck, the prince of commanders | 28 |
Man is for woman made | 41 |
Many a long, long year ago | 664 |
Margarita first possess'd | 176 |
Marry, I lent my gossip my mare, to fetch home coals | 807 |
Mary had a little lamb | 506 |
Matilda Maud Mackenzie frankly hadn't any chin | 395 |
May the Babylonish curse | 726 |
Men, Dying, make their wills, but wives | 362 |
Men once were surnamed for their shape or estate | 804 |
'Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam | 498 |
Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn | 229 |
Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa! | 95 |
Miss Flora McFlimsey, of Madison Square | 148 |
Mr. Finney had a turnip | 847 |
My brother Jack was nine in May | 390 |
My coachman, in the moonlight there | 359 |
My curse upon you venom'd stang | 724 |
My dear young friend, whose shining wit | 42 |
My feet, they haul me Round the House | 855 |
My Heart will break—I'm sure it will | 183 |
My lank limp lily, my long lithe lily | 510 |
My little dears, who learn to read, pray early, learn to shun | 828 |
My Love has sicklied unto Loath | 410 |
My Madeline! my Madeline! | 773 |
My passion is as mustard strong | 754 |
My pipe is lit, my grog is mixed | 342 |
[Pg 968] | |
My temples throb, my pulses boil | 49 |
My William was a soldier, and he says to me, says he | 598 |
Mysterious Nothing! how shall I define | 786 |
Nay, I cannot come into the garden just now | 188 |
"Needy Knife-grinder! whither are you going? | 249 |
Night saw the crew like pedlars with their packs | 841 |
No fault in women, to refuse | 166 |
No longer, O scholars, shall Platus | 826 |
No sun—no moon! | 792 |
No usual words can bear the woe I feel | 379 |
Nothing to do but work | 358 |
Now Jake looked up—it was time to sup, and the buckets was yet to fill | 421 |
Now the Widow McGee | 165 |
O cool in the summer is salad | 436 |
"O Crikey, Bill!" she ses to me, she ses | 400 |
O for a lodge in a garden of cucumbers! | 781 |
O, if my love offended me | 184 |
O lady wake!—the azure moon | 886 |
O mickle yeuks the keckle doup | 384 |
O my earliest love, who, ere I number'd | 116 |
O nymph with the nicest of noses | 544 |
O precious code, volume, tome | 825 |
O reverend sir, I do declare | 195 |
O say, have you seen at the willows so green | 921 |
O Season supposed of all free flowers | 527 |
O the quietest home on earth had I | 720 |
O thou wha in the heavens dost dwell | 272 |
O what harper could worthily harp it | 64 |
O'er the men of Ethiopia she would pour her cornucopia | 160 |
Of all life's plagues I recommend to no man | 76 |
Of all the girls that are so smart | 182 |
Of all the mismated pairs ever created | 480 |
Of all the men one meets about | 370 |
Of all the rides since the birth of time | 688 |
Of all the wimming doubly blest | 241 |
Of priests we can offer a charmin' variety | 719 |
Oh, but she was dark and shrill | 509 |
Oh, dewy was the morning, upon the first of May | 949 |
Oh, I have been North, and I have been South, and the East hath seen me pass | 403 |
Oh! I have loved thee fondly, ever | 732 |
Oh, I know a certain woman who is reckoned with the good | 132 |
Oh, I used to sing a song | 768 |
Oh, I want to win me hame | 385 |
Oh listen, little children, to a proper little song | 937 |
Oh, many have told of the monkeys of old | 913 |
Oh, Mary had a little lamb, regarding whose cuticular | 477 |
Oh, my Geraldine | 180 |
Oh, sing a song of phosphates | 324 |
Oh, solitude thou wonder-working fay | 457 |
Oh, tell me have you ever seen a red, long-leg'd Flamingo? | 894 |
Oh that my soul a marrow-bone might seize! | 851 |
Oh, the days were ever shiny | 204 |
Oh, the fisherman is a happy wight! | 81 |
Oh, the Roman was a rogue | 753 |
"Oh, 'tis time I should talk to your mother | 181 |
Oh, 'twas O'Nolan M'Figg | 700 |
Oh, what a fund of joy jocund lies hid in harmless hoaxes! | 26 |
"Oh! what is that comes gliding in | 800 |
Oh, what's the way to Arcady? | 201 |
Oh, Wing Tee Wee | 139 |
Oh, would that working I might shun | 47 |
Oh, yes, we've be'n fixin' some sence we sold that piece o' groun' | 192 |
[Pg 969] | |
Oh! young Lochinvar has come out of the West | 381 |
Old Grimes is dead; that good old man | 766 |
Old man never had much to say | 678 |
Old Nick, who taught the village school | 174 |
On wan dark night on Lac St. Pierre | 662 |
On me he shall ne'er put a ring | 191 |
On the Coast of Goromandel | 859 |
On the downtown side of an uptown street | 79 |
On the eighth day of March it was, some people say | 58 |
One day the dreary old King of death | 801 |
One evening while reclining | 268 |
One morning when Spring was in her teens | 188 |
One of the kings of Scanderoon | 578 |
One stormy morn I chanced to meet | 123 |
One, who is not, we see; but one, whom we see not, is | 458 |
Or ever a lick of Art was done | 383 |
Out of the clothes that cover me | 471 |
Out on the margin of moonshine land | 858 |
Out rode from his wild, dark castle | 49 |
Out upon it, I have loved | 218 |
Over the way, over the way | 125 |
Paddy, in want of a dinner one day | 571 |
Paddy McCabe was dying one day | 307 |
Peerless yet hapless maid of Q! | 787 |
Perchance it was her eyes of blue | 74 |
Perhaps you may a-noticed I been soht o' solemn lately | 157 |
Philosophy shows us 'twixt monkey and man | 92 |
Ph, it's H-A-P-P-Y I am, and it's F-R-double-E | 816 |
Poor Lucy Lake was overgrown | 463 |
Potiphar Gubbins, C.E. | 226 |
Pour varlet, pour the water | 486 |
Power to thine elbow, thou newest of sciences | 409 |
Quest.—Why is a pump like Viscount Castlereagh? | 370 |
Qui nune dancere vult modo | 832 |
Quixotic is his enterprise and hopeless his adventure is | 25 |
Quoth John to Joan, will thou have me | 217 |
Rain on the face of the sea | 427 |
Remembering his taste for blood | 893 |
Roll on, thou ball, roll on! | 256 |
Rooster her sign | 414 |
Row-diddy, dow de, my little sis | 670 |
Said Opie Read to E. P. Roe | 948 |
Said the Raggedy Man on a hot afternoon | 856 |
Saint Anthony at church | 251 |
Sally Salter, she was a young lady who taught | 812 |
Sam Brown was a fellow from way down East | 52 |
Say there! P'r'aps | 652 |
Scintillate scintillate, globule orific | 476 |
"Scorn not the sonnet," though its strength be sapped | 281 |
See yonder goes old Mendax, telling lies | 369 |
Sez Alderman Grady | 232 |
Sez Corporal Madden to Private McFadden | 230 |
Shall I, mine affections slack | 526 |
She flung the parlour window wide | 205 |
Shepherd. Echo, I wean, will in the woods reply | 752 |
She kept her secret well, oh, yes | 158 |
She stood beneath the mistletoe | 196 |
She went around and asked subscriptions | 167 |
Side by side in the crowded streets | 393 |
Sin, I admit your general rule | 363 |
Since for kissing thee, Minguillo | 122 |
Sing for the garish eye | 875 |
Singee a songee sick a pence | 530 |
Singing through the forests | 748 |
[Pg 970] | |
Sir Guy was a doughty crusader | 644 |
Sleep, my own darling | 932 |
Slim feet than lilies tenderer | 477 |
Sly Beelzebub took all occasions | 364 |
So slowly you walk, and so quickly you eat | 369 |
So that's Cleopathera's Needle, bedad | 105 |
Some ladies now make pretty songs | 367 |
Some poets sing of sweethearts dead | 223 |
Speak gently to the herring and kindly to the calf | 891 |
"Speak, O man less recent! | 46 |
Spontaneous Us! | 417 |
Stiff are the warrior's muscles | 456 |
Strange pie that is almost a passion | 472 |
Strike the concertina's melancholy string! | 641 |
Sudden swallows swiftly skimming | 774 |
Superintendent wuz Flannigan | 225 |
Suppose you screeve? or go cheap-jack? | 399 |
Swans sing before they die:—'twere no bad thing | 364 |
Sweet maiden of Passamaquoddy | 830 |
Take a robin's leg | 76 |
That man must lead a happy life | 803 |
That very time I saw, (but thou couldst not) | 493 |
The Antiseptic Baby and the Prophylactic Pup | 87 |
The auld wife sat at her ivied door | 467 |
The Ballyshannon foundered off the coast of Cariboo | 256 |
The cat is in the parlour | 950 |
The chill November day was done | 938 |
The Crankadox leaned o'er the edge of the moon | 855 |
The crow—the crow! the great black crow! | 908 |
The day was done, and darkness | 490 |
The editor sat with his head in his hands | 447 |
The Emperor Nap he would set off | 775 |
The fable which I now present | 249 |
The frugal crone, whom praying priest attend | 285 |
The gallows in my garden, people say | 224 |
The hale John Spratt—oft called for shortness, Jack | 406 |
"The Herring he loves the merry moonlight | 949 |
The honey-moon is very strange | 366 |
The jackals prowl, the serpents hiss | 445 |
The Jackdaw sat on the Cardinal's chair! | 586 |
The King was sick. His cheek was red | 658 |
The Lady Jane was tall and slim | 590 |
The Laird o' Cockpen, he's proud and he's great | 703 |
The Llama is a woolly sort of fleecy, hairy goat | 906 |
The man in the wilderness asked of me | 951 |
The man who invented women's waists that button down behind | 94 |
The Messed Damozel leaned out | 471 |
The Microbe is so very small | 907 |
The mountain and the squirrel | 290 |
The night was thick and hazy | 617 |
The oft'ner seen, the more I lust | 807 |
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat went to sea | 901 |
The Pobble who has no toes | 865 |
The poet is, or ought to be, a hater of the city | 97 |
The Pope he leads a happy life | 70 |
"The proper way for a man to pray," | 54 |
The prospect is bare and white | 42 |
The Roof it has a Lazy Time | 855 |
The saddest fish that swims the briny ocean | 900 |
The sextant of the meetinouse, which sweeps | 66 |
The skies they were ashen and sober | 423 |
The sun is in the sky, mother, the flowers are springing fair | 451 |
The sun was setting, and vespers done | 313 |
The sun was shining on the sea | 896 |
[Pg 971] | |
The Thingumbob sat at eventide | 882 |
The town of Nice! the town of Nice! | 438 |
The woggly bird sat on the whango tree | 842 |
The woodchuck told it all about | 312 |
There be two men of all mankind | 35 |
There is a river clear and fair | 535 |
There lived an old man in the kingdom of Tess | 866 |
There lived a sage in days of yore | 850 |
There once was a Shah had a second son | 199 |
There sat an old man on a rock | 348 |
There's a bower of bean-vines in Benjamin's yard | 493 |
There's somewhat on my breast, father | 443 |
There wanst was two cats at Kilkenny | 950 |
There was a Cameronian cat | 917 |
There was a child, as I have been told | 946 |
There was a cruel darkey boy | 927 |
There was a lady liv'd at Leith | 742 |
There was a little girl | 926 |
There was a man in Arkansaw | 697 |
There was a negro preacher, I have heard | 274 |
There was an old man of Tobago | 835 |
There was a snake that dwelt in Skye | 887 |
There was a young lady of Niger | 948 |
There was (not a certain when) a certain preacher | 282 |
There was once a little man, and his rod and line he took | 200 |
There were three jovial huntsmen | 878 |
There were three kings into the east | 730 |
There were three young maids of Lee | 170 |
There were three sailors of Bristol City | 546 |
There were two of us left in the berry-patch | 479 |
These are the things that make me laugh | 73 |
They called him Bill, the hired man | 653 |
They nearly strike me dumb | 153 |
They're always abusing the women | 126 |
They spoke of Progress spiring round | 337 |
They stood on the bridge at midnight | 489 |
They tell me (but I really can't | 600 |
They told hum gently he was made | 89 |
They've got a brand-new organ, Sue | 162 |
They went to sea in a sieve, they did | 862 |
Thine eyes, dear ones, dot dot, are like, dash, what? | 824 |
This is the tale that was told to me | 680 |
Thou art like unto a Flower | 427 |
Thou happy, happy elf! | 941 |
Thou shall have one God only, who | 261 |
Thou who, when fears attack | 732 |
Though I met her in the summer, when one's heart lies round at east | 345 |
Three children sliding on the ice | 843 |
Three score and ten by common calculation | 99 |
Tim Turpin he was gravel blind | 795 |
'Tis midnight and the moonbeam sleeps | 411 |
'Tis midnight, and the setting sun | 843 |
'Tis sweet at dewy eve to rove | 450 |
'Tis sweet to roam when morning's light | 878 |
To Lake Aghmoogenegamook | 757 |
To make this condiment, your poet begs | 93 |
The outer senses they are geese | 509 |
To see the Kaiser's epitaph | 948 |
To Urn, or not to Urn? that is the question | 534 |
To you, my purse, and to none other wight | 58 |
Tom's album was filled with the pictures of belles | 141 |
Trilobite, Graphtolite, Nautilus pie | 324 |
"True 'tis a P T, and P T 'tis, 'tis true" | 788 |
[Pg 972] | |
'Twas a pretty little maiden | 161 |
'Twas after supper of Norfolk brawn | 884 |
'Twas April when she came to town | 120 |
'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves | 869 |
'Twas brussels, and the loose liege | 482 |
'Twas ever thus from childhood's hour! | 469 |
'Twas gilbert. The kchesterton | 437 |
'Twas late, and the gay company was gone | 446 |
'Twas more than a million years ago | 497 |
'Twas on a lofty vase's side | 557 |
'Twas on a windy night | 214 |
'Twas on the shores that round our coast | 632 |
'Twas raw, and chill, and cold outside | 98 |
'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house | 935 |
'Twas whispered in heaven, 'twas muttered in hell | 762 |
Two gentlemen their appetite had fed | 666 |
Two honest tradesmen meeting in the Strand | 254 |
Two old Bachelors were living in one house | 868 |
Two webfoot brothers loved a fair | 629 |
Two Yankee wags, one summer day | 572 |
Tying her bonnet under her chin | 124 |
Uncle Simon he | 849 |
Upon a rock, yet uncreate | 771 |
Upon an island, all alone | 683 |
Upon ane stormy Sunday | 190 |
Upon the poop the captain stands | 876 |
Wake! for the Hack can scatter into flight | 512 |
Wal, no! I can't tell whar he lives | 661 |
Wan from the wild and woful West | 386 |
Was once a hen of wit not small | 892 |
We climbed to the top of Goat Point hill | 210 |
We love thee Ann Maria Smith | 389 |
We rode the tawny Texan hills | 288 |
We seek to know, and knowing seek | 463 |
We were crowded in the cabin | 492 |
We've lived for forty years, dear wife | 246 |
Well I recall how first I met | 30 |
Werther had a love for Charlotte | 140 |
What asks the Bard? He prays for nought | 320 |
What, he on whom our voices unanimously ran | 286 |
What is Earth, sexton—A place to dig graves | 810 |
What is the matter with Grandpapa? | 950 |
What lightning shall light it? What thunder shall tell it? | 404 |
What makes you come here fer, Mister | 925 |
What motley cares Corilla's mind perplex | 278 |
What! not know our Clean Clara? | 283 |
"What other men have dared, I dare." | 109 |
What poor short-sighted worms we be | 353 |
What? rise again with all one's bones | 363 |
What, what, what | 710 |
What will we do when the good days come | 311 |
Whenas to shoot my Julia goes | 418 |
When Chapman billies leave the street | 623 |
When dido found Aeneas would not come | 366 |
When good King Arthur ruled the land | 879 |
When I am dead you'll find it hard | 109 |
When I had firmly answered "no," | 431 |
When I was young and full o' pride | 115 |
When lovely woman wants a favor | 494 |
When Mary Ann Dollinger got the skule daown thar on Injun Bay | 168 |
When men a dangerous disease did 'scape | 365 |
When moonlike ore the hazure seas | 34 |
When nettles in winter bring forth roses red | 276 |
[Pg 973] | |
When sporgles spanned the floreate mead | 877 |
When swallows Northward flew | 191 |
When that old joke was new | 33 |
When the breeze from the bluebottle's blustering blim | 852 |
When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock | 34 |
When the landlord wants the rent | 336 |
When the little armadillo | 902 |
When they heard the Captain humming and beheld the dancing crew | 615 |
When you slice a Georgy melon you mus' know what you is at | 73 |
Whene'er I take my walks abroad | 950 |
Whene'er with haggard eyes I view | 84 |
Where the Moosatockmaguntic | 113 |
Whereas, on certain boughs and sprays | 402 |
"Wherefore starts my bosom's lord? | 453 |
Which I wish to remark | 648 |
Which is of greater value, prythee, say | 371 |
While Butler, needy wretch, was yet alive | 370 |
Who am I? | 434 |
Who money hast, well wages the campaign | 323 |
Who, or why, or which, or what | 708 |
"Who stuffed that white owl?" No one spoke in the shop | 309 |
1. Why all this toil for triumphs of an hour? | 783 |
"Why do you wear your hair like a man | 474 |
Why don't the men propose, mamma? | 130 |
Why doth the pussy cat prefer | 895 |
Why is it the children don't love me | 943 |
Why should you swear I am forsworn | 241 |
Why was Cupid a boy | 56 |
Wisely a woman prefers to a lover a man who neglects her | 247 |
With chocolate-cream that you buy in the cake | 932 |
With due condescension, I'd call your attention | 106 |
With ganial foire | 547 |
Wynken, Blynken, and Nod one night | 928 |
Ye may tramp the world over | 717 |
Years—years ago—ere yet my dreams | 171 |
Yes, write if you want to—there's nothing like trying | 36 |
Yet another great truth I record in my verse | 906 |
"You are old, Father William," the young man said | 485 |
"You are old, Father William," the young man said | 531 |
You beat your pate, and fancy wit will come | 362 |
You bid me try, Blue-eyes, to write | 782 |
"You gave me the key of your heart, my love | 137 |
"You have heard," said a youth to his sweetheart, who stood | 133 |
You may notch it on the palin's as a mighty resky plan | 312 |
"You must give back," her mother said | 198 |
You prefer a buffoon to a scholar | 339 |
You see this pebble-stone? It's a thing I bought | 464 |
You Wi'yum, sir, dis minute. Wut dat you got | 325 |
You wrote a line too much, my sage | 362 |
Young Ben he was a nice young man | 792 |
Young Rory O'More courted Kathleen Bawn | 141 |
Your poem must eternal be | 364 |
Zack Bumstead useter flosserfize | 242 |
Zig-zagging it went | 760 |
page | ||
A | ||
Accepted and Will Appear | Parmenas Mix | 268 |
Actor, An | John Wolcot | 287 |
Ad Chloen, M. A. | Mortimer Collins | 184 |
Address to the Toothache | Robert Burns | 724 |
Æstivation | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 849 |
After Dilettante Concetti | H. D. Traill | 474 |
After Horace | A. D. Godley | 320 |
Ahkoond of Swat, The | George Thomas Lanigan | 710 |
Ahkond of Swat, The | Edward Lear | 708 |
Ain't It Awful, Mabel? | John Edward Hazzard | 137 |
Alarmed Skipper, The | James Thomas Fields | 664 |
All at Sea | Frederick Moxon | 70 |
All-Saints | Edmund Yates | 280 |
All's Well That Ends Well | Unknown | 264 |
All Things Except Myself I Know | François Villon | 343 |
Amazing Facts About Food | Unknown | 91 |
Ambiguous Lines | Unknown | 804 |
American Traveller, The | Robert H. Newell (Orpheus C. Kerr) | 751 |
Angelo Orders His Dinner | Bayard Taylor | 428 |
Annabel Lee | Stanley Huntley | 497 |
Annuity, The | George Outram | 350 |
Answer to Master Wither's Song, "Shall I, Wasting in Despair?" | Ben Jonson | 526 |
Any One Will Do | Unknown | 169 |
Appeal for Are to the Sextant of the Old Brick Meetinouse, A | Arabella Willson | 66 |
Are Women Fair? | Francis Davison | 189 |
Art of Book-keeping, The | Laman Blanchard | 818 |
As to the Weather | Unknown | 107 |
At the Sign of the Cock | Owen Seaman | 414 |
B | ||
Baby's Début, The | James Smith | 390 |
Bachelor's Dream, The | Thomas Hood | 342 |
Bachelor's Mono-Rhyme, A | Charles Mackay | 817 |
Bald-headed Tyrant, The | Mary E. Vandyne | 720 |
Ballad | Charles Stuart Calverley | 467 |
Ballad, A | Guy Wetmore Carryl | 426 |
Ballade of An Anti-Puritan, A | G. K. Chesterton | 337 |
Ballade of Ballade-Mongers, A | Augustus M. Moore | 441 |
Ballad of Bedlam, A | Unknown | 886 |
Ballad of Bouillabaisse, The | W. M. Thackeray | 714 |
Ballad of the Canal | Phœbe Cary | 492 |
Ballad of Cassandra Brown, The | Helen Gray Cone | 345 |
Ballad of Charity, A | Charles Godfrey Leland | 613 |
Ballad of the Emeu, The | Bret Harte | 921 |
Ballade of Forgotten Loves | Arthur Grissom | 223 |
Ballade of the Golfer in Love | Clinton Scollard | 222 |
Ballad of Hans Breitmann | Charles Godfrey Leland | 669 |
Ballad of High Endeavor, A | Unknown | 484 |
Ballad of the Oysterman, The | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 583 |
Ballad of the Primitive Jest | Andrew Lang | 72 |
Ballade of Suicide, A | G. K. Chesterton | 224 |
Bangkolidye | Barry Pain | 334 |
Barney McGee | Richard Hovey | 721 |
Battle of Blenheim, The | Robert Southey | 252 |
Behave Yoursel' Before Folk | Alexander Rodger | 174 |
Behold the Deeds | H. C. Bunner | 397 |
Bellancholly Days | Unknown | 747 |
Belle of the Ball, The | Winthrop Mackworth Praed | 171 |
Bells, The | Unknown | 816 |
Ben Bluff | Thomas Hood | 619 |
Bessie Brown, M. D. | Samuel Minturn Peck | 120 |
Bird in the Hand, A | Frederic E. Weatherly | 170 |
Birth of Saint Patrick, The | Samuel Lover | 58 |
Bitter Bit, The | William E. Aytoun | 451 |
Blow Me Eyes! | Wallace Irwin | 115 |
Boston Lullaby, A | James Jeffrey Roche | 240 |
Boston Nursery Rhymes | Rev. Joseph Cook | 324 |
Broken Pitcher, The | William E. Aytoun | 86 |
Bunches of Grapes | Walter Ramal | 947 |
Buxom Joan | William Congreve | 179 |
Bygones | Bert Leston Taylor | 383 |
By Parcels Post | George R. Sims | 262 |
C | [Pg 975] | |
Cacoethes Scribendi | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 238 |
Camerados | Bayard Taylor | 430 |
Cameronian Cat, The | Unknown | 917 |
Candidate's Creed, The | James Russell Lowell | 294 |
Cantelope, The | Bayard Taylor | 393 |
Careful Penman, The | Unknown | 810 |
Carman's Account of a Law Suit, A | Sir David Lindesay | 807 |
Casey at the Bat | Ernest Lawrence Thayer | 601 |
Catalectic Monody, A | Unknown | 833 |
Cataract of Lodore, The | Robert Southey | 743 |
Categorical Courtship | Unknown | 207 |
Catfish, The | Oliver Herford | 900 |
"Caudal" Lecture, A | William Sawyer | 92 |
Cautionary Verses | Theodore Hook | 828 |
Chemist to His Love, The | Unknown | 206 |
Chloe, M. A. | Mortimer Collins | 185 |
Chorus of Women | Aristophanes | 126 |
Christmas Chimes | Unknown | 284 |
Chronicle: A Ballad, The | Abraham Cowley | 176 |
Circumstance | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 444 |
Clean Clara | W. B. Rands | 283 |
Cloud, The | Oliver Herford | 134 |
Clown's Courtship, The | Unknown | 217 |
Cock and the Bull, The | Charles Stuart Calverley | 464 |
Cologne | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 363 |
Colubriad, The | William Cowper | 909 |
Comfort in Affliction | William E. Aytoun | 453 |
Comic Miseries | John G. Saxe | 42 |
Comical Girl, The | M. Pelham | 946 |
Commonplaces | Rudyard Kipling | 427 |
Companions | Charles Stuart Calverley | 63 |
Confession, The | Richard Harris Barham (Thomas Ingoldsby) | 443 |
Conjugal Conjugations | A. W. Bellaw | 810 |
Conjugal Conundrum, A | Unknown | 371 |
Constancy | John Boyle O'Reilly | 137 |
Constant Cannibal Maiden, The | Wallace Irwin | 194 |
Contentment | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 238 |
Contrast, The | Captain C. Morris | 265 |
Converted Cannibals, The | G. E. Farrow | 683 |
Cosmic Egg, The | Unknown | 771 |
Cosmopolitan Woman, A | Unknown | 167 |
Cossimbazar | Henry S. Leigh | 843 |
Counsel to Those That Eat | Unknown | 932 |
Country Summer Pastoral, A | Unknown | 883 |
Courtin', The | James Russell Lowell | 110 |
Courting in Kentucky | Florence E. Pratt | 168 |
Cremation | William Sawyer | 534 |
Crystal Palace, The | W. M. Thackeray | 547 |
Culture in the Slums | William Ernest Henley | 400 |
Cumberbunce, The | Paul West | 844 |
Cupid | William Blake | 56 |
Cupid | Ben Jonson | 211 |
Cupid's Darts | Unknown | 67 |
Cynical Ode to An Ultra-Cynical Public | Charles Mackay | 339 |
Cynicus to W. Shakespeare | James Kenneth Stephen | 362 |
D | ||
Darius Green and His Flying-Machine | John Townsend Trowbridge | 690 |
Darwinian Ballad | Unknown | 913 |
Darwinity | Herman C. Merivale | 409 |
Day Is Done," "The | Phœbe Cary | 490 |
Deacon's Masterpiece, The | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 580 |
Death's Ramble | Thomas Hood | 801 |
Declaration, The | N. P. Willis | 446 |
Devil's Walk on Earth, The | Robert Southey | 298 |
Devonshire Lane, The | John Marriott | 266 |
Dialogue from Plato, A | Austin Dobson | 142 |
Dido | Richard Porson | 366 |
Dighton Is Engaged | Gelett Burgess | 647 |
Dinkey-Bird, The | Eugene Field | 929 |
Dirge | Unknown | 787 |
Dirge, A | William Augustus Croffut | 737 |
Dirge of the Moolla of Kotal | George T. Lanigan | 712 |
Disaster | Charles Stuart Calverley | 469 |
Distichs | John Hay | 247 |
Diversions of the Re-Echo Club | Carolyn Wells | 515 |
Diverting History of John Gilpin, The | William Cowper | 564 |
Divided Destinies | Rudyard Kipling | 704 |
Donnybrook Jig, The | Viscount Dillon | 700 |
Dora Versus Rose | Austin Dobson | 144 |
Double Ballade of Primitive Man | Andrew Lang | 331 |
Dutch Lullaby | Eugene Field | 928 |
E | ||
Early Rising | J. G. Saxe | 44 |
Eastern Question, An | H. M. Paull | 598 |
[Pg 976] | ||
Echo | J. G. Saxe | 750 |
Editor's Wooing, The | Robert H. Newell (Orpheus C. Kerr) | 389 |
Elderly Gentleman, The | George Canning | 665 |
Elegy | Arthur Guiterman | 445 |
Elegy, An | Oliver Goldsmith | 740 |
Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An | Oliver Goldsmith | 764 |
Enchanted Shirt, The | John Hay | 658 |
Endless Song, The | Ruth McEnery Stuart | 968 |
Enigma on the Letter H | Catherine Fanshawe | 762 |
Epitaph, An | George John Cayley | 366 |
Epitaph, An | Matthew Prior | 765 |
Epitaph Intended for His Wife | John Dryden | 368 |
Erring in Company | Franklin P. Adams | 55 |
Eternal Poem, An | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 364 |
Etiquette | W. S. Gilbert | 256 |
"Exactly So" | Lady T. Hastings | 61 |
Extracts from the Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne | Gelett Burgess | 512 |
F | ||
Fable, | Ralph Waldo Emerson | 290 |
Fair Millinger, The | Fred W. Loring | 186 |
Faithless Nellie Gray | Thomas Hood | 797 |
Faithless Sally Brown | Thomas Hood | 792 |
False Love and True Logic | Laman Blanchard | 183 |
Familiar Letter to Several Correspondents, A | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 36 |
Farewell | Bert Leston Taylor | 419 |
Farewell to Tobacco, A | Charles Lamb | 726 |
Fastidious Serpent, The | Henry Johnstons | 887 |
Father Molloy. | Samuel Lover | 307 |
Father O'Flynn | Alfred Perceval Graves | 719 |
Father William | Lewis Carroll | 485 |
Father William | Unknown | 531 |
Feminine Arithmetic | Charles Graham Halpine | 191 |
Fernando and Elvira | W. S. Gilbert | 635 |
Fin de Siècle | Unknown | 357 |
Finnigin to Flannigan | S. W. Gillinan | 225 |
First Banjo, The | Irwin Russell | 672 |
First Love | Charles Stuart Calverley | 116 |
Fish Story, A | Henry A. Beers | 916 |
Fisherman's Chant, The | F. C. Burnand | 81 |
Five Wives | Robert Herrick | 772 |
Flamingo, The | Lewis Gaylord Clark | 894 |
Foam and Fangs | Walter Parke | 544 |
Fool and the Poet, The | Alexander Pope | 363 |
For I Am Sad | Don Marquis | 379 |
Forlorn One, The | Richard Harris Barham (Thomas Ingoldsby) | 449 |
Forty Years After | H. H. Porter | 210 |
Fragment, A | Unknown | 450 |
Friar of Orders Gray, The | John O'Keefe | 282 |
Frog, The | Hilaire Belloc | 907 |
From a Full Heart | A. A. Milne | 31 |
Future of the Classics, The | Anonymous | 826 |
G | ||
Gentle Alice Brown | W. S. Gilbert | 639 |
Gentle Echo on Woman, A | Dean Swift | 752 |
Gifts Returned | Walter Savage Landor | 198 |
Giles's Hope | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 363 |
Girl Was Too Reckless of Grammar, A | Guy Wetmore Carryl | 395 |
Good and Bad Luck | John Hay | 334 |
Goose, The | Lord Tennyson | 611 |
Gouty Marchant and the Stranger, The | Horace Smith | 563 |
Grain of Salt, A | Wallace Irwin | 241 |
Grampy Sings a Song | Holman F. Day | 670 |
Great Black Crow, The | Philip James Bailey | 908 |
Great Fight, A | Robert H. Newell (Orpheus C. Kerr) | 697 |
H | ||
Half Hours with the Classics | H. J. DeBurgh | 779 |
Hans Breitmann's Party | Charles Godfrey Leland | 668 |
Happy Man, The | Gilles Ménage | 814 |
He and She | Eugene Fitch Ware | 109 |
He Came to Pay | Parmenas Mix | 447 |
Height of the Ridiculous, The | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 38 |
Hen, The | Matthew Claudius | 892 |
Hen-Roost Man, The | Ruth McEnery Stuart | 247 |
Here Is the Tale | Anthony C. Deane | 421 |
Here She Goes and There She Goes | James Nack | 572 |
Her Little Feet | William Ernest Henley | 59 |
Herring, The | Sir Walter Scott | 949 |
[Pg 977] | ||
Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell, The | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 458 |
Hiram Hover | Bayard Taylor | 113 |
His Mother-in-Law | Walter Parke | 75 |
Hoch! Der Kaiser | Rodney Blake | 291 |
Holy Willie's Prayer | Robert Burns | 272 |
Home and Mother | Mary Mapes Dodge | 932 |
Homœopathic Soup | Unknown | 76 |
Home Sweet Home with Variations | H. C. Bunner | 498 |
Honey-Moon, The | Walter Savage Landor | 366 |
House That Jack Built, The | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 407 |
How the Daughters Come Down at Dunoon | H. Chalmondeley-Pennell | 533 |
How Often | Ben King | 489 |
How to Ask and Have | Samuel Lover | 181 |
How to Eat Watermelons | Frank Libby Stanton | 73 |
How to Make a Man of Consequence | Mark Lemon | 280 |
Humpty Dumpty's Recitations | Lewis Carroll | 872 |
Hundred Best Books, The | Mostyn T. Pigott | 769 |
Hunting of the Snark, The | Lewis Carroll | 676 |
Husband and Heathen Sam | Walter Foss | 160 |
Husband's Petition, The | William B. Aytoun | 454 |
Hyder Iddle | Unknown | 879 |
Hypocrisy | Samuel Butler | 365 |
I | ||
Ideal Husband to His Wife, The | Sam Walter Foss | 246 |
"I Didn't Like Him" | Harry B. Smith | 157 |
Idyll of Phatte and Leene, An | Unknown | 406 |
If | Unknown | 951 |
If | Mortimer Collins | 436 |
If | H. C. Dodge | 268 |
If I Should Die To-night | Ben King | 489 |
If the Man | Samuel Johnson | 949 |
If They Meant All They Said | Alice Duer Miller | 247 |
If We Didn't Have to Eat | Nixon Waterman | 57 |
If You Have Seen | Thomas Moore | 444 |
I Hae Laid a Herring in Saut | James Tytler | 216 |
Imaginative Crisis, The | Unknown | 457 |
Imagiste Love Lines | Unknown | 383 |
Imitation | Anthony C. Deane | 375 |
Imitation of Walt Whitman | Unknown | 434 |
Imitation of Wordsworth, An | Catherine M. Fanshawe | 535 |
Indifference | Unknown | 950 |
In Memoriam | Cuthbert Bede | 463 |
In Memoriam Technicam | Thomas Hood, Jr. | 413 |
Invisible Bridge, The | Gelett Burgess | 855 |
Invitation to the Zoölogical Gardens, An | Unknown | 822 |
Inspect Us | Edith Daniell | 471 |
In the Catacombs | Harlan Hoge Ballard | 52 |
Irishman and the Lady, The | William Maginn | 742 |
Irish Schoolmaster, The | James A. Sidey | 103 |
Israfiddlestrings | Unknown | 472 |
J | ||
Jabberwocky | Lewis Carroll | 869 |
Jabberwocky of Authors, The | Harry Parsons Taber | 437 |
Jackdaw of Rheims, The | Richard Harris Barham (Thomas Ingoldsby) | 586 |
Jacob | Phœbe Cary | 491 |
Jester Condemned to Death, The | Horace Smith | 578 |
"Jim" | Bret Harte | 652 |
Jim Bludso | John Hay | 661 |
Jim-Jam King of the Jou-Jous | Alaric Bertrand Stuart | 851 |
Job | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 364 |
Jocosa Lyra | Austin Dobson | 824 |
John Barleycorn | Robert Burns | 730 |
John Grumlie | Allen Cunningham | 326 |
John Thompson's Daughter | Phœbe Cary | 494 |
Jovial Priest's Confession, The | Leigh Hunt | 834 |
Joys of Marriage, The | Charles Cotton | 344 |
Jumbles, The | Edward Lear | 862 |
Justice to Scotland | Unknown | 384 |
K | ||
K. K.—Can't Calculate | Frances M. Whitcher | 353 |
Kentucky Philosophy | Harrison Robertson | 325 |
Kindly Advice | Unknown | 890 |
Kindness to Animals | J. Ashby-Sterry | 891 |
King Arthur | Unknown | 879 |
King John and the Abbot | Unknown | 554 |
Kilkenny Cats, The | Unknown | 950 |
Kiss, The | Tom Masson | 109 |
Kiss in the Rain, A | Samuel Minturn Peck | 123 |
Kitchen Clock, The | John Vance Cheney | 220 |
Kitty of Coleraine | Edward Lysaght | 130 |
Kitty Wants to Write | Gelett Burgess | 646 |
K. K.—Can't Calculate | F. M. Witcher | 354 |
Knife-Grinder, The | George Canning | 249 |
Knight and the Lady, The | Richard Harris Barham (Thomas Ingoldsby) | 590 |
L | [Pg 978] | |
Lady Mine | H. E. Clarke | 221 |
Laird O'Cockpen, The | Lady Nairne | 703 |
Lament of the Scotch Irish Exile | James Jeffrey Roche | 385 |
Lanty Leary | Samuel Lover | 208 |
Larrie O'Dee, | William W. Fink | 165 |
Last Ride Together, The | James Kenneth Stephen | 431 |
Latest Decalogue, The | Arthur Hugh Clough | 261 |
Laughing Willow, The | Oliver Herford | 948 |
Lawyer's Invocation to Spring, The | Henry Howard Brownell | 402 |
Lay of Ancient Rome | Thomas R. Ybarra | 753 |
Lay of the Deserted Influenzaed | N. Cholmondeley-Pennell | 746 |
Lay of the Love Lorn, The | Aytoun, William E., and Martin | 537 |
Lay of the Lover's Friend, The | William E. Aytoun | 88 |
Lazy Roof, The | Gelett Burgess | 855 |
Learned Negro, The | Unknown | 274 |
Leedle Yawcob Straus | Charles Follen Adams | 940 |
Legend of the First Cam-u-el, The | Arthur Guiterman | 888 |
Legend of Heinz von Stein, The | Charles Godfrey Leland | 49 |
Life | Unknown | 783 |
Life in Laconics | Mary Mapes Dodge | 311 |
Like to the Thundering Tone | Bishop Corbet | 848 |
Lilies | Don Marquis | 379 |
Limericks | Carolyn Wells | 835 |
Lines | Unknown | 456 |
Lines by an Old Fogy | Unknown | 882 |
Lines to Miss Florence Huntingdon | Unknown | 830 |
Lines Written After a Battle | Unknown | 456 |
Literary Lady, The | Richard Brinsley Sheridan | 278 |
Little Billee | W. M. Thackeray | 546 |
Little Breeches | John Hay | 657 |
Little Goose, A | Eliza Sproat Turner | 938 |
Little Mamma | Charles Henry Webb | 943 |
Little Orphant Annie | James Whitcomb Riley | 934 |
Little Peach, The | Eugene Field | 931 |
Little Star, The | Unknown | 476 |
Little Swirl of Vers Libre, A | Thomas R. Ybarra | 380 |
Little Vagabond, The | William Blake | 269 |
Llama, The | Hilaire Belloc | 906 |
Logic | Unknown | 809 |
Logical English | Unknown | 809 |
Lord Guy | George F. Warren | 191 |
Lost Pleiad, The | Arthur Reed Ropes | 161 |
Lost Spectacles, The | Unknown | 287 |
Love is Like a Dizziness | James Hogg | 218 |
Lovers and a Reflection | Charles Stuart Calverley | 372 |
Love Knot, The | Nora Perry | 124 |
Lovelilts | Marion Hill | 824 |
Love Playnt, A | Godfrey Turner | 408 |
Love's Moods and Tenses | Unknown | 812 |
Lucy Lake | Newton Mackintosh | 463 |
Lugubrious Whing-Whang, The | James Whitcomb Riley | 858 |
Lunar Stanzas | Henry Coggswell Knight | 841 |
Lying | Thomas Moore | 86 |
M | ||
Madame Sans Souci | Unknown | 951 |
Malbrouck | Father Prout | 28 |
Man, The | Stephen Crane | 248 |
Man in the Moon, The | James Whitcomb Riley | 856 |
Man of Words, A | Unknown | 790 |
Man's Place in Nature | Unknown | 89 |
Manila | Eugene Fitch Ware | 949 |
March to Moscow, The | Robert Southey | 775 |
Mark Twain: A Pipe Dream | Oliver Herford | 30 |
Martial in London | Mortimer Collins | 316 |
Martin Luther at Potsdam | Barry Pain | 404 |
Maud | Henry S. Leigh | 188 |
Maudle-in-Ballad | Unknown | 510 |
Mavrone | Arthur Guiterman | 378 |
Meeting of the Clabberhuses, The | Sam Walter Foss | 244 |
Melton Mowbray Pork-Pie, A | Richard le Gallienne | 472 |
Mendax | Lessing | 369 |
Messed Damozel, The | Charles Hanson Towne | 471 |
Mexican Serenade | Arthur Guiterman | 902 |
Microbe, The | Hilaire Belloc | 907 |
Midsummer Madness | Unknown | 377 |
Mighty Must, The | W. S. Gilbert | 376 |
Millennuim, The | Robert Browning | 60 |
Minguillo's Kiss | Unknown | 122 |
Miniver Cheevy | Edward Arlington Robinson | 229 |
Misadventures at Margate | Richard Harris Barham (Thomas Ingoldsby) | 558 |
Mis' Smith | Albert Bigelow Paine | 119 |
Modern Hiawatha, The | Unknown | 482 |
Modest Wit, A | Selleck Osborn | 260 |
"Mona Lisa" | John Kendrick Bangs | 95 |
Money | Jehan du Pontalais | 323 |
More Impressions | Oscuro Wildgoose | 509 |
[Pg 979] | ||
More Walks | Richard Harris Barham (Thomas Ingoldsby) | 950 |
Mr. Finney's Turnip | Unknown | 847 |
Mrs. Smith | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 155 |
Musical Ass, The | Tomaso de Yriarte | 249 |
My Angeline | Harry B. Smith | 158 |
My Aunt's Spectre | Mortimer Collins | 600 |
My Dream | Unknown | 853 |
My Feet | Gelett Burgess | 855 |
My Foe | Unknown | 529 |
My Love and My Heart | Henry S. Leigh | 204 |
My Madeline | Walter Parke | 773 |
My Mistress's Boots | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 153 |
N | ||
Naughty Darkey Boy, The | Unknown | 927 |
Nemesis | J. W. Foley | 94 |
Nephelidia | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 459 |
"Never Forget Your Parents" | Franklin P. Adams | 394 |
New Church Organ, The | Will Carleton | 162 |
New Song, A | John Gay | 754 |
New Version, The | W. J. Lampton | 90 |
New Vestments | Edward Lear | 866 |
Ninety-Nine in the Shade | Rossiter Johnson | 781 |
Nirvana | Unknown | 900 |
No! | Thomas Hood | 792 |
No Fault in Women | Robert Herrick | 166 |
Nocturnal Sketch, A | Thomas Hood | 823 |
Nongtongpaw | Charles Dibdin | 808 |
Nonsense Verses | Charles Lamb | 848 |
Nora's Vow | Sir Walter Scott | 159 |
Northern Farmer | Lord Tennyson | 354 |
North, East, South and West | Unknown | 403 |
Nothing | Richard Porson | 786 |
Nothing to Wear | William Allen Butler | 148 |
Noureddin, The Son of the Shah | Clinton Scollard | 199 |
Nun, The | Leigh Hunt | 206 |
Nursery Legend, A | Henry S. Leigh | 937 |
Nursery Rhymes à la Mode | Unknown | 509 |
Nursery Song in Pidgin English | Unknown | 530 |
O | ||
Ocean Wanderer, The | Unknown | 879 |
Ode for a Social Meeting | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 833 |
Ode for a Social Meeting | Leigh Hunt | 834 |
Ode to a Bobtailed Cat | Unknown | 936 |
Ode to the Human Heart | Laman Blanchard | 784 |
Ode to Tobacco | Charles Stuart Calverley | 732 |
Ode to Work in Springtime | Thomas R. Ybarra | 47 |
O D V | Unknown | 788 |
Of a Certain Man | Sir John Harrington | 282 |
Of All the Men | Thomas Moore | 370 |
Of a Precise Tailor | Sir John Harrington | 322 |
Of Baiting the Lion | Owen Seaman | 893 |
Officer Brady | Robert W. Chambers | 232 |
Oh, My Geraldine | F. C. Burnand | 180 |
Old Bachelor, An | Tudor Jenks | 98 |
Old Fashioned Fun | W. M. Thackery | 33 |
Old Grimes | Albert Gorton Greene | 766 |
Old Line Fence, The | A. W. Bellaw | 760 |
Old Man and Jim, The | James Whitcomb Riley | 678 |
Old Song by New Singers, An | A. C. Wilkie | 506 |
Old Stuff | Bert Leston Taylor | 48 |
On the Aristocracy of Harvard | Dr. Samuel G. Bushnell | 949 |
On a Bad Singer | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 364 |
On Butler's Monument | Rev. Samuel Wesley | 370 |
On a Deaf Housekeeper | Unknown | 76 |
On the Death of a Favorite Cat | Thomas Gray | 557 |
On the Democracy of Yale | Dean Jones | 949 |
On the Downtown Side of an Uptown Street | William Johnstone | 79 |
On a Full-Length Portrait of Beau Marsh | Lord Chesterfield | 369 |
On Hearing a Lady Praise a Certain Rev. Doctor's Eyes | George Outram | 368 |
On Knowing When to Stop | L. J. Bridgman | 312 |
On a Magazine Sonnet | Russell Hilliard Loines | 281 |
On the Oxford Carrier | John Milton | 780 |
On Scotland | Cleveland | 369 |
On a Sense of Humor | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 367 |
On Taking a Wife | Thomas Moore | 367 |
Only Seven | Henry S. Leigh | 543 |
Optimism | Newton Mackintosh | 445 |
Origin of Ireland, The | Unknown | 106 |
Original Lamb, The | Unknown | 477 |
Orphan Born | Robert J. Burdette | 903 |
Oubit, The | Charles Kingsley | 330 |
O-u-g-h | Charles Battell Loomis | 761 |
[Pg 980] | ||
Ould Doctor Mack | Alfred Perceval Graves | 717 |
Our Hymn | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 374 |
Our Native Birds | Nathan Haskell Dole | 53 |
Our Traveller | Henry Cholmondeley-Pennell | 445 |
Out of Sight, Out of Mind | Barnaby Googe | 807 |
Out Upon it | Sir John Suckling | 218 |
Over the Way | Mary Mapes Dodge | 125 |
Owen Seaman | Louis Untermeyer | 480 |
Owl and the Pussy Cat, The | Edward Lear | 901 |
Owl-Critic, The | James Thomas Fields | 309 |
P | ||
Paddy O'Rafther | Samuel Lover | 571 |
Pairing-Time Anticipated | William Cowper | 212 |
Palabras Grandiosas | Bayard Taylor | 407 |
Panegyric on the Ladies | Unknown | 803 |
Paradise | George Birdseye | 281 |
Parental Ode to My Son, Aged Three Years and Five Months, A | Thomas Hood | 941 |
Parson Gray | Oliver Goldsmith | 741 |
Parterre, The | E. H. Palmer | 180 |
Pensées de Noël | A. D. Godley | 336 |
Pessimism | Newton Mackintosh | 338 |
Pessimist, The | Ben King | 358 |
Pet's Punishment | J. Ashby-Sterry | 184 |
Phillis's Age | Matthew Prior | 332 |
Philosopher, A | Sam Walter Foss | 242 |
Phyllis Lee | Oliver Herford | 139 |
Pied Piper of Hamelin, The | Robert Browning | 603 |
Pig, The | Robert Southey | 914 |
Pilgrims and the Peas, The | John Wolcot | 621 |
Pin, A | Ella Wheeler Wilcox | 132 |
Plaidie, The | Charles Sibley | 190 |
Plain Language from Truthful James | Bret Harte | 648 |
Played-Out Humorist, The | W. S. Gilbert | 25 |
Plea for Trigamy, A | Owen Seaman | 68 |
Pobble Who Has No Toes, The | Edward Lear | 865 |
Poe-'em of Passion, A | C. F. Lummis | 532 |
Poets at Tea, The | Barry Pain | 486 |
Polka Lyric, A | Barclay Philips | 832 |
Poor Dear Grandpapa | D'Arcy W. Thompson | 950 |
Pope, The | Chas. Lever | 70 |
Pope and the Net, The | Robert Browning | 286 |
Portrait, A | John Keats | 496 |
Positivists, The | Mortimer Collins | 315 |
Post Captain, The | Charles E. Carryl | 615 |
Post-Impressionism | Bert Leston Taylor | 235 |
Practical Joker, The | W. S. Gilbert | 26 |
Prayer of Cyrus Brown, The | Sam Walter Foss | 54 |
Prehistoric Smith | David Law Proudfit | 83 |
Presto Furioso | Owen Seaman | 417 |
Prior to Miss Belle's Appearance | James Whitcomb Riley | 925 |
Promissory Note, The | Bayard Taylor | 429 |
Propinquity Needed | Charles Battell Loomis | 51 |
Purple Cow, The | Gelett Burgess | 948 |
Q | ||
Quaker's Meeting, The | Samuel Lover | 576 |
Quest of the Purple Cow, The | Hilda Johnson | 100 |
Questions with Answers | Unknown | 810 |
Quite by Chance | Frederick Langbridge | 205 |
R | ||
Razor Seller, The | John Wolcot | 297 |
Reasons for Drinking | Dr. Henry Aldrich | 364 |
Recruit, The | Robert W. Chambers | 230 |
Reflections on Cleopathera's Needle | Cormac O'Leary | 105 |
Rejected "National Hymns," The | Robert H. Newell (Orpheus C. Kerr) | 387 |
Religion of Hudibras, The | Samuel Butler | 271 |
Remedy Worse than the Disease, A | Matthew Prior | 365 |
Report of an Adjudged Case | William Cowper | 82 |
Retired Cat, The | William Cowper | 910 |
Retired Pork-Butcher and the Spook | G. E. Farrow | 685 |
Retort, The | George Pope Morris | 174 |
Rev. Gabe Tucker's Remarks | Unknown | 312 |
Reuben | Phœbe Cary | 493 |
Rhyme for Musicians, A | E. Lemke | 772 |
Rhyme of the Rail | John G. Saxe | 748 |
Rhymester, A | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 363 |
Riddle, A | Unknown | 951 |
Rigid Body Sings | J. C. Maxwell | 483 |
Robert Frost | Louis Untermeyer | 479 |
Robinson Crusoe's Story | Charles E. Carryl | 617 |
[Pg 981] | ||
Rollicking Mastodon, The | Arthur Macy | 853 |
Romance of the Carpet, The | Robert J. Burdette | 674 |
Romaunt of Humpty Dumpty The | Henry S. Leigh | 411 |
Rondeau, The | Austin Dobson | 782 |
Rondelay, A | Peter A. Motteux | 41 |
Rory O'More; or, Good Omens | Samuel Lover | 141 |
Ruling Passion, The | Alexander Pope | 285 |
Rural Bliss | Anthony C. Deane | 97 |
Rural Raptures | Unknown | 450 |
S | ||
Sabine Farmer's Serenade, The | Father Prout | 214 |
Said Opie Reed | Julian Street and Montgomery Flagg | 948 |
Sailor's Yarn, A | James Jeffrey Roche | 680 |
Sainte Margerie | Unknown | 477 |
Salad | Mortimer Collins | 436 |
Salad | Sydney Smith | 93 |
Sally in Our Alley | Henry Carey | 182 |
Sally Simkin's Lament | Thomas Hood | 800 |
Same Old Story | Harry B. Smith | 360 |
Sary "Fixes Up" Things | Albert Bigelow Paine | 192 |
Saying, Not Meaning | William Basil Wake | 666 |
School | James Kenneth Stephen | 60 |
Schoolmaster, The | Charles Stuart Calverley | 64 |
Scientific Proof | J. W. Foley | 880 |
Secret Combination, The | Ellis Parker Butler | 209 |
Select Passages from a Coming Poet | F. Anstey | 410 |
Senex to Matt. Prior | James Kenneth Stephen | 362 |
Shake, Mulleary and Go-ethe | H. C. Bunner | 40 |
Shipwreck, The | H. Palmer | 876 |
Siege of Belgrade, The | Unknown | 813 |
Siege of Djklxprwbz, The | Eugene Fitch Ware | 96 |
Similes | Unknown | 791 |
Simile, A | Matthew Prior | 262 |
Sing for the Garish Eye | W. S. Gilbert | 875 |
Sir Guy the Crusader | W. S. Gilbert | 644 |
Sketch from the Life, A | Arthur Guiterman | 121 |
Skipper Treson's Ride | John Greenleat Whittier | 688 |
Sky-Making | Mortimer Collins | 314 |
Smack in School, The | William Pitt Palmer | 128 |
Smatterers | Samuel Butler | 365 |
Society upon the Stanislaus The | Bret Harte | 650 |
"Soldier, Rest!" | Robert J. Burdette | 374 |
Some Hallucinations | Lewis Carroll | 874 |
Some Ladies | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 367 |
Some Little Bug | Roy Atwell | 77 |
Somewhere-in-Europe-Wocky | F. G. Hartswick | 482 |
Song | Joseph Addison | 751 |
Song | George Canning | 84 |
Song | John Donne | 330 |
Song | Richard Lovelace | 241 |
Song | J. R. Ptanche | 99 |
Song of Impossibilities, A | Winthrop Mackintosh Praed | 327 |
Song of Sorrow, A | Charles Battell Loomis | 386 |
Song of the Springtide | Unknown | 527 |
"Songs Without Words" | Robert J. Burdette | 413 |
Sonnet Found in a Deserted Mad House | Unknown | 851 |
Sonnet to a Clam | John G. Saxe | 734 |
Sorrows of Werther, The | W. M. Thackeray | 140 |
'Spacially Jim | Bessie Morgan | 129 |
Spirk Throll-Derisiye | James Whitcomb Riley | 855 |
Splendid Fellow, A | H. C. Dodge | 267 |
Splendid Shilling, The | John Philips | 316 |
St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fishes | Abraham á Sancta-Clara | 251 |
Stanzas to Pale Ale | Unknown | 732 |
St. Patrick of Ireland, My Dear! | William Maginn | 101 |
Story of Prince Agib, The | W. S. Gilbert | 641 |
Strictly Germ-Proof | Arthur Guiterman | 87 |
Strike Among the Poets, A | Unknown | 785 |
Study of an Elevation, in Indian Ink | Rudyard Kipling | 226 |
Styx River Anthology | Carolyn Wells | 521 |
Surnames | James Smith | 804 |
Susan | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 157 |
Susan Simpson | Unknown | 774 |
Sympathy | Reginald Heber | 270 |
T | ||
Takings | Thomas Hood, Jr. | 817 |
Tam o' Shanter | Robert Burns | 623 |
Ternary of Littles, Upon a Pipkin of Jelly Sent to a Lady, A | Robert Herrick | 806 |
Terrible Infant, A | Frederick Locker-Lampson | 156 |
'Tis Midnight | Unknown | 843 |
'Tis Sweet to Roam | Unknown | 878 |
That Gentle Man from Boston Town | Joaquin Miller | 629 |
That Texan Cattle Man | Joaquin Miller | 288 |
Thingumbob, The | Unknown | 882 |
Then Ag'in | Sam Walter Foss | 357 |
[Pg 982] | ||
"There's a Bower of Bean-vines" | Phœbe Cary | 493 |
There Was a Little Girl | Unknown | 926 |
Third Proposition, The | Madeline Bridges | 345 |
Thought, A | James Kenneth Stephen | 248 |
Three Black Crows, The | John Byrom | 254 |
Three Children | Unknown | 843 |
Three Jovial Huntsmen | Unknown | 878 |
Thursday | Frederick E. Weatherly | 313 |
Tim Turpin | Thomas Hood | 795 |
To a Blockhead | Alexander Pope | 362 |
To a Capricious Friend | Joseph Addison | 368 |
To a Fly | John Wolcot | 734 |
To an Importunate Host | Unknown | 534 |
To a Slow Walker and Quick Eater | Lessing | 369 |
To a Thesaurus | Franklin P. Adams | 825 |
To Be or Not To Be | Unknown | 891 |
To Doctor Empiric | Ben Jonson | 365 |
To Julia in Shooting Togs | Owen Seaman | 418 |
To Marie | John Bennett | 852 |
To Minerva | Thomas Hood | 49 |
To My Empty Purse | Geoffrey Chaucer | 58 |
To My Nose | Alfred A. Forrester (Alfred Croquill) | 832 |
Too Late | Fitz Hugh Ludlow | 348 |
To Phœbe | W. S. Gilbert | 28 |
To the Pliocene Skull | Bret Harte | 46 |
To the Portrait of "A Gentleman" | Oliver Wendell Holmes | 236 |
To the Terrestrial Globe | W. S. Gilbert | 256 |
Town of Nice, The | Herman C. Merivale | 438 |
Tragic Story, A | W. M. Thackeray | 850 |
Transcendentalism | Unknown | 92 |
Translated Way | Franklin P. Adams | 427 |
Travesty of Miss Fanshawe's Enigma | Horace Mayhew | 763 |
Triolet | Paul T. Gilbert | 120 |
Triolet, The | William Ernest Henley | 782 |
True to Poll | F. C. Burnand | 275 |
Trust in Women | Unknown | 276 |
Truth About Horace, The | Eugene Field | 50 |
Tu Quoque | Austin Dobson | 146 |
Turtle and the Flamingo, The | James Thomas Fields | 923 |
Turvey Top | William Sawyer | 884 |
'Twas Ever Thus | Henry S. Leigh | 544 |
Twelve Articles | Dean Swift | 279 |
Twins, The | Henry S. Leigh | 108 |
Two Fishes | Unknown | 188 |
Two Men | Edwin Arlington Robinson | 35 |
Two Old Bachelors, The | Edward Lear | 868 |
V | ||
Uffia | Harriet R. White | 877 |
Ultimate Joy, The | Unknown | 32 |
Unattainable, The | Harry Romaine | 141 |
Uncle Simon and Uncle Jim | Charles Farrar Browne (Artemus Ward) | 849 |
Under the Mistletoe | George Francis Schults | 196 |
Unexpected Fact, An | Edward Cannon | 844 |
Unfortunate Miss Bailey | Unknown | 702 |
Unsatisfied Yearning | R. K. Munkittrick | 889 |
Upon Being Obliged to Leave a Pleasant Party | Thomas Moore | 367 |
Up the Spout | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 460 |
Usual Way, The | Frederick E. Weatherly | 200 |
V | ||
Vague Story, A | Walter Parke | 74 |
V-A-S-E, The | James Jeffrey Roche | 227 |
Village Choir, The | Unknown | 528 |
Villanelle of Things Amusing | Gelett Burgess | 73 |
Villon's Straight Tip to All Cross Coves | William Ernest Henley | 399 |
Viper, The | Hilaire Belloc | 906 |
Visit from St. Nicholas, A | Clement Clarke Moore | 935 |
W | ||
Walrus and the Carpenter, The | Lewis Carroll | 896 |
The Whango Tree | Unknown | 842 |
War: A-Z, The | John R. Edwards | 829 |
War Relief | Oliver Herford | 901 |
Ways and Means | Lewis Carroll | 870 |
Way to Arcady, The | H. C. Bunner | 201 |
Wedding, A | Sir John Suckling | 704 |
Wedding, The | Thomas Hood, Jr. | 412 |
Well of St. Keyne, The | Robert Southey | 584 |
What is a Woman Like? | Unknown | 118 |
What's In a Name? | R. K. Munkittrick | 347 |
What's My Thought Like? | Thomas Moore | 370 |
What Will We Do? | Robert J. Burdette | 311 |
Whatever Is, Is Right | Laman Blanchard | 786 |
[Pg 983] | ||
What Mr. Robinson Thinks | James Russell Lowell | 292 |
Whenceness of the Which | Unknown | 476 |
When Lovely Woman | Phoebe Cary | 494 |
When Moonlike Ore the Hazure Seas | W. M. Thackeray | 34 |
When the Frost Is on the Punkin | James Whitcomb Riley | 34 |
Which Is Which | John Byrom | 368 |
Whistler, The | Unknown | 133 |
Why? | H. P. Stevens | 214 |
Why Don't the Men Propose? | Thomas Haynes Bayly | 131 |
Why Doth a Pussy Cat? | Surges Johnson | 895 |
Widow Bedott to Elder Sniffles | Frances M. Whicher | 195 |
Widow Malone, The | Charles Lever | 126 |
Wife, A | Richard Brinsley Sheriian | 366 |
Wife, The | Phoebe Cary | 494 |
William Brown of Oregon | Joaquin Miller | 653 |
Willows, The | Bret Harte | 423 |
Willow-Tree, The | W. M. Thackeray | 439 |
Wing Tee Wee | J. P. Denison | 139 |
Winter Dusk | R. K. Munkittrick | 42 |
Within and Without | James Russell Lowell | 359 |
Wofle New Ballad of Jane Roney and Mary Brown, The | W. M. Thackeray | 552 |
Woman's Will | John G. Saxe | 362 |
Wonders of Nature | Unknown | 470 |
Wordsworthian Reminiscence | Unknown | 470 |
Wreck of the "Julie Plante" | William Henry Drummond | 662 |
Written After Swimming from Sestos to Abydos | Lord Byron | 80 |
Y | ||
Yak, The | Hilaire Belloc | 906 |
Yarn of the "Nancy Bell" | W. S. Gilbert | 632 |
Yonghy-Bonghy Ho, The | Edward Lear | 859 |
Young Gazelle | Walter Parke | 918 |
Young Lady of Niger, The | Unknown | 948 |
Young Lochinvar | Unknown | 381 |
Youth and Art | Robert Browning | 339 |
Z | ||
Zealless Xylographer, The | Mary Mapes Dodge | 759 |
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
It is not always obvious if verses in the original have been split through pagination; if there is doubt the split has been retained.
'Ode for a Social Meeting' has some words struck out and replaced above with alternatives. This has been represented with the struckout words underlined in red and the alternate words in boxes above. The font of the poem has been switched to monospaced to accurately align the two.
Both "Geoffrey" and "Goeffrey" are used as spellings for Geoffrey Chaucer's name without obvious reason. The spelling has been standardised here to the more commonly accepted (today) version "Geoffrey".
The title of "Spirk, Troll-Derisive" uses both "Troll" and "Throll" throughout the original text. The spelling has been standardised here to "Troll".
"There is no poem in the original beginning 'Oh! Weary mother' and it appears to have been an error. The page reference, '000,' is from the original."
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