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A WAIL FOR THE WHALE, ETC.


A WAIL FOR THE WHALE.

Ah, alas! it is over forever!
Has the climate — which most of us kills —
Settled thee? Say, again shall I never
Read thy name in large type in the bills?

Must I stand at the door with my shilling,
But to hear thy too pitiful tale?
Is it useless to urge that I’m willing —
Quite — to put down one more "for the whale?"

Alas, yes, 'tis too true! Though they caught thee,
Prepared for thee honors untold, —
P'raps with Pongo to dine might have taught thee,—
They couldn't quite cope with thy cold.

And though M.D.'s abound in thy quarter,
Alas, what could their science suggest?
They might say, "Put its tail in hot water,—
Try a plaster or two on its chest.

"Such a cold! — all our practice can't match it;
It floods diagnosis with doubt.
Where on earth did our young patient catch it!
Has it been in the water — or out?

"We can picture an elephant wheezing,
Or a Python knocked over by cramp,
But a whale! — we can't fancy that sneezing,
With a pulse at a hundred — from damp!"

So I wonder, at human invention
If thy too fishy nature took fright,
When each minute, with kindest intention,
Some one soused thee all day — and all night!

If that voyage across the Atlantic, —
Meant to handsomely butter thy bread, —
Made thee long for a voice to cry, frantic,
"Oh! do stop, I’ve a cold in my head!"

Such a cold! Ah, too late they all rue it!
And denounce thy berth minus a lid, —
With a douche! For if that didn't do it,
'Tis not easy to tell thee what did!

Ah! but there, — all is over forever!
Though thy tank daily empties and fills,
I shall never again — I shall never
Read thy name in large type in the bills!

Punch.




A CRY.

Lo! I am weary of all, —
Of men, and their love and their hate;
I have been long enough life's thrall,
And the toy of a tyrant fate.

I would have nothing but rest,
I would not struggle again;
Take me now to thy breast,
Earth, sweet mother of men.

Hide me, and let me sleep;
Give me a lonely tomb,
So close and so dark and so deep,
I shall hear no trumpet of doom.

There let me lie forgot,
When the dead at its blast are gone;
Give me to hear it not,
But only to slumber on.

This is the fate I crave,
For I look to the end, and see,
If there be not rest in the grave,
There will never be rest for me.

Spectator.H. E. CLarke.




A BALLAD OF THE "THUNER-SEE."

Soft on the lake's soft bosom we twain
Float in the haze of a dim delight,
While the wavelets cradle the sleepless brain,
And the eyes are glad of the lessening light,
And the east with a fading glory is bright —
The lingering smile of a sun that is set —
And the earth in its tender sorrow is dight,
And the shadow that falleth hath spared us yet!

Oh! the mellow beam of the suns that wane,
Of the joys, ah me! that are taking flight;
Oh, the sting of a rapture too near to pain,
And of love that loveth imdeath's despite!
But the hour is ours, and its beauty's might
Subdues our souls to a still regret,
While the Blumlis-Alp unveils to the night,
And the shadow that falleth hath spared us yet!

Now we set our prow to the land again,
And our backs to those splendors ghostly white,
But a mirrored star with a watery train
We hold in our wake as a golden kite;
When we near the shore, with its darkening height,
And its darker shade on the waters set,
Lo! the dim shade fleeth before our sight,
And the shadow that falleth hath spared us yet!

ENVOY.


From the jewelled circles where I indite
This song, which my faithless tears make wet,
We trail the light till its jemmed rings smite
The shadow, — that falleth! and spares us yet.

Spectator.Emily Pfeiffer