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More Bab Ballads [12]

By Root 195 0
they require

To animate a paving-stone

With SHAKESPEARE'S intellectual fire.



"At parties where young ladies gaze,

And I attempt to speak my joy,

'Hush, pray,' some lovely creature says,

'The fond illusion don't destroy!'



"Whene'er I speak, my soul is wrung

With these or some such whisperings:

''Tis pity that a SHAKESPEARE'S tongue

Should say such un-Shakesperian things!'



"I should not thus be criticised

Had I a face of common wont:

Don't envy me - now, be advised!"

And, now I think of it, I don't!







Ballad: Gregory Parable, LL.D.







A leafy cot, where no dry rot

Had ever been by tenant seen,

Where ivy clung and wopses stung,

Where beeses hummed and drummed and strummed,

Where treeses grew and breezes blew -

A thatchy roof, quite waterproof,

Where countless herds of dicky-birds

Built twiggy beds to lay their heads

(My mother begs I'll make it "eggs,"

But though it's true that dickies do

Construct a nest with chirpy noise,

With view to rest their eggy joys,

'Neath eavy sheds, yet eggs and beds,

As I explain to her in vain

Five hundred times, are faulty rhymes).

'Neath such a cot, built on a plot

Of freehold land, dwelt MARY and

Her worthy father, named by me

GREGORY PARABLE, LL.D.



He knew no guile, this simple man,

No worldly wile, or plot, or plan,

Except that plot of freehold land

That held the cot, and MARY, and

Her worthy father, named by me

GREGORY PARABLE, LL.D.



A grave and learned scholar he,

Yet simple as a child could be.

He'd shirk his meal to sit and cram

A goodish deal of Eton Gram.

No man alive could him nonplus

With vocative of FILIUS;

No man alive more fully knew

The passive of a verb or two;

None better knew the worth than he

Of words that end in B, D, T.

Upon his green in early spring

He might be seen endeavouring

To understand the hooks and crooks

Of HENRY and his Latin books;

Or calling for his "Caesar on

The Gallic War," like any don;

Or, p'raps, expounding unto all

How mythic BALBUS built a wall.

So lived the sage who's named by me

GREGORY PARABLE, LL.D.



To him one autumn day there came

A lovely youth of mystic name:

He took a lodging in the house,

And fell a-dodging snipe and grouse,

For, oh! that mild scholastic one

Let shooting for a single gun.



By three or four, when sport was o'er,

The Mystic One laid by his gun,

And made sheep's eyes of giant size,

Till after tea, at MARY P.

And MARY P. (so kind was she),

She, too, made eyes of giant size,

Whose every dart right through the heart

Appeared to run that Mystic One.

The Doctor's whim engrossing him,

He did not know they flirted so.

For, save at tea, "MUSA MUSAE,"

As I'm advised, monopolised

And rendered blind his giant mind.

But looking up above his cup

One afternoon, he saw them spoon.

"Aha!" quoth he, "you naughty lass!

As quaint old OVID says, 'Amas!'"



The Mystic Youth avowed the truth,

And, claiming ruth, he said, "In sooth

I love your daughter, aged man:

Refuse to join us if you can.

Treat not my offer, sir, with scorn,

I'm wealthy though I'm lowly born."

"Young sir," the aged scholar said,

"I never thought you meant to wed:

Engrossed completely with my books,

I little noticed lovers' looks.

I've lived so long away from man,

I do not know of any plan

By which to test a lover's worth,

Except, perhaps, the test of birth.

I've half forgotten in this wild

A father's duty to his child.

It is his place, I think it's said,

To see his daughters richly wed

To dignitaries of the earth -

If possible, of noble birth.

If noble birth is not at hand,

A father may, I understand

(And this affords a chance for you),

Be satisfied to wed her to

A BOUCICAULT or BARING - which

Means any one who's very rich.

Now, there's an Earl who lives hard by, -

My child and I will go and try

If he will
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