Tasuta

Mother Goose for Grown Folks

Tekst
iOSAndroidWindows Phone
Kuhu peaksime rakenduse lingi saatma?
Ärge sulgege akent, kuni olete sisestanud mobiilseadmesse saadetud koodi
Proovi uuestiLink saadetud

Autoriõiguse omaniku taotlusel ei saa seda raamatut failina alla laadida.

Sellegipoolest saate seda raamatut lugeda meie mobiilirakendusest (isegi ilma internetiühenduseta) ja LitResi veebielehel.

Märgi loetuks
Šrift:Väiksem АаSuurem Aa

FANTASY



"I have a little sister,

They call her peep, peep;

She wades through the water,

Deep, deep, deep;

She climbs up the mountains,

High, high, high; '

My poor little sister,

She has but one eye!"





Rough Common Sense doth here confess

Her kinship to Imagination;

Betraying also, I should guess,

Some little pride in the relation.





For even while vexed, and puzzled too,

By the vagaries of the latter,—

Fearful what next the child may do,—

She looks with loving wonder at her.





Plain Sense keeps ever to the road

That's beaten down and daily trod;

While Fancy fords the rivers wide,

And scrambles up the mountain-side:

By which exploits she's always getting

Either a tumble or a wetting.





While simple Sense looks straight before,

Fancy "peeps" further, and sees more;

And yet, if left to walk alone,

May chance, like most long-sighted people,

To trip her foot against a stone

While gazing at a distant steeple.





Nay, worse! with all her grace erratic,

And feats aerial and aquatic,

Her flights sublime, and moods ecstatic,

She of the vision wild and high

Hath but a solitary eye!

And,—not to quote the Scripture, which

Forebodes the falling in the ditch,—

Doubtless by following such a guide

Blindly, in all her wanderings wide,

The world, at best, would get o' one side.





What then? To rid us of our doubt

Is there no other thing to do

But we must turn poor Fancy out,

And only downright Fact pursue?





Ah, see you not, bewildered man!

The heavenly beauty of the plan?

'T was so ordained, in counsels high,

To give to sweet Imagination

A single deep and glorious eye;

But then't was meant, in compensation,

That Common Sense, with optics keen,—

As maid of honor to a queen,—

On her blind side should always stay,

And keep her in the middle way.



JINGLING AND JANGLING



"Little Jack Jingle

Used to live single.

But when he got tired

Of that kind of life,

He left off being single,

And lived with his wife."





Your period's pointed, most excellent Moth-

er!

Pray what did he do when he tired of the

other?

For a man so deplorably prone to ennui

But a queer sort of husband is likely to be.





The fatigue might recur,—and, in case it

should be so,

Why not take a wife on a limited lease, O?

Grant the privilege, pray, to his idiosyn-

crazy,—

Some natures won't bear to be too closely

pinned, you see,—

And, at worst, the poor Benedict might

advertise,

When weary, at length, of the light of his

eyes,—

Or failing to find her, it may be, in salt,—

"Disposed of, indeed, for no manner of

fault,"

(To borrow a figure of speech from the

mart,)

"But because the late owner has taken a

start!"





I believe once before you have cautiously

said

Something quite as concise on this delicate

head,

When distantly hinting at "needles and

pins,"

And that "when a man marries, his trouble

begins";

But I don't recollect that you ever pretend

To prophesy anything as to the

end

.





Unless we may learn it of Peter,—the

bumpkin,

Renowned for naught else but his eating

of pumpkin;

Whose wife—I don't see how he happened

to get her—

Had a taste, very likely, for things that

were better:





Since, fearing to lose her, at last it be-

fell

He bethought him of shutting her up in a

shell;

By which brilliant contrivance she

kept

 very

well!

What he did with her next, the old rhyme

does n't say,

But she seems to be somehow got out of

the way,

For the ill-fated Peter was wedded once

more,

To find his bewilderment worse than be-

fore;

"If the first for her spouse had but small

predilection,

Now 't was his turn, alas! to fall short in

affection.





And how do you think that he conquered

the evil?

Why, simply by

lifting himself to her level

;

By leaving his pumpkins, and learning to

spell,

He came, saith the story, to love her right

well;

And the mythical memoir its moral con-

trives

For the lasting instruction of husband*

and wives.



THE OLD WOMAN OF SURREY



"There was an old woman in Surrey,

Who was morn, noon, and night in a hurry;

Called her husband a fool,

Drove the children to school,

The worrying old woman of Surrey."





T was an ancient earldom over the sea,

And it must be now as it used to be;

Yet the sketch is of one I have known

before,—

The very old woman that lives next door.





One thing is unquestionable,—she 's

"smart,"—

As they say of an apple that's rather tart;

For her nearest friends, I think, would

allow her

To be, at her best, but a "pleasant sour."

There's a certain electrical atmosphere

That you feel beforehand, when she's near:

And—unless you 'ye a wonderful deal of

pluck—

A shrinking fear that you might be

"struck."





She moves with such a bustle and rush,—

Such an elemental stir and crush,

As makes the branches bend and fall

In the breeze that blows up a thunder-squall.

And yet, it is only her endless "hurry";

She's not so bad if she would n't "worry."

And, for all the worlds that she has to make.

If the six days' time she 'd only take.





You may talk about Surrey, or Devon, or

Kent,

But I doubt if a special location was meant;

It may sound severe,—but it seems to me

That a "representative" woman was she;





And that here and there you may chance

to trace

Some specimens extant of the race:

For a slip of the stock, as I've a notion,

Somehow "in the Mayflower" crossed the

ocean.



PICKLE PEPPERS



"Peter Piper picked a peck of pickle peppers;

And a peck of pickle peppers Peter Piper picked;

If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickle peppers

Where's the peck of pickle peppers Peter Piper

picked?"





Poor Peter toiled his life away,

That afterward the world might say

"Where is the peck of peppers he

Did gather so industriously?"

The peppers are embalmed in metre,—

But who, alas! inquires for Peter?





In sun or storm, by night and day,

Scant time for sleep, and none for play,

Still the poor fool did nothing reck,

If only he might pick his peck:

And what result from all hath sprung,

But just to bite somebody's tongue?

Or,—Lady Fortune playing fickle,—

Get some one in a precious pickle?



HUMPTY DUMPTY



"Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall;

Humpty Dumpty had a great fall:

Not all the king's horses nor all the king's men

Could set Humpty Dumpty up again."





Full many a project that never was hatched

Falls down, and gets shattered beyond be-

ing patched;

And luckily, too! for if all came to chick-

ens,

Then things without feathers might go to

the dickens.





If each restless unit that moves among men

Might climb to a place with the privileged

"ten,"

Pray tell us where all the commotion would

stop!

Must the whole pan of milk, forsooth, rise

to the top?





If always the statesman attained to his hopes,

And grasped the great helm, who would

stand by the ropes?

Or if all dainty fingers their duties might

choose,

Who would wash up the dishes, and polish

the shoes?





Suppose every aspirant writing a book

Contrived to get published, by hook or by

crook;

Geologists then of a later creation

Would be startled, I fancy, to find a forma-

tion

Proving how the poor world did most wo-

fully sink

Beneath mountains of paper, and oceans of

ink!





Or even suppose all the women were mar-

ried;

By whom would superfluous babies be car-

ried?

Where would be the good aunts that should

knit all the stockings?

Or nurses, to do up the singings and rock-

ings?

Wise spinsters, to lay down their wonderful

rules,

And with theories rare to enlighten the

fools,—

Or to look after orphans, and primary

schools?





No! Failure's a part of the infinite plan;

Who finds that he can't, must give way to

who can;

And as one and another drops out of the

race,

Each stumbles at last to his suitable place.





So the great scheme works on,—though,

like eggs from the wall,

Little single designs to such ruin may fall,

That not all the world's might, of its horses

or men,

Could set their crushed hopes at the sum-

mit again.



SUNDAY AND MONDAY



"As Tommy Snooks and Bessy Brooks

Were walking out one Sunday,

Says Tommy Snooks to Bessy Brooks,

To-morrow will be Monday."





No doubt you are smiling at such a remark.

And thinking poor Snooks but a pitiful

spark;

But the words have a meaning, worth look-

ing for, too,

As I'll presently try and demonstrate for you.





'Twas a pity, indeed, in that moment of

leisure,

To dampen poor Bessy's hebdomadal pleas-

ure,

Suggesting that close on the beautiful Sun-

day

Must come all the common-place horrors

of Monday;





That he to his toiling, and she to her

tub,

Must turn, and take up with another week's

rub;

Yet a truth for us all, since the shade of

the real

Follows fast on the track of each sunny

ideal.





Now and then we may pause on Life's

pleasant oases;

But between lie the desert's grim, desolate

spaces;

And our feet, with all patience, must trav-

erse them still,

Reaching forward to blessing, through

bearing of ill.





Yet for Snooks and his Bessy,—for me

and for you,—

Comes a Saturday night when the wage

will be due;

And we'll say to each other, in ecstasy,

one day,

"To-morrow—the endless to-morrow—is

Sunday!"



THE MAD HORSE



"There was a mad man,

And he had a mad wife,

And the children were mad beside;

So on a mad horse

They all of them got,

And madly away did ride."





Sagacious Goose! Fresh wonders yet!

"What spell had power to help you get

Those seven-leagued spectacles, that see

Down to the nineteenth century?





"The mad world, and his madder wife!"

That, in your earlier time of life,—

Though quite demented now,?t is plain,—

Were sober, grave, and al