Project Gutenberg's Ventures Into Verse, by H. L. (Henry Louis) Mencken This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Title: Ventures Into Verse Being various ballads, ballades, rondeaux, triolets, songs, quatrains, odes and roundels, all rescued from the potters' field of old files and her given decent burial Author: H. L. (Henry Louis) Mencken Release Date: August 27, 2016 [EBook #52904] Language: English Character set encoding: UTF-8 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VENTURES INTO VERSE *** Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive) Ventures _into_ Verse Being Various BALLADS, BALLADES, RONDEAUX, TRIOLETS, SONGS, QUATRAINS, ODES _and_ ROUNDELS ✿ All rescued from _the_ POTTERS' FIELD _of_ Old Files _and_ here Given DECENT BURIAL ✿ [Peace _to_ Their Ashes] BY Henry Louis Mencken WITH ILLUSTRATIONS & OTHER THINGS _By_ CHARLES S. GORDON & JOHN SIEGEL [Illustration] MARSHALL, BEEK & GORDON :: NEW YORK :: LONDON :: TORONTO :: SYDNEY BALTIMORE ✿ FIRST (_and Last_) EDITION M C M I I I Copyright, 1903, by Henry L. Mencken CONTENTS VENTURES INTO VERSE TO R. K. THE SONG OF THE OLDEN TIME THE SPANISH MAIN THE TRANSPORT GEN'RAL FERGUSON A WAR SONG FAITH THE BALLAD OF SHIPS IN HARBOR THE ORF'CER BOY THE FILIPINO MAIDEN THE VIOLET THE TIN-CLADS SEPTEMBER ARABESQUE ESSAYS IN OLD FRENCH FORMS A BALLADE OF PROTEST A FRIVOLOUS RONDEAU THE RHYMES OF MISTRESS DOROTHY A FEW LINES A RONDEAU OF TWO HOURS AN ANTE-CHRISTMAS RONDEAU ROUNDEL IN VAUDEVILLE THE RONDEAU OF RICHES IN EATING SOUP LOVE AND THE ROSE A RONDEAU OF STATESMANSHIP SONGS of THE CITY SONGS OF THE CITY OTHER VERSES A MADRIGAL A BALLAD OF LOOKING WHEN THE PIPE GOES OUT A PARADOX THE SONG OF THE SLAPSTICK IL PENSEROSO FINIS _WARNING_ Most of the verses that follow have been printed before and the author wishes to acknowledge his thanks for permission to reproduce them, to the editors and publishers of _The Bookman_, _Life_, _The New England Magazine_, _The National Magazine_ and the _Baltimore Morning Herald_. Some are imitations—necessarily weak—of the verse of several men in whose writings he has found a good deal of innocent pleasure. The others, he fears, are more or less original. PRELIMINARY REBUKE _Don't shoot the pianist; he's doing his best._ Gesundheit! Knockers! have your Fling! Unto an Anvilfest you're bid; It took a Lot of Hammering, To build Old Cheops' Pyramid! Ventures _into_ Verse ✿ ✿ BY HENRY L. MENCKEN ✿ ✿ TO R. K.[1] Prophet of brawn and bravery! Bard of the fighting man! You have made us kneel to a God of Steel, And to fear his church's ban; You have taught the song that the bullet sings— The knell and the crowning ode of kings; The ne'er denied appeal! Prophet of brain and handicraft! Bard of our grim machines! You have made us dream of a God of Steam, And have shown what his worship means In the clanking rod and the whirring wheel A life and a soul your songs reveal, And power and might supreme. Bard of the East and mystery! Singer of those who bow To the earthen clods that they call their gods And with god-like fees endow; You have shown that these heed not the suppliant's plea, Nor the prayers of the priest and devotee, Nor the vestal's futile vow. Singer, we ask what we cannot learn From our wise men and our schools; Will our offered slain from our gods obtain But the old reward of fools? Will our man-made gods be like their kind? If we bow to a clod of clay enshrined Will we pray our prayers in vain? ----- Footnote 1: Copyright, 1899, by Dodd, Mead & Co. THE SONG OF THE OLDEN TIME Powder and shot now fight our fights And we meet our foes no more, As face to face our fathers fought In the brave old days of yore; To the thirteen inch and the needle gun, To the she-cat four-point-three We look for help when the war-dogs yelp And the foe comes o'er the sea! _Oho! for the days of the olden time, When a fight was a fight of men! When lance broke lance and arm met arm— There were no cowards then; Sing ho! for the fight of the olden time, When the muscles swelled in strain, As the steel found rest in a brave man's breast And the axe in a brave man's brain!_ The lance-point broke on the armor's steel, And the pike crushed helmet through, And the blood of the vanquished, warm and red, Stained the victor's war-steed, too! A fight was a fight in the olden time— Sing ho, for the days bygone!— And a strong right arm was the luckiest charm, When the foe came marching on! _Oho! for the days of the olden time, When a fight was a fight of men! When lance broke lance and arm met arm— There were no cowards then! Sing ho! for the fight of the olden time, When the muscles swelled in strain, As the steel found rest in a brave man's breast And the axe in a brave man's brain!_ THE SPANISH MAIN Between the tangle of the palms, There gleaming, like a star-strewn plain, All smiling, lies the sea of calms, And calls to us to fare amain; And calls us, as with smile and gem, She called that bold, upstanding brood, Whose bones, when she had done with them, Upon her shores she strewed. Between the tangle of the palms, By day the gleam is on the swell, And drifting zephyrs, bearing balms, Her tales of joy and riches tell, And when the winds of night are free Long, glimmering ripples wander by As if the stars where in the sea, Instead of in the sky. And they went forth in ships of war Girt up in all foolhardiness, To take their toll from out her store, Beguiled and snared by her caress; And we go forth in cargo ships To wrest her treasures bloodlessly, And buy the nectar from her lips, Our fairy goddess, she! Where once their galleons blundered by Our cargo ships are on their way, And where their galleons rotting lie, Our cargo ships are wrecked today. For ever, 'till the world is done, And all good merchantmen go down, And dies the wind, as pales the sun, Her smile will mask her frown. [Illustration] THE TRANSPORT GEN'RAL FERGUSON[2] The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she left the Golden Gate, With a thousand rookies sweatin' in her hold; An' the sergeants drove an' drilled them, an' the sun it nearly killed them,— Till they learned to do whatever they were told. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she lay at Honolu', An' the rookies went ashore an' roughed the town, So the sergeants they corralled them, and with butt and barrel quelled them,— An' they limped aboard an' set to fryin' brown. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she steamed to-ward the south, And the rookies sweated morning, noon and night; 'Till the lookout sighted land, and they cheered each grain o' sand,— For their blood was boilin' over for a fight. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she tied up at the dock, An' each rookie lugged his gun an' kit ashore, An' a train it come and took 'em where the tropic sun could cook 'em,— An' the sergeants they could talk to them of war. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she had her bottom scraped, For the first part of her labor it was done, An' the rookies chased the Tagals and the Tagals they escaped,— An' the rookies set and sweated in the sun. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she loafed around awhile, An' the rookies they was soldier boys by now, For it don't take long to teach 'em—where the Tagal lead can reach 'em— All about the which and why and when and how. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she headed home again, With a thousand heavy coffins in her hold; They were soldered up and stenciled, they were numbered and blue penciled,— And the rookies lay inside 'em stiff and cold. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she reached the Golden Gate, An' the derrick dumped her cargo on the shore; In a pyramid they piled it—and her manifest they filed it, In a pigeon-hole with half a hundred more. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she travels up and down, A-haulin' rookies to and from the war; Outward-bound they sweat in Kharki; homeward bound they come in lead And they wonder what they've got to do it for. The transport Gen'ral Ferguson, she's owned by Uncle Sam, An' maybe Uncle Sam could tell 'em why, But he don't—and so he takes 'em out to fight, and sweat, and swear, An' brings them home for plantin' when they die. ----- Footnote 2: Copyright, 1902, by the _Life_ Publishing Company. A WAR SONG The wounded bird to its blasted nest, (Sing ho! for the joys of war!) When the sun of its life veers o'er to the West, (Sing ho! for the war, for the war!) The wounded fox to its cave in the hill, And the blood-dyed wolf to the snow-waste chill, And the mangled elk to the wild-wood rill, (Sing ho! for the price of war!) The nest-queen harks to her master's hurts, (Sing ho! for the wounds of war!) And the she-fox busies with woodland worts, (Sing ho! for the end of war!) The she-wolf staunches the warm red flood, And the doe is besmeared with the spurting blood, For 'tis ever the weak that must help the strong, Though they have no part in the triumph song, And their glory is brief as their work is long— (Sing ho! for the saints of war!) [Illustration] FAITH The Gawd that guided Moses Acrost the desert sand, The Gawd that unter Joner Put out a helping hand, The Gawd that saved these famous men From death on land an' sea, Can spare a minute now an' then To take a peep at you an' me. The Gawd of Ol' Man Adam An' Father Abraham, Of Joshua an' Isaiah, Of lion an' of lamb, Of kings, an' queens, an' potentates, An' chaps of pedigree, Wont put a bar acrost the Gate When Gabr'el toots fer you an' me. The Gawd that made the ocean An' painted up the sky, The Gawd that sets us livin' An' takes us when we die, Is just the same to ev'ry man, Of high or low degree, An' no one's better treated than Poor little you and little me. THE BALLAD OF SHIPS IN HARBOR _Clatter of shears and derrick, Rattle of box and bale, The ships of the earth are at their docks, Back from the world-round trail— Back from the wild waste northward, Back from the wind and the lea, Back from the ports of East and West, Back from the under sea._ Here is a bark from Rio, Back—and away she steals! Here, from her trip, is a clipper ship That showed the sea her heels— South to the Gallapagos, Down, due south, to the Horn, And up, by the Windward Passage way, On the breath of the balm-wind borne. There, standing down the channel, With a smoke wake o'er her rail, Is a ship that goes to Zanzibar Along the world-round trail, 'Ere seven suns have kissed her She may pound on Quoddy Head— A surf-tossed speck of melting wreck, Deep-freighted with her dead. And see that gaunt Norwegian, Greasy, grimy and black— She sails today for Yeddo Bay; Who knows but she comes not back? And there is a low decked Briton, And yonder a white-winged Dane— Oh, a song for the ships that put to sea And come not back again! _Clatter of shears and derrick, Rattle of box and bale, The ships of the earth are home today, Tomorrow they shall sail; Cleared for the dawn and the sunset, Cleared for the wind and the lea; World-round and back, by the olden track— Playthings of the sea._ [Illustration] THE ORF'CER BOY “He was a gran' bhoy!”—_Mulvaney._ Now 'e aren't got no whiskers An' 'e's only five foot 'igh, (All the same 'e is a' orf'cer hof the Queen!) Oh, 'is voice is like a loidy's An' 'e's so polite an' shy! (All the same 'e serves 'Er Majesty the Queen!) It is only 'bout a year ago 'e left 'is mother's knee, It is only 'bout a month ago 'e come acrost the sea, It is only 'bout a week that 'e 'as been aleadin' me. (That's the way 'e serves 'Er Majesty the Queen!) 'E is such a little chappie, Bein' only five foot 'igh, That you'd wonder how 'is likes could serve the Queen; You would think that when 'e 'eard the guns 'E'd just set down an' cry— A-forgettin' ev'rythink about the Queen; But by all that's good an' holy, you'd be extraord'ny wrong, 'Cos 'e doesn't like no singin' 'arf as good 's the Gatlin's song, An' 'e fights as though 'e'd been a-fightin' twenty times as long As any other man that serves the Queen! If you'd seen him when we got to where The Modder's deep an' wet, You'd a-knowed 'e was a' orf'cer hof the Queen! There's a dozen of the enemy That ain't forgot 'im yet— For 'e run 'is sword clean through 'em for the Queen! Oh, 'e aren't much on whiskers an' 'e aren't much on 'eight, An' a year or two ago 'e was a-learnin' for to write, But you bet your soldier's shillin' 'e's the devil in a fight— An' 'ed die to serve 'Er Majesty the Queen! THE FILIPINO MAIDEN Her father we've chased in the jungle, And her brother is full of our lead; Her uncles and cousins In yellow half-dozens We've tried to induce to be dead; And while we have shot at their shadows, They've done the same favor for us— But, by George, she's so sweet That we'd rather be beat Than to have her mixed up in the fuss. Oh! isn't her blush like the roses? And aren't her eyes like the stars? And whenever she smiles Don't you think you are miles From the rattle and roar of the wars? Would you take the three stars of a general If she'd say “Leave the stars and take me?” Oh! we've stolen sweet kisses from thousands of misses, But hers are the sweetest that be. Her name may be Ahlo or Nina, Or Zanez or Lalamaloo; She may smoke the cigars Of the chino bazars, And prefer black maduros to you; She may speak a wild six-cornered lingo, And say that your Spanish is queer, But you'll never mind this When she gives you a kiss And calls you her “zolshier poy dear.” Oh! isn't her blush like the roses? And aren't her eyes like the stars? And whenever she smiles Don't you think you are miles From the rattle and roar of the wars? Would you take the three stars of a general If she'd say “Leave the stars and take me?” Oh! I've stolen sweet kisses from thousands of misses, But her's are the sweetest for me! [Illustration] THE VIOLET As in the first pale flush of coming dawn We see a promise of the glorious sun, So in the violet's misty blue is drawn A shadowy likeness of the days to be, The days of cloudless skies and poesie, When Winter's done. THE TIN-CLADS[3] The small gunboats captured from the Spaniards and facetiously called “tin-clads” by the men of the land forces, are of great value in the offensive operations against the insurgents along the coast.—[MANILLA DISPATCH] _Their draft is a foot and a half, And a knot and a half is their speed, Their bows are as blunt as the stern of a punt And their boilers are wonders of greed; Their rudders are always on strike, Their displacement is thirty-two tons, They are armored with tin—to the dishpan they're kin— But their Maxims are A number ones, (Ask Aggie!) Their Maxims are murderous guns!_ When from out the towns and villages, and out the jungle, too, We have chased the Filipinos on the run, Toward the river swamps they foot it—towards the swamps we can't go through— And we're doubtful if we've lost the fight or won; Then when all are safe in hiding in the slimy mud and reeds, From the river 'cross the swamp we hear a sound; It's the sputter and the rattle of the automatic feeds On the tin-protected cruisers—how they pound— (Sweet sound!) They that save us being losers—Rah! the tin-protected cruisers! Hear their rattling Maxims pound, pound, pound! When the guns have done their work, and the Tagals come our way, (I admit they much prefer us to the guns,) Why, we finish up what's left—ten in every dozen lay Dead as Noah, in the swampy pools and runs; Then the Maxims stop their rattle and we know that midst the reeds, Half a hundred Filipinos on the ground Are a-looking at the sky, with a glassy, sightless eye, And the other half—or most of them—are drowned. 'Twas the tin-protected cruisers—How they pound! (Sweet sound!) They that saved us being losers—Rah! the tin-protected cruisers! How their rattling Maxims pound, pound, pound! _Their draft is a foot and a half And a knot and a half is their speed, Their bows are as blunt as the stern of a punt, And their engines are wonders, indeed. Their rudders are always on strike, Their bunkers hold two or three tons, They are armored with tin—to the meat-can they're kin— 'But their Maxims are A number ones, (Ask Aggie!) Their Maxims are murderous guns; (Go ask him!) Their Maxims are Death's younger sons._ ----- Footnote 3: Copyright, 1900, by the W. W. Potter Co. SEPTEMBER A dash of scarlet in the dark'ning green, A minor echo in the night-wind's wail, And faint and low, the swirling boughs between, The last, sad carol of the nightingale. [Illustration] ARABESQUE (_An English Version of an old Turkish Lyric._) The tinkling sound of the camel's bell Comes softly across the sand, And the nightingale by the garden well Still warbles his saraband, But the night goes by and the dawn-winds blow From the glimmering East and the Hills of Snow, And I wait, sweetheart, I wait alone, For a smile from thee, my own! Awake! e'er the gong of the muezzin Peals forth for another day; E'er its loveless, barren toil begin But a smile from you I pray! But a smile from your soul-enslaving eyes,— As brightly dark as the midnight skies,— But a smile, I pray! Awake! sweetheart, Awake! my own, my own! ESSAYS IN OLD FRENCH FORMS [Illustration] A BALLADE OF PROTEST[4] (_To the address of Master Rudyard Kipling, Poetaster_) For long, unjoyed, we've heard you sing Of politics and army bills, Of money-lust and cricketing, Of clothes and fear and other things; Meanwhile the palm-trees and the hills Have lacked a bard to voice their lay; Poet, ere time your lyre string stills, Sing us again of Mandalay! Unsung the East lies glimmering, Unsung the palm trees toss their frills, Unsung the seas their splendors fling, The while you prate of laws and tills. Each man his destiny fulfills; Can it be yours to loose and stray; In sophist garb to waste your quills?— Sing us again of Mandalay! Sing us again in rhymes that ring, In Master-Voice that lives and thrills. Sing us again of wind and wing, Of temple bells and jungle thrills; And if your Pegasus e'er wills To lead you down some other way, Go bind him in his olden thills— Sing us again of Mandalay! Master, regard the plaint we bring, And hearken to the prayer we pray. Lay down your law and sermoning— Sing us again of Mandalay! ----- Footnote 4: Copyright, 1902, by Dodd, Mead & Co. A FRIVOLOUS RONDEAU “I co'd reherse A lyric verse.”—_The Hesperides._ A lyric verse I'll make for you, Fair damsel that the many woo, 'Twill be a sonnet on your fan— That aid to love from quaint Japan— And “true” will rhyme with “eyes of blue.” Ah! me, if you but only knew The toil of setting out to hew From words—as I shall try to do— A lyric verse. Fleet metric ghosts I must pursue, And dim rhyme apparitions, too— But yet, 'tis joyfully I scan, And reckon rhymes and think and plan For there's no cheaper present than A lyric verse. THE RHYMES OF MISTRESS DOROTHY _Roundel_— Bemauled by ev'ry hurrying churl And deafened by the city's brawl, A helm-less craft I helpless swirl Adown the street. With battered hat I trip and sprawl And like a toy tee-to-tum swirl, To end my strugglings with a fall— But what care I for knock and whirl?— Egad! I heed them not at all; For here comes Dolly—sweetheart girl!— Adown the street! _Triolet_— The light that lies in Dolly's eyes Is sun and moon and stars to me; It dims the splendor of the skies— The light that lies in Dolly's eyes— And me-ward shining, testifies That Dolly's mine, fore'er to be— The light that lies in Dolly's eyes Is sun and moon and stars to me! _Roundelay_— Oh, Dolly is my treasury— What more of wealth could I desire? Her lips are rubies set for me, And there between (sweet property!) A string of pearls to smiles conspire; With Dolly as my treasury, What more of wealth could I desire? And when have men of alchemy Yet dreamed of gems like those I see In Dolly's eyes, as flashing fire, They bid the envious world admire?— Oh, Dolly is my treasury! What more of wealth could I desire? And then her hair!—there cannot be Such gold beyond the Purple Sea As this of mine—unpriced and free! Oh, Dolly is my treasury, My sweetheart and my heart's desire! [Illustration] A FEW LINES Few roses like your cheeks are red, Few lilies like your brow are fair; Few vassals like your slave are led, Few roses like your cheeks are red, Few dangers like your frown I dread; Few rubies to your lips compare, Few roses like your cheeks are red, Few lilies like your brow are fair. A RONDEAU OF TWO HOURS “It's a cinch.”—_Plato._ From four to six milady fair Is chic and sweet and debonair, For then it is, with smiles and tea, She fills the chappy mob with glee (The jays but come to drink and stare). A rose is nestled in her hair, Like Cupid lurking in his lair— Few of the jays remain heart free From four to six. Oh let them come—I would not care If all the men on earth were there; For when they go she smiles on me, And, just because she loves me, she Makes all the ringers take their share From four to six. AN ANTE-CHRISTMAS RONDEAU “'Tis a sad story, mates.”—_Marie Corelli._ It's up to me—the winds are chill And snow clouds drift from o'er the hill, At dawn the rime is on the grass, At five o'clock we light the gas, And long gone is the daffodil. Jack Frost draws flowers upon the glass And blasts the growing ones—alas! Whene'er he comes to scar and kill, It's up to me. I run not in the croaker class, But when I see the autumn pass, Of crushing woes I have my fill— To buy a Christmas gift for Jill A horde of gold I must amass— It's up to me. [Illustration] ROUNDEL If love were all and we could cheat All gods but Cupid of their due, Our joy in life would be complete. We'd only live that we might woo, (Instead, as now, that we might eat,) And ev'ry lover would be true,— If love were all. Yet, if we found our bread and meat In kisses it would please but few, Soon life would grow a cloying sweet, If love were all. IN VAUDEVILLE In vaudeville the elder jest Remains the one that's loved the best; For 'tis the custom of the stage To venerate and honor age And look upon the old as blest. Originality's a pest That artist's labor hard to best— Conservatism is the rage In vaudeville. The artist's arms are here expressed: A slapstick argent as a crest (It is an ancient heritage), A seltzer siphon gules—the wage Of newness is a lengthy rest In vaudeville. THE RONDEAU OF RICHES If I were rich and had a store Of gold doubloons and louis d'or— A treasure for a pirate crew— Then I would spend it all for you— My heart's delight and conqueror! About your feet upon the floor, Ten thousand rubies I would pour— Regardless of expense, I'd woo If I were rich. But as I'm not, I can but soar Mid fancy's heights and ponder o'er The things that I would like to do; And as I pass them in review It strikes me that you'd love me more If I were rich. IN EATING SOUP In eating soup, it's always well To make an effort to excel The unregenerate who sop With bread the last surviving drop As if to them but one befell. And if it burn you do not yell, Or stamp or storm or say “Oh!——well!”— From social grandeur you may flop In eating soup. And if the appetizing smell Upon you cast a witch's spell, To drain your plate pray do not stop, And please, I pray you, do not slop! A gurgling sound's a social knell In eating soup. [Illustration] LOVE AND THE ROSE The thorn lives but to shield the rose; Coquetry may but shelter love! (This consolation Hope bestows). The thorn lives but to shield the rose; Though blood from many a thorn wound flows I'll pluck the rose that blows above— The thorn lives but to shield the rose, Coquetry may but shelter love! Love me more or not at all, Half a rose is less than none; Hear the wretch you hold in thrall! Love me more or not at all! Dilletante love will pall, I would have you wholly won;— Love me more or not at all; Half a rose is less than none! A RONDEAU OF STATESMANSHIP In politics it's funny how A man may tell you one thing now And say tomorrow that he meant To voice a different sentiment And vow a very different vow. The writ and spoken laws allow Each individual to endow His words with underground intent In politics. Thus he who leads in verbal prow- Ness sports the laurel on his brow— So if you wish to represent The acme of the eminent, Learning lying ere you make your bow In politics. SONGS _of_ THE CITY [Illustration] SONGS OF THE CITY I—_Auroral_[5] Another day comes journeying with the sun, The east grows ghastly with the dawning's gleam, And e'er the dark has flown and night is done The alley pavements with their many teem. Another day of toil and grief and pain; Life surely seems not sweet to such as these! Yet they live toiling that they may but gain The right to life and all life's miseries. II—_Madrigal_ Ah! what were all the running brooks From ocean-side to ocean-side, And what were all the chattering wrens That wake the wood with song, And what were all the roses red In all the flowery meadows wide, And what were all the fairy clouds That 'cross the heavens throng— And what were all the joys that bide In meadow, wood and down, To me, if I were at your side Within the joyless town? III—_Within the City Gates_ We can but dream of murmuring rills Mad racing down the wooded hills, Of meadow flowers and balmy days When robin sings his amorous lays; And lost among the city's ways, To us it is not given to gaze In wonder as the morning haze Lifts from the sea of daffodils,— Of all but those on window-sills We can but dream. IV—_April_ At dawn a gay gallant comes to the eaves And trills a song unto his lady fair, And then, above the reach of boyish thieves, A building nest sways in the balmy air; One day a flower upon a window sill Puts forth a bud, and as its beauty grows The sun—gay prodigal!—with life-light glows, The while he reads the doom of storms and snows; And then—and then—there comes the springtime's thrill! V—_The Coming of Winter_ A chill, damp west wind and a heavy sky, With clouds that merge in one gray, darkling sea, The last red leaves of autumn flutter by, Wrest from the dead twigs of the street-side tree; And then there comes an eddying cloud of white, First dim, then blotting everything below; Up to the eaves the sparrows haste in flight— And thus upon the town descends the snow. VI—_The Snow_ A song of birds adown a mine's dark galleries, A scent of roses 'mid a waste of moor and fen, A gush of sparkling waters from the desert sands,— So comes the snow upon the town, an alien. VII—_Nocturne_ How like a warrior on the battlefield The city sleeps, with brain awake, and eyes That know no closing. Ere the first star dies It rises from its slumber, and with shield In hand, full ready for the fray, Goes forth to meet the day. ----- Footnote 5: Copyright, 1899, by Warren F. Kellogg. OTHER VERSES [Illustration] A MADRIGAL How can I choose but love you, Maid of the witching smile? Your eyes are as blue as the skies above you; How can I choose but love you, love you, You and your witching smile? For the red of your lips is the red of the rose, And the white of your brows is the white of the snows, And the gold of your hair is the splendor that glows When the sun gilds the east at morn. And the blue of your eyes Is the blue of the skies Of an orient day new-born; And your smile has a charm that is balm to the soul, And your pa has a bar'l and a many-plunk roll, So how can I choose but love you, love you, Love you, love you, love you? A BALLAD OF LOOKING He looked into her eyes, and there he saw No trace of that bright gleam which poets say Comes from the faery orb of love's sweet day, No blushing coyness causes her to withdraw Her gaze from his. He looked and yet he knew No joy, no whirling numbness of the brain, No quickening heart-beat. Then he looked again, And once again, unblushing, she looked too. He looked into her eyes—with interest he Stared at them through a magnifying prism. For he was but an oculist, and she Was being treated for astigmatism. [Illustration] WHEN THE PIPE GOES OUT A maiden's heart, And sighs profuse, A father's foot, And—what's the use? A PARADOX Dan Cupyd drewe hys lyttle bowe, And strayght ye arrowe from it flewe, Although its course was rather lowe, I thought 'twould pass above my heade— In stature I am shorte, you knowe. But soone upon my breast a stayne Of blood appeared, and showed ye marke Whereat ye boy god tooke hys aime; I staggered, groaned and then—I smyled! Egad! it was a pleasante payne! [Illustration] THE SONG OF THE SLAPSTICK Why is a hen? (Kerflop!) Haw, haw! Toot, goes the slide trombone; Why is a hen? (And a swat in the jaw!) And the ushers laugh alone. Why is a—(Bang!)—is a—(Biff!) Ho, ho! Boom! goes the sad French horn; Why is a hen? (Kerflop!) Do you know?— And the paid admissions mourn! Vhy iss a hen? Yes? No? (Kerflop?) Bang! goes the man at the drum; Vhy iss a hen? (And a knock at the top!) And the press agent's stricken dumb; Vhy iss a—(Thud!)—iss a—(Flop!)—iss a hen? Hark! how the supers laugh! Vhy iss a—(Bing! Bang! Boom!)—and then The slapstick's bust in half! (Curtain) IL PENSEROSO Love's song is sung in ragtime now And kisses sweet are syncopated joys, The tender sign, the melancholy moan, The soft reproach and yearning up-turned gaze Have passed into the caves without the gates And in their place, to serve love's purposes, Bold profanations from the music halls Are working overtime. In days of old the amorous swain would sigh And say unto his lady love the while He pressed her to his heaving low-cut vest, “Dost love me, sweet?” And she, with many a blush, Would softly answer, “Yes, my cavalier!” Now to his girl the ragtime lover says, The while he strums his marked-down mandolin “Is you ma lady love?” and she, his girl, Makes answer thus: “Ah is!” Gadzooks! it makes me sad! I see the doom Of Cupid, and upon the battered air I hear a rumor floating. It is this: That when the boy god shuffles to the grave 'Tis Syncopated Sambo that will get His job! * * * * * Ah, me! What sadness resteth on my soul! FINIS There was a man that delved in the earth For glittering gems and gold, And whatever lay hidden that seemed of worth He carefully seized and sold; So his days were long and his store was great, And ever for more he sighed, 'Till kings bowed down and he ruled in state— And after awhile he died. _Oh, blithesome and shrill the wails resound! Oh, gaily his children moan! And the end of it all was a hole in the ground And a scratch on a crumbling stone._ There was a man that fought for the right, And never a friend had he, 'Till after the dark there dawned the light And the world could know and see; Oh, long was the fight and comfortless, But great was the fighter's pride, And a victor he rose from the storm and stress— And after awhile he died. _Oh, great was the fame but newly found Of the man that fought alone! And the end of it all was a hole in the ground And a scratch on a crumbling stone._ There was a man that dreamed a dream, And his pen it served his brain; And great was his art and great his theme And long was his laurelled reign; But after awhile the world forgot And his work was pushed aside, (For to serve and wait is the mortal lot) And then, in the end, he died. _Oh! brown on his brow were the bays that bound And far was his glory flown! And the end of it all was a hole in the ground And a scratch on a crumbling stone._ [Illustration] DONE INTO TYPE AND PRINTED BY MARSHALL, BEEK & GORDON IN THE CITY OF BALTIMORE AND ON THE THIRD FLOOR OF THE TELEGRAM BUILDING, NORTH AND BALTIMORE STREET CROSSING ♣ ANNO DOMINI MCMIII 250 Copies Of This Facsimile Edition Of Ventures Into Verse Have Been Printed For Smith's Book Store Baltimore 1, Maryland This Is Copy No. _247_ TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES 1. Added Table of Contents on p. 3. 2. Corrected Isaaih to Isaiah on p. 11. 3. Silently corrected typographical errors. 4. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed. 5. Substituted ✿ symbol for evergreen tree like symbol. 6. Substituted ♣ symbol for fallen leaf like symbol. 7. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_. End of Project Gutenberg's Ventures Into Verse, by H. L. 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