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    Shapes of Clay

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      1895.

      THE OPPOSING SEX.

      The Widows of Ashur

      Are loud in their wailing:

      "No longer the 'masher'

      Sees Widows of Ashur!"

      So each is a lasher

      Of Man's smallest failing.

      The Widows of Ashur

      Are loud in their wailing.

      The Cave of Adullam,

      That home of reviling—

      No wooing can gull 'em

      In Cave of Adullam.

      No angel can lull 'em

      To cease their defiling

      The Cave of Adullam,

      That home of reviling.

      At men they are cursing—

      The Widows of Ashur;

      Themselves, too, for nursing

      The men they are cursing.

      The praise they're rehearsing

      Of every slasher

      At men. They are cursing

      The Widows of Ashur.

      A WHIPPER-IN.

      Commissioner of Pensions Dudley has established a Sunday-school and declares he will remove any clerk in his department who does not regularly attend.

      N.Y. World.]

      Dudley, great placeman, man of mark and note,

      Worthy of honor from a feeble pen

      Blunted in service of all true, good men,

      You serve the Lord—in courses, table d'hôte:

      Au, naturel, as well as à la Nick—

      "Eat and be thankful, though it make you sick."

      O, truly pious caterer, forbear

      To push the Saviour and Him crucified

      (Brochette you'd call it) into their inside

      Who're all unused to such ambrosial fare.

      The stomach of the soul makes quick revulsion

      Of aught that it has taken on compulsion.

      I search the Scriptures, but I do not find

      That e'er the Spirit beats with angry wings

      For entrance to the heart, but sits and sings

      To charm away the scruples of the mind.

      It says: "Receive me, please; I'll not compel"—

      Though if you don't you will go straight to Hell!

      Well, that's compulsion, you will say. 'T is true:

      We cower timidly beneath the rod

      Lifted in menace by an angry God,

      But won't endure it from an ape like you.

      Detested simian with thumb prehensile,

      Switch me and I would brain you with my pencil!

      Face you the Throne, nor dare to turn your back

      On its transplendency to flog some wight

      Who gropes and stumbles in the infernal night

      Your ugly shadow lays along his track.

      O, Thou who from the Temple scourged the sin,

      Behold what rascals try to scourge it in!

      JUDGMENT.

      I drew aside the Future's veil

      And saw upon his bier

      The poet Whitman. Loud the wail

      And damp the falling tear.

      "He's dead—he is no more!" one cried,

      With sobs of sorrow crammed;

      "No more? He's this much more," replied

      Another: "he is damned!"

      1885.

      THE FALL OF MISS LARKIN.

      Hear me sing of Sally Larkin who, I'd have you understand,

      Played accordions as well as any lady in the land;

      And I've often heard it stated that her fingering was such

      That Professor Schweinenhauer was enchanted with her touch;

      And that beasts were so affected when her apparatus rang

      That they dropped upon their haunches and deliriously sang.

      This I know from testimony, though a critic, I opine,

      Needs an ear that is dissimilar in some respects to mine.

      She could sing, too, like a jaybird, and they say all eyes were wet

      When Sally and the ranch-dog were performing a duet—

      Which I take it is a song that has to be so loudly sung

      As to overtax the strength of any single human lung.

      That, at least, would seem to follow from the tale I have to tell,

      Which (I've told you how she flourished) is how Sally Larkin fell.

      One day there came to visit Sally's dad as sleek and smart

      A chap as ever wandered there from any foreign part.

      Though his gentle birth and breeding he did not at all obtrude

      It was somehow whispered round he was a simon-pure Dude.

      Howsoe'er that may have been, it was conspicuous to see

      That he was a real Gent of an uncommon high degree.

      That Sally cast her tender and affectionate regards

      On this exquisite creation was, of course, upon the cards;

      But he didn't seem to notice, and was variously blind

      To her many charms of person and the merits of her mind,

      And preferred, I grieve to say it, to play poker with her dad,

      And acted in a manner that in general was bad.

      One evening—'twas in summer—she was holding in her lap

      Her accordion, and near her stood that melancholy chap,

      Leaning up against a pillar with his lip in grog imbrued,

      Thinking, maybe, of that ancient land in which he was a Dude.

      Then Sally, who was melancholy too, began to hum

      And elongate the accordion with a preluding thumb.

      Then sighs of amorosity from Sally L. exhaled,

      And her music apparatus sympathetically wailed.

      "In the gloaming, O my darling!" rose that wild impassioned strain,

      And her eyes were fixed on his with an intensity of pain,

      Till the ranch-dog from his kennel at the postern gate came round,

      And going into session strove to magnify the sound.

      He lifted up his spirit till the gloaming rang and rang

      With the song that to his darling he impetuously sang!

      Then that musing youth, recalling all his soul from other scenes,

      Where his fathers all were Dudes and his mothers all Dudines,

      From his lips removed the beaker and politely, o'er the grog,

      Said: "Miss Larkin, please be quiet: you will interrupt the dog."

      IN HIGH LIFE.

      Sir Impycu Lackland, from over the sea,

      Has led to the altar Miss Bloatie Bondee.

      The wedding took place at the Church of St. Blare;

      The fashion, the rank and the wealth were all there—

      No person was absent of all whom one meets.

      Lord Mammon himself bowed them into their seats,

      While good Sir John Satan attended the door

      And Sexton Beelzebub managed the floor,

      Respectfully keeping each dog to its rug,

      Preserving the peace between poodle and pug.

      Twelve bridesmaids escorted the bride up the aisle

      To blush in her blush and to smile in her smile;

      Twelve groomsmen supported the eminent groom

      To scowl in his scowl and to gloom in his gloom.

      The rites were performed by the hand and the lip

      Of his Grace the Diocesan, Billingham Pip,

      Assisted by three able-bodied divines.

      He prayed and they grunted, he read, they made signs.

      Such fashion, such beauty, such dressing, such grace

      Were ne'er before seen in that heavenly place!

      That night, full of gin, and all blazing inside,

      Sir Impycu blackened the eyes of his bride.

      A BUBBLE.

      Mrs. Mehitable Marcia Moore

      Was a dame of superior mind,

      With a gown which, modestly fitting before,

      Was greatly puffed up behind.

      The bustle she wore was ingeniously planned

      With an inspiration bright:

      It magnified seven diameters and

      Was remarkably nice and light.

      It was made of rubb
    er and edged with lace

      And riveted all with brass,

      And the whole immense interior space

      Inflated with hydrogen gas.

      The ladies all said when she hove in view

      Like the round and rising moon:

      "She's a stuck up thing!" which was partly true,

      And men called her the Captive Balloon.

      To Manhattan Beach for a bath one day

      She went and she said: "O dear!

      If I leave off this what will people say?

      I shall look so uncommonly queer!"

      So a costume she had accordingly made

      To take it all nicely in,

      And when she appeared in that suit arrayed,

      She was greeted with many a grin.

      Proudly and happily looking around,

      She waded out into the wet,

      But the water was very, very profound,

      And her feet and her forehead met!

      As her bubble drifted away from the shore,

      On the glassy billows borne,

      All cried: "Why, where is Mehitable Moore?

      I saw her go in, I'll be sworn!"

      Then the bulb it swelled as the sun grew hot,

      Till it burst with a sullen roar,

      And the sea like oil closed over the spot—

      Farewell, O Mehitable Moore!

      A RENDEZVOUS.

      Nightly I put up this humble petition:

      "Forgive me, O Father of Glories,

      My sins of commission, my sins of omission,

      My sins of the Mission Dolores."

      FRANCINE.

      Did I believe the angels soon would call

      You, my beloved, to the other shore,

      And I should never see you any more,

      I love you so I know that I should fall

      Into dejection utterly, and all

      Love's pretty pageantry, wherein we bore

      Twin banners bravely in the tumult's fore,

      Would seem as shadows idling on a wall.

      So daintily I love you that my love

      Endures no rumor of the winter's breath,

      And only blossoms for it thinks the sky

      Forever gracious, and the stars above

      Forever friendly. Even the fear of death

      Were frost wherein its roses all would die.

      AN EXAMPLE.

      They were two deaf mutes, and they loved and they

      Resolved to be groom and bride;

      And they listened to nothing that any could say,

      Nor ever a word replied.

      From wedlock when warned by the married men,

      Maintain an invincible mind:

      Be deaf and dumb until wedded—and then

      Be deaf and dumb and blind.

      REVENGE.

      A spitcat sate on a garden gate

      And a snapdog fared beneath;

      Careless and free was his mien, and he

      Held a fiddle-string in his teeth.

      She marked his march, she wrought an arch

      Of her back and blew up her tail;

      And her eyes were green as ever were seen,

      And she uttered a woful wail.

      The spitcat's plaint was as follows: "It ain't

      That I am to music a foe;

      For fiddle-strings bide in my own inside,

      And I twang them soft and low.

      "But that dog has trifled with art and rifled

      A kitten of mine, ah me!

      That catgut slim was marauded from him:

      'Tis the string that men call E."

      Then she sounded high, in the key of Y,

      A note that cracked the tombs;

      And the missiles through the firmament flew

      From adjacent sleeping-rooms.

      As her gruesome yell from the gate-post fell

      She followed it down to earth;

      And that snapdog wears a placard that bears

      The inscription: "Blind from birth."

      THE GENESIS OF EMBARRASSMENT.

      When Adam first saw Eve he said:

      "O lovely creature, share my bed."

      Before consenting, she her gaze

      Fixed on the greensward to appraise,

      As well as vision could avouch,

      The value of the proffered couch.

      And seeing that the grass was green

      And neatly clipped with a machine—

      Observing that the flow'rs were rare

      Varieties, and some were fair,

      The posts of precious woods, besprent

      With fragrant balsams, diffluent,

      And all things suited to her worth,

      She raised her angel eyes from earth

      To his and, blushing to confess,

      Murmured: "I love you, Adam—yes."

      Since then her daughters, it is said,

      Look always down when asked to wed.

      IN CONTUMACIAM.

      Och! Father McGlynn,

      Ye appear to be in

      Fer a bit of a bout wid the Pope;

      An' there's divil a doubt

      But he's knockin' ye out

      While ye're hangin' onto the rope.

      An' soon ye'll lave home

      To thravel to Rome,

      For its bound to Canossa ye are.

      Persistin' to shtay

      When ye're ordered away—

      Bedad! that is goin' too far!

      RE-EDIFIED.

      Lord of the tempest, pray refrain

      From leveling this church again.

      Now in its doom, as so you've willed it,

      We acquiesce. But you'll rebuild it.

      A BULLETIN.

      "Lothario is very low,"

      So all the doctors tell.

      Nay, nay, not so—he will be, though,

      If ever he get well.

      FROM THE MINUTES.

      When, with the force of a ram that discharges its ponderous body

      Straight at the rear elevation of the luckless culler of simples,

      The foot of Herculean Kilgore—statesman of surname suggestive

      Or carnage unspeakable!—lit like a missile prodigious

      Upon the Congressional door with a monstrous and mighty momentum,

      Causing that vain ineffective bar to political freedom

      To fly from its hinges, effacing the nasal excrescence of Dingley,

      That luckless one, decently veiling the ruin with ready bandanna,

      Lamented the loss of his eminence, sadly with sobs as follows:

      "Ah, why was I ever elected to the halls of legislation,

      So soon to be shown the door with pitiless emphasis? Truly,

      I've leaned on a broken Reed, and the same has gone back on me meanly.

      Where now is my prominence, erstwhile in council conspicuous, patent?

      Alas, I did never before understand what I now see clearly,

      To wit, that Democracy tends to level all human distinctions!"

      His fate so untoward and sad the Pine-tree statesman, bewailing,

      Stood in the corridor there while Democrats freed from confinement

      Came trooping forth from the chamber, dissembling all, as they passed him,

      Hilarious sentiments painful indeed to observe, and remarking:

      "O friend and colleague of the Speaker, what ails the unjoyous proboscis?"

      WOMAN IN POLITICS.

      What, madam, run for School Director? You?

      And want my vote and influence? Well, well,

      That beats me! Gad! where are we drifting to?

      In all my life I never have heard tell

      Of such sublime presumption, and I smell

      A nigger in the fence! Excuse me, madam;

      We statesmen sometimes speak like the old Adam.

      But now you mention it—well, well, who knows?

      We might, that's certain, give the sex a show.

      I have a cousin—teacher. I suppose

      If I stand in and you 're elected—no?

      You'll make
    no bargains? That's a pretty go!

      But understand that school administration

      Belongs to Politics, not Education.

      We'll pass the teacher deal; but it were wise

      To understand each other at the start.

      You know my business—books and school supplies;

      You'd hardly, if elected, have the heart

      Some small advantage to deny me—part

      Of all my profits to be yours. What? Stealing?

      Please don't express yourself with so much feeling.

      You pain me, truly. Now one question more.

      Suppose a fair young man should ask a place

      As teacher—would you (pardon) shut the door

      Of the Department in his handsome face

      Until—I know not how to put the case—

      Would you extort a kiss to pay your favor?

      Good Lord! you laugh? I thought the matter graver.

      Well, well, we can't do business, I suspect:

      A woman has no head for useful tricks.

      My profitable offers you reject

      And will not promise anything to fix

      The opposition. That's not politics.

      Good morning. Stay—I'm chaffing you, conceitedly.

      Madam, I mean to vote for you—repeatedly.

      TO AN ASPIRANT.

      What! you a Senator—you, Mike de Young?

      Still reeking of the gutter whence you sprung?

      Sir, if all Senators were such as you,

      Their hands so crimson and so slender, too,—

      (Shaped to the pocket for commercial work,

      For literary, fitted to the dirk)—

      So black their hearts, so lily-white their livers,

      The toga's touch would give a man the shivers.

      A BALLAD OF PIKEVILLE.

      Down in Southern Arizona where the Gila monster thrives,

      And the "Mescalero," gifted with a hundred thousand lives,

      Every hour renounces one of them by drinking liquid flame—

     


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