Neghborly Poems and Dialect Sketches. James Whitcomb Riley. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: James Whitcomb Riley
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
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isbn: 4064066237165
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In chorus glorious—

       Old Man?

      In your reposeful gaze

       The dusk of Autumn days

       Is blent with April haze,

       As when of old began

       The bursting of the bud

       Of rosy babyhood—

       When all the world was good,

       Old Man.

      And yet I find a sly

       Little twinkle in your eye;

       And your whisperingly shy

       Little laugh is simply an

       Internal shout of glee

       That betrays the fallacy

       You'd perpetrate on me,

       Old Man!

      So just put up the frown

       That your brows are pulling down!

       Why, the fleetest boy in town,

       As he bared his feet and ran,

       Could read with half a glance—

       And of keen rebuke, perchance—

       Your secret countenance,

       Old Man!

      Now, honestly, confess:

       Is an old man any less

       Than the little child we bless

       And caress when we can?

       Isn't age but just a place

       Where you mask the childish face

       To preserve its inner grace,

       Old Man?

      Hasn't age a truant day,

       Just as that you went astray

       In the wayward, restless way,

       When, brown with dust and tan,

       Your roguish face essayed,

       In solemn masquerade,

       To hide the smile it made

       Old Man?

      Now, fair, and square, and true,

       Don't your old soul tremble through,

       As in youth it used to do

       When it brimmed and overran

       With the strange, enchanted sights,

       And the splendors and delights

       Of the old "Arabian Nights,"

       Old Man?

      When, haply, you have fared

       Where glad Aladdin shared

       His lamp with you, and dared

       The Afrite and his clan;

       And, with him, clambered through

       The trees where jewels grew—

       And filled your pockets, too,

       Old Man?

      Or, with Sinbad, at sea—

       And in veracity

       Who has sinned as bad as he,

       Or would, or will, or can?—

       Have you listened to his lies,

       With open mouth and eyes,

       And learned his art likewise,

       Old Man?

      And you need not deny

       That your eyes were wet as dry,

       Reading novels on the sly!

       And review them, if you can,

       And the same warm tears will fall—

       Only faster, that is all—

       Over Little Nell and Paul,

       Old Man!

      O, you were a lucky lad—

       Just as good as you were bad!

       And the host of friends you had—

       Charley, Tom, and Dick, and Dan;

       And the old School-Teacher, too,

       Though he often censured you;

       And the girls in pink and blue,

       Old Man.

      And—as often you have leant,

       In boyish sentiment,

       To kiss the letter sent

       By Nelly, Belle, or Nan—

       Wherein the rose's hue

       Was red, the violet blue—

       And sugar sweet—and you,

       Old Man—

      So, to-day, as lives the bloom,

       And the sweetness, and perfume

       Of the blossoms, I assume,

       On the same mysterious plan

       The master's love assures,

       That the self-same boy endures

       In that hale old heart of yours,

       Old Man.

       AND

       'LEVEN MORE POEMS

       BY

       BENJ. F. JOHNSON, OF BOONE

       Table of Contents

      The delights of our childhood is soon passed away,

       And our gloryus youth it departs—

       And yit, dead and burried, they's blossoms of May

       Ore theyr medderland graves in our harts.

       So, friends of my bare-footed days on the farm,

       Whether truant in city er not,

       God prosper you same as He's prosperin' me,

       Whilse your past haint despised er fergot.

      Oh! they's nothin', at morn, that's as grand unto me

       As the glorys of Nachur so fare—

       With the Spring in the breeze, and the bloom in the trees,

       And the hum of the bees ev'rywhare!

       The green in the woods, and the birds in the boughs,

       And the dew spangled over the fields;

       And the bah of the sheep and the bawl of the cows

       And the call from the house to your meals!

      Then ho! fer your brekfast! and ho! fer the toil

       That waiteth alike man and beast!

       Oh! its soon with my team I'll be turnin' up soil,

       Whilse the sun shoulders up in the East

       Ore the tops of the ellums and beeches and oaks,

       To smile his godspeed on the plow,

       And the furry and seed, and the Man in his need,

       And the joy of the swet of his brow!

       Table of Contents

      Oh! the old swimmin'-hole! whare the crick so still and deep

       Looked like a baby-river that was laying half asleep,