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Title: Songs, Merry and Sad
Author: McNeill, John Charles, 1874-1907
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Songs, Merry and Sad" ***


SONGS, MERRY AND SAD

by John Charles McNeill

[American (North Carolina) poet.  1874-1907.]



               To
               JOSEPH P. CALDWELL
               ("The Old Man")



Contents


     The Bride
     "Oh, Ask Me Not"
     Isabel
     To ------
     To Melvin Gardner:  Suicide
     Away Down Home
     For Jane's Birthday
     A Secret
     The Old Bad Woman
     Valentine
     A Photograph
     Jesse Covington
     An Idyl
     Home Songs
     M. W. Ransom
     Protest
     Oblivion
     Now!
     Tommy Smith
     Before Bedtime
     "If I Could Glimpse Him"
     Attraction
     Love's Fashion
     Alcestis
     Reminiscence
     Sonnet
     Lines
     An Easter Hymn
     A Christmas Hymn
     When I Go Home
     Odessa
     Trifles
     Sunburnt Boys
     Gray Days
     An Invalid
     A Caged Mocking-Bird
     Dawn
     Harvest
     Two Pictures
     October
     The Old Clock
     Tear Stains
     A Prayer
     She Being Young
     Paul Jones
     The Drudge
     The Wife
     Vision
     September
     Barefooted
     Pardon Time
     The Rattlesnake
     The Prisoner
     Sonnet
     Folk Song
     "97":  The Fast Mail
     Sundown
     At Sea
     L'envoi



SONGS, MERRY AND SAD



The Bride



     The little white bride is left alone
     With him, her lord; the guests have gone;
         The festal hall is dim.
     No jesting now, nor answering mirth.
     The hush of sleep falls on the earth
         And leaves her here with him.

     Why should there be, O little white bride,
     When the world has left you by his side,
         A tear to brim your eyes?
     Some old love-face that comes again,
     Some old love-moment sweet with pain
         Of passionate memories?

     Does your heart yearn back with last regret
     For the maiden meads of mignonette
         And the fairy-haunted wood,
     That you had not withheld from love,
     A little while, the freedom of
         Your happy maidenhood?

     Or is it but a nameless fear,
     A wordless joy, that calls the tear
         In dumb appeal to rise,
     When, looking on him where he stands,
     You yield up all into his hands,
         Pleading into his eyes?

     For days that laugh or nights that weep
     You two strike oars across the deep
         With life's tide at the brim;
     And all time's beauty, all love's grace
     Beams, little bride, upon your face
         Here, looking up at him.



"Oh, Ask Me Not"



     Love, should I set my heart upon a crown,
      Squander my years, and gain it,
     What recompense of pleasure could I own?
      For youth's red drops would stain it.

     Much have I thought on what our lives may mean,
      And what their best endeavor,
     Seeing we may not come again to glean,
      But, losing, lose forever.

     Seeing how zealots, making choice of pain,
      From home and country parted,
     Have thought it life to leave their fellows slain,
      Their women broken-hearted;

     How teasing truth a thousand faces claims,
      As in a broken mirror,
     And what a father died for in the flames
      His own son scorns as error;

     How even they whose hearts were sweet with song
      Must quaff oblivion's potion,
     And, soon or late, their sails be lost along
      The all-surrounding ocean:

     Oh, ask me not the haven of our ships,
      Nor what flag floats above you!
     I hold you close, I kiss your sweet, sweet lips,
      And love you, love you, love you!



Isabel



     When first I stood before you,
         Isabel,
     I stood there to adore you,
         In your spell;
     For all that grace composes,
     And all that beauty knows is
     Your face above the roses,
         Isabel.

     You knew the charm of flowers,
         Isabel,
     Which, like incarnate hours,
         Rose and fell
     At your bosom, glowed and gloried,
     White and pale and pink and florid,
     And you touched them with your forehead,
         Isabel.

     Amid the jest and laughter,
         Isabel,
     I saw you, and thereafter,
         Ill or well,
     There was nothing else worth seeing,
     Worth following or fleeing,
     And no reason else for being,
         Isabel.



To ------



     Some time, far hence, when Autumn sheds
      Her frost upon your hair,
     And you together sit at dusk,
      May I come to you there?
     And lightly will our hearts turn back
      To this, then distant, day
     When, while the world was clad in flowers,
      You two were wed in May.

     When we shall sit about your board
      Three old friends met again,
     Joy will be with us, but not much
      Of jest and laughter then;
     For Autumn's large content and calm,
      Like heaven's own smile, will bless
     The harvest of your happy lives
      With store of happiness.

     May you, who, flankt about with flowers,
      Will plight your faith to-day,
     Hold, evermore enthroned, the love
      Which you have crowned in May;
     And Time will sleep upon his scythe,
      The swallow rest his wing,
     Seeing that you at autumntide
      Still clasp the hands of spring.



To Melvin Gardner:  Suicide



     A flight of doves, with wanton wings,
      Flash white against the sky.
     In the leafy copse an oriole sings,
      And a robin sings hard by.
     Sun and shadow are out on the hills;
     The swallow has followed the daffodils;
     In leaf and blade, life throbs and thrills
      Through the wild, warm heart of May.

     To have seen the sun come back, to have seen
      Children again at play,
     To have heard the thrush where the woods are green
      Welcome the new-born day,
     To have felt the soft grass cool to the feet,
     To have smelt earth's incense, heavenly sweet,
     To have shared the laughter along the street,
      And, then, to have died in May!

     A thousand roses will blossom red,
      A thousand hearts be gay,
     For the summer lingers just ahead
      And June is on her way;
     The bee must bestir him to fill his cells,
     The moon and the stars will weave new spells
     Of love and the music of marriage bells--
      And, oh, to be dead in May!



Away Down Home



     'T will not be long before they hear
      The bullbat on the hill,
     And in the valley through the dusk
      The pastoral whippoorwill.
     A few more friendly suns will call
      The bluets through the loam
     And star the lanes with buttercups
         Away down home.

     "Knee-deep!" from reedy places
      Will sing the river frogs.
     The terrapins will sun themselves
      On all the jutting logs.
     The angler's cautious oar will leave
      A trail of drifting foam
     Along the shady currents
         Away down home.

     The mocking-bird will feel again
      The glory of his wings,
     And wanton through the balmy air
      And sunshine while he sings,
     With a new cadence in his call,
      The glint-wing'd crow will roam
     From field to newly-furrowed field
         Away down home.

     When dogwood blossoms mingle
      With the maple's modest red,
     And sweet arbutus wakes at last
      From out her winter's bed,
     'T would not seem strange at all to meet
      A dryad or a gnome,
     Or Pan or Psyche in the woods
         Away down home.

     Then come with me, thou weary heart!
      Forget thy brooding ills,
     Since God has come to walk among
      His valleys and his hills!
     The mart will never miss thee,
      Nor the scholar's dusty tome,
     And the Mother waits to bless thee,
         Away down home.



For Jane's Birthday



     If fate had held a careless knife
      And clipped one line that drew,
     Of all the myriad lines of life,
      From Eden up to you;
     If, in the wars and wastes of time,
      One sire had met the sword,
     One mother died before her prime
      Or wed some other lord;

     Or had some other age been blest,
      Long past or yet to be,
     And you had been the world's sweet guest
      Before or after me:
     I wonder how this rose would seem,
      Or yonder hillside cot;
     For, dear, I cannot even dream
      A world where you are not!

     Thus heaven forfends that I shall drink
      The gall that might have been,
     If aught had broken a single link
      Along the lists of men;
     And heaven forgives me, whom it loves,
      For feigning such distress:
     My heart is happiest when it proves
      Its depth of happiness.

     Enough to see you where you are,
      Radiant with maiden mirth!
     To bless whatever blessed star
      Presided o'er your birth,
     That, on this immemorial morn,
      When heaven was bending low,
     The gods were kind and you were born
      Twenty sweet years ago!



A Secret



     A little baby went to sleep
      One night in his white bed,
     And the moon came by to take a peep
      At the little baby head.

     A wind, as wandering winds will do,
      Brought to the baby there
     Sweet smells from some quaint flower that grew
      Out on some hill somewhere.

     And wind and flower and pale moonbeam
      About the baby's bed
     Stirred and woke the funniest dream
      In the little sleepy head.

     He thought he was all sorts of things
      From a lion to a cat;
     Sometimes he thought he flew on wings,
      Or fell and fell, so that

     When morning broke he was right glad
      But much surprised to see
     Himself a soft, pink little lad
      Just like he used to be.

     I would not give this story fame
      If there were room to doubt it,
     But when he learned to talk, he came
      And told me all about it.



The Old Bad Woman



     The Old Bad Woman was coming along,
     Busily humming a sort of song.

     You could barely see, below her bonnet,
     Her chin where her long nose rested on it.

     One tooth thrust out on her lower lip,
     And she held one hand upon her hip.

     Then we went to thinking mighty fast,
     For we knew our time had come at last.

     For what we had done and didn't do
     The Old Bad Woman would put us through.

     If you cried enough to fill your hat,
     She wouldn't care; she was used to that.

     Of the jam we had eaten, she would know;
     How we ran barefooted in the snow;

     How we cried when they made us take our bath;
     How we tied the grass across the path;

     How we bound together the cat and cur--
     We couldn't deny these things to her.

     She pulled her nose up off her chin
     And blinked at us with an awful grin.

     And we almost died, becaze and because
     Her bony fingers looked like claws.

     When she came on up to where we were,
     How could we be polite to her?

     You needn't guess how she put us through.
     If you are bad, she'll visit you.

     And when she leaves and hobbles off
     You'll think that she has done enough;

     For the Old Bad Woman will and can
     Be just as bad as the Old Bad Man!



Valentine



     This is the time for birds to mate;
        To-day the dove
     Will mark the ancient amorous date
        With moans of love;
     The crow will change his call to prate
        His hopes thereof.

     The starling will display the red
        That lights his wings;
     The wren will know the sweet things said
        By him who swings
     And ducks and dips his crested head
        And sings and sings.

     They are obedient to their blood,
        Nor ask a sign,
     Save buoyant air and swelling bud,
        At hands divine,
     But choose, each in the barren wood,
        His valentine.

     In caution's maze they never wait
        Until they die;
     They flock the season's open gate
        Ere time steals by.
     Love, shall we see and imitate,
        You, love, and I?



A Photograph



     When in this room I turn in pondering pace
     And find thine eyes upon me where I stand,
     Led on, as by Enemo's silken strand,
     I come and gaze and gaze upon thy face.

     Framed round by silence, poised on pearl-white grace
     Of curving throat, too sweet for beaded band,
     It seems as if some wizard's magic wand
     Had wrought thee for the love of all the race.

     Dear face, that will not turn about to see
     The tulips, glorying in the casement sun,
     Or, other days, the drizzled raindrops run

     Down the damp walls, but follow only me,
     Would that Pygmalion's goddess might be won
     To change this lifeless image into thee!



Jesse Covington



     If I have had some merry times
      In roaming up and down the earth,
     Have made some happy-hearted rhymes
      And had my brimming share of mirth,
     And if this song should live in fame
      When my brief day is dead and gone,
     Let it recall with mine the name
      Of old man Jesse Covington.

     Let it recall his waggish heart--
      Yeke-hey, yeke-hey, hey-diddle-diddle--
     When, while the fire-logs fell apart,
      He snatched the bow across his fiddle,
     And looked on, with his eyes half shut,
      Which meant his soul was wild with fun,
     At our mad capers through the hut
      Of old man Jesse Covington.

     For all the thrilling tales he told,
      For all the tunes the fiddle knew,
     For all the glorious nights of old
      We boys and he have rollicked through,
     For laughter all unknown to wealth
      That roared responsive to a pun,
     A hale, ripe age and ruddy health
      To old man Jesse Covington!



An Idyl



     Upon a gnarly, knotty limb
      That fought the current's crest,
     Where shocks of reeds peeped o'er the brim,
      Wild wasps had glued their nest.

     And in a sprawling cypress' grot,
      Sheltered and safe from flood,
     Dirt-daubers each had chosen a spot
      To shape his house of mud.

     In a warm crevice of the bark
      A basking scorpion clung,
     With bright blue tail and red-rimmed eyes
      And yellow, twinkling tongue.

     A lunging trout flashed in the sun,
      To do some petty slaughter,
     And set the spiders all a-run
      On little stilts of water.

     Toward noon upon the swamp there stole
      A deep, cathedral hush,
     Save where, from sun-splocht bough and bole,
      Sweet thrush replied to thrush.

     An angler came to cast his fly
      Beneath a baffling tree.
     I smiled, when I had caught his eye,
      And he smiled back at me.

     When stretched beside a shady elm
      I watched the dozy heat,
     Nature was moving in her realm,
      For I could hear her feet.



Home Songs



     The little loves and sorrows are my song:
      The leafy lanes and birthsteads of my sires,
      Where memory broods by winter's evening fires
     O'er oft-told joys, and ghosts of ancient wrong;
     The little cares and carols that belong
      To home-hearts, and old rustic lutes and lyres,
      And spreading acres, where calm-eyed desires
     Wake with the dawn, unfevered, fair, and strong.

     If words of mine might lull the bairn to sleep,
      And tell the meaning in a mother's eyes;
     Might counsel love, and teach their eyes to weep
      Who, o'er their dead, question unanswering skies,
     More worth than legions in the dust of strife,
     Time, looking back at last, should count my life.



M. W. Ransom

       (Died October 8, 1904)



     For him, who in a hundred battles stood
      Scorning the cannon's mouth,
     Grimy with flame and red with foeman's blood,
      For thy sweet sake, O South;

     Who, wise as brave, yielded his conquered sword
      At a vain war's surcease,
     And spoke, thy champion still, the statesman's word
      In the calm halls of peace;

     Who pressed the ruddy wine to thy faint lips,
      Where thy torn body lay,
     And saw afar time's white in-sailing ships
      Bringing a happier day:

     Oh, mourn for him, dear land that gave him birth!
      Bow low thy sorrowing head!
     Let thy seared leaves fall silent on the earth
      Whereunder he lies dead!

     In field and hall, in valor and in grace,
      In wisdom's livery,
     Gentle and brave, he moved with knightly pace,
      A worthy son of thee!



Protest



     Oh, I am weary, weary, weary
      Of Pan and oaten quills
     And little songs that, from the dictionary,
      Learn lore of streams and hills,
     Of studied laughter, mocking what is merry,
      And calculated thrills!

     Are we grown old and past the time of singing?
      Is ardor quenched in art
     Till art is but a formal figure, bringing
      A money-measured heart,
     Procrustean cut, and, with old echoes, ringing
      Its bells about the mart?

     The race moves on, and leaves no wildernesses
      Where rugged voices cry;
     It reads its prayer, and with set phrase it blesses
      The souls of men who die,
     And step by even step its rank progresses,
      An army marshalled by.

     If it be better so, that Babel noises,
      Losing all course and ken,
     And grief that wails and gladness that rejoices
      Should never wake again
     To shock a world of modulated voices
      And mediocre men,

     Then he is blest who wears the painted feather
      And may not turn about
     To dusks when muses romped the dewy heather
      In unrestricted rout
     And dawns when, if the stars had sung together,
      The sons of God would shout!



Oblivion



     Green moss will creep
     Along the shady graves where we shall sleep.

     Each year will bring
     Another brood of birds to nest and sing.

     At dawn will go
     New ploughmen to the fields we used to know.

     Night will call home
     The hunter from the hills we loved to roam.

     She will not ask,
     The milkmaid, singing softly at her task,

     Nor will she care
     To know if I were brave or you were fair.

     No one will think
     What chalice life had offered us to drink,

     When from our clay
     The sun comes back to kiss the snow away.



Now!



     Her brown hair knew no royal crest,
      No gems nor jeweled charms,
     No roses her bright cheek caressed,
      No lilies kissed her arms.
     In simple, modest womanhood
      Clad, as was meet, in white,
     The fairest flower of all, she stood
      Amid the softest light.

     It had been worth a perilous quest
      To see the court she drew,--
     My rose, my gem, my royal crest,
      My lily moist with dew;
     Worth heaven, when, with farewells from each
      The gay throng let us be,
     To see her turn at last and reach
      Her white hands out to me.



Tommy Smith



     When summer's languor drugs my veins
      And fills with sleep the droning times,
     Like sluggish dreams among my brains,
      There runs the drollest sort of rhymes,
     Idle as clouds that stray through heaven
      And vague as if they were a myth,
     But in these rhymes is always given
      A health for old Bluebritches Smith.

     Among my thoughts of what is good
      In olden times and distant lands,
     Is that do-nothing neighborhood
      Where the old cider-hogshead stands
     To welcome with its brimming gourd
      The canny crowd of kin and kith
     Who meet about the bibulous board
      Of old Bluebritches Tommy Smith.

     In years to come, when stealthy change
      Hath stolen the cider-press away
     And the gnarled orchards of the grange
      Have fallen before a slow decay,
     Were I so cunning, I would carve
      From some time-scorning monolith
     A sculpture that should well preserve
      The fame of old Bluebritches Smith.



Before Bedtime



     The cat sleeps in a chimney jam
      With ashes in her fur,
     An' Tige, from on the yuther side,
      He keeps his eye on her.

     The jar o' curds is on the hearth,
      An' I'm the one to turn it.
     I'll crawl in bed an' go to sleep
      When maw begins to churn it.

     Paw bends to read his almanax
      An' study out the weather,
     An' bud has got a gourd o' grease
      To ile his harness leather.

     Sis looks an' looks into the fire,
      Half-squintin' through her lashes,
     An' I jis watch my tater where
      It shoots smoke through the ashes.



"If I Could Glimpse Him"



     When in the Scorpion circles low
      The sun with fainter, dreamier light,
     And at a far-off hint of snow
      The giddy swallows take to flight,
     And droning insects sadly know
      That cooler falls the autumn night;

     When airs breathe drowsily and sweet,
      Charming the woods to colors gay,
     And distant pastures send the bleat
      Of hungry lambs at break of day,
     Old Hermes' wings grow on my feet,
      And, good-by, home!  I'm called away!

     There on the hills should I behold,
      Sitting upon an old gray stone
     That humps its back up through the mold,
      And piping in a monotone,
     Pan, as he sat in days of old,
      My joy would bid surprise begone!

     Dear Pan!  'Tis he that calls me out;
      He, lying in some hazel copse,
     Where lazily he turns about
      And munches each nut as it drops,
     Well pleased to see me swamped in doubt
      At sound of his much-changing stops.

     If I could glimpse him by the vine
      Where purple fox-grapes hang their store,
     I'd tell him, in his leafy shrine,
      How poets say he lives no more.
     He'd laugh, and pluck a muscadine,
      And fall to piping, as of yore!



Attraction



     He who wills life wills its condition sweet,
     Having made love its mother, joy its quest,
     That its perpetual sequence might not rest
     On reason's dictum, cold and too discreet;

     For reason moves with cautious, careful feet,
     Debating whether life or death were best,
     And why pale pain, not ruddy mirth, is guest
     In many a heart which life hath set to beat.

     But I will cast my fate with love, and trust
     Her honeyed heart that guides the pollened bee
     And sets the happy wing-seeds fluttering free;

     And I will bless the law which saith, Thou must!
     And, wet with sea or shod with weary dust,
     Will follow back and back and back to thee!



Love's Fashion



     Oh, I can jest with Margaret
      And laugh a gay good-night,
     But when I take my Helen's hand
      I dare not clasp it tight.

     I dare not hold her dear white hand
      More than a quivering space,
     And I should bless a breeze that blew
      Her hair into my face.

     'T is Margaret I call sweet names:
      Helen is too, too dear
     For me to stammer little words
      Of love into her ear.

     So now, good-night, fair Margaret,
      And kiss me e'er we part!
     But one dumb touch of Helen's hand,
      And, oh, my heart, my heart!



Alcestis



     Not long the living weep above their dead,
     And you will grieve, Admetus, but not long.
     The winter's silence in these desolate halls
     Will break with April's laughter on your lips;
     The bees among the flowers, the birds that mate,
     The widowed year, grown gaunt with memory
     And yearning toward the summer's fruits, will come
     With lotus comfort, feeding all your veins.
     The vining brier will crawl across my grave,
     And you will woo another in my stead.
     Those tender, foolish names you called me by,
     Your passionate kiss that clung unsatisfied,
     The pressure of your hand, when dark night hushed
     Life's busy stir, and left us two alone,
     Will you remember? or, when dawn creeps in,
     And you bend o'er another's pillowed head,
     Seeing sleep's loosened hair about her face,
     Until her low love-laughter welcomes you,
     Will you, down-gazing at her waking eyes,
     Forget?
         So have I loved you, my Admetus,
     I thank the cruel fates who clip my life
     To lengthen yours, they tarry not for age
     To dim my eye and blanch my cheek, but now
     Take me, while my lips are sweet to you
     And youth hides yet amid this hair of mine,
     Brown in the shadow, golden in the light.
     Bend down and kiss me, dying for your sake,
     Not gratefully, but sadly, love's farewell;
     And if the flowering year's oblivion
     Lend a new passion to thy life, far down
     In the dim Stygian shadows wandering,
     I will not know, but still will cherish there,
     Where no change comes, thy love upon my lips.



Reminiscence



     We sang old love-songs on the way
      In sad and merry snatches,
     Your fingers o'er the strings astray
      Strumming the random catches.

     And ever, as the skiff plied on
      Among the trailing willows,
     Trekking the darker deeps to shun
      The gleaming sandy shallows,

     It seemed that we had, ages gone,
      In some far summer weather,
     When this same faery moonlight shone,
      Sung these same songs together.

     And every grassy cape we passed,
      And every reedy island,
     Even the bank'd cloud in the west
      That loomed a sombre highland;

     And you, with dewmist on your hair,
      Crowned with a wreath of lilies,
     Laughing like Lalage the fair
      And tender-eyed like Phyllis:

     I know not if 't were here at home,
      By some old wizard's orders,
     Or long ago in Crete or Rome
      Or fair Provencal borders,

     But now, as when a faint flame breaks
      From out its smouldering embers,
     My heart stirs in its sleep, and wakes,
      And yet but half-remembers

     That you and I some other time
      Moved through this dream of glory,
     Like lovers in an ancient rhyme,
      A long-forgotten story.



Sonnet



     I would that love were subject unto law!
      Upon his person I should lay distraint
      And force him thus to answer my complaint,
     Which I, in well-considered counts, should draw.
     Not free to fly, he needs must seek some flaw
      To mar my pleading, though his heart were faint;
      Declare his counsel to me, and acquaint
     Himself with maxim, precedent, and saw.

     Ah, I could win him with authorities,
      If suing thus in such a sober court;
      Could read him many an ancient rhym'd report
     Of such sad cases, tears would fill his eyes
      And he confess a judgment, or resort
     To some well-pleasing terms of compromise!



Lines



     To you, dear mother heart, whose hair is gray
     Above this page to-day,
     Whose face, though lined with many a smile and care,
     Grows year by year more fair,

     Be tenderest tribute set in perfect rhyme,
     That haply passing time
     May cull and keep it for strange lips to pay
     When we have gone our way;

     And, to strange men, weary of field and street,
     Should this, my song, seem sweet,
     Yours be the joy, for all that made it so
     You know, dear heart, you know.



An Easter Hymn



     The Sun has come again and fed
      The lily's lamp with light,
     And raised from dust a rose, rich red,
      And a little star-flower, white;
     He also guards the Pleiades
      And holds his planets true:
     But we--we know not which of these
      The easier task to do.

     But, since from heaven he stoops to breathe
      A flower to balmy air,
     Surely our lives are not beneath
      The kindness of his care;
     And, as he guides the blade that gropes
      Up from the barren sod,
     So, from the ashes of our hopes,
      Will beauty grow toward God.

     Whate'er thy name, O Soul of Life,--
      We know but that thou art,--
     Thou seest, through all our waste of strife,
      One groping human heart,
     Weary of words and broken sight,
      But moved with deep accord
     To worship where thy lilies light
      The altar of its Lord.



A Christmas Hymn



     Near where the shepherds watched by night
      And heard the angels o'er them,
     The wise men saw the starry light
      Stand still at last before them.
     No armored castle there to ward
      His precious life from danger,
     But, wrapped in common cloth, our Lord
      Lay in a lowly manger.
     No booming bells proclaimed his birth,
      No armies marshalled by,
     No iron thunders shook the earth,
      No rockets clomb the sky;
     The temples builded in his name
      Were shapeless granite then,
     And all the choirs that sang his fame
      Were later breeds of men.
     But, while the world about him slept,
      Nor cared that he was born,
     One gentle face above him kept
      Its mother watch till morn;
     And, if his baby eyes could tell
      What grace and glory were,
     No roar of gun, no boom of bell
      Were worth the look of her.
     Now praise to God that ere his grace
      Was scorned and he reviled
     He looked into his mother's face,
      A little helpless child;
     And praise to God that ere men strove
      About his tomb in war
     One loved him with a mother's love,
      Nor knew a creed therefor.



When I Go Home



     When I go home, green, green will glow the grass,
     Whereon the flight of sun and cloud will pass;
      Long lines of wood-ducks through the deepening gloam
     Will hold above the west, as wrought on brass,
      And fragrant furrows will have delved the loam,
             When I go home.

     When I go home, the dogwood stars will dash
     The solemn woods above the bearded ash,
      The yellow-jasmine, whence its vine hath clomb,
     Will blaze the valleys with its golden flash,
      And every orchard flaunt its polychrome,
             When I go home.

     When I go home and stroll about the farm,
     The thicket and the barnyard will be warm.
      Jess will be there, and Nigger Bill, and Tom--
     On whom time's chisel works no hint of harm--
      And, oh, 'twill be a day to rest and roam,
             When I go home!



Odessa



     A horror of great darkness over them,
     No cloud of fire to guide and cover them,
     Beasts for the shambles, tremulous with dread,
     They crouch on alien soil among their dead.

     "Thy shield and thy exceeding great reward,"
     This was thine ancient covenant, O Lord,
     Which, sealed with mirth, these many thousand years
     Is black with blood and blotted out with tears.

     Have these not toiled through Egypt's burning sun,
     And wept beside the streams of Babylon,
     Led from thy wilderness of hill and glen
     Into a wider wilderness of men?

     Life bore them ever less of gain than loss,
     Before and since Golgotha's piteous Cross,
     And surely, now, their sorrow hath sufficed
     For all the hate that grew from love of Christ!

     Thou great God-heart, heed thou thy people's cry,
     Bare-browed and empty-handed where they die,
     Sea-sundered from wall-girt Jerusalem,
     There being no sword that wills to succor them,--

     And Miriam's song, long hushed, will rise to thee,
     And all thy people lift their eyes to thee,
     When, for the darkness' horror over them,
     Thou comest, a cloud of light to cover them.



Trifles



     What shall I bring you, sweet?
      A posy prankt with every April hue:
      The cloud-white daisy, violet sky-blue,
      Shot with the primrose sunshine through and through?

     Or shall I bring you, sweet,
      Some ancient rhyme of lovers sore beset,
      Whose joy is dead, whose sadness lingers yet,
      That you may read, and sigh, and soon forget?

     What shall I bring you, sweet?
      Was ever trifle yet so held amiss
      As not to fill love's waiting heart with bliss,
      And merit dalliance at a long, long kiss?



Sunburnt Boys



     Down on the Lumbee river
      Where the eddies ripple cool
     Your boat, I know, glides stealthily
      About some shady pool.
     The summer's heats have lulled asleep
      The fish-hawk's chattering noise,
     And all the swamp lies hushed about
      You sunburnt boys.

     You see the minnow's waves that rock
      The cradled lily leaves.
     From a far field some farmer's song,
      Singing among his sheaves,
     Comes mellow to you where you sit,
      Each man with boatman's poise,
     There, in the shimmering water lights,
      You sunburnt boys.

     I know your haunts:  each gnarly bole
      That guards the waterside,
     Each tuft of flags and rushes where
      The river reptiles hide,
     Each dimpling nook wherein the bass
      His eager life employs
     Until he dies--the captive of
      You sunburnt boys.

     You will not--will you?--soon forget
      When I was one of you,
     Nor love me less that time has borne
      My craft to currents new;
     Nor shall I ever cease to share
      Your hardships and your joys,
     Robust, rough-spoken, gentle-hearted
      Sunburnt boys!



Gray Days



     A soaking sedge,
     A faded field, a leafless hill and hedge,

     Low clouds and rain,
     And loneliness and languor worse than pain.

     Mottled with moss,
     Each gravestone holds to heaven a patient Cross.

     Shrill streaks of light
     Two sycamores' clean-limbed, funereal white,

     And low between,
     The sombre cedar and the ivy green.

     Upon the stone
     Of each in turn who called this land his own

     The gray rain beats
     And wraps the wet world in its flying sheets,

     And at my eaves
     A slow wind, ghostlike, comes and grieves and grieves.



An Invalid



     I care not what his name for God may be,
      Nor what his wisdom holds of heaven and hell,
      The alphabet whereby he strives to spell
     His lines of life, nor where he bends his knee,
     Since, with his grave before him, he can see
      White Peace above it, while the churchyard bell
      Poised in its tower, poised now, to boom his knell,
     Seems but the waiting tongue of liberty.

     For names and knowledge, idle breed of breath,
      And cant and creed, the progeny of strife,
      Thronging the safe, companioned streets of life,
     Shrink trembling from the cold, clear eye of death,
      And learn too late why dying lips can smile:
      That goodness is the only creed worth while.



A Caged Mocking-Bird



     I pass a cobbler's shop along the street
      And pause a moment at the door-step, where,
     In nature's medley, piping cool and sweet,
      The songs that thrill the swamps when spring is near,
      Fly o'er the fields at fullness of the year,
     And twitter where the autumn hedges run,
     Join all the months of music into one.

     I shut my eyes:  the shy wood-thrush is there,
      And all the leaves hang still to catch his spell;
     Wrens cheep among the bushes; from somewhere
      A bluebird's tweedle passes o'er the fell;
      From rustling corn bob-white his name doth tell;
     And when the oriole sets his full heart free
     Barefooted boyhood comes again to me.

     The vision-bringer hangs upon a nail
      Before a dusty window, looking dim
     On marts where trade goes hot with box and bale;
      The sad-eyed passers have no time for him.
      His captor sits, with beaded face and grim,
     Plying a listless awl, as in a dream
     Of pastures winding by a shady stream.

     Gray bird, what spirit bides with thee unseen?
      For now, when every songster finds his love
     And makes his nest where woods are deep and green,
      Free as the winds, thy song should mock the dove.
      If I were thou, my grief in moans should move
     At thinking--otherwhere, by others' art
     Charmed and forgetful--of mine own sweetheart.

     But I, who weep when fortune seems unkind
      To prison me within a space of walls,
     When far-off grottoes hold my loves enshrined
      And every love is cruel when it calls;
      Who sulk for hills and fern-fledged waterfalls,--
     I blush to offer sorrow unto thee,
     Master of fate, scorner of destiny!



Dawn



     The hills again reach skyward with a smile.
      Again, with waking life along its way,
     The landscape marches westward mile on mile
      And time throbs white into another day.

     Though eager life must wait on livelihood,
      And all our hopes be tethered to the mart,
     Lacking the eagle's wild, high freedom, would
      That ours might be this day the eagle's heart!



Harvest



     Cows in the stall and sheep in the fold;
     Clouds in the west, deep crimson and gold;
      A heron's far flight to a roost somewhere;
      The twitter of killdees keen in the air;
     The noise of a wagon that jolts through the gloam
             On the last load home.

     There are lights in the windows; a blue spire of smoke
     Climbs from the grange grove of elm and oak.
      The smell of the Earth, where the night pours to her
      Its dewy libation, is sweeter than myrrh,
     And an incense to Toil is the smell of the loam
             On the last load home.



Two Pictures



     One sits in soft light, where the hearth is warm,
      A halo, like an angel's, on her hair.
     She clasps a sleeping infant in her arm.
      A holy presence hovers round her there,
      And she, for all her mother-pains more fair,
     Is happy, seeing that all sweet thoughts that stir
     The hearts of men bear worship unto her.

     Another wanders where the cold wind blows,
      Wet-haired, with eyes that sting one like a knife.
     Homeless forever, at her bosom close
      She holds the purchase of her love and life,
      Of motherhood, unglorified as wife;
     And bitterer than the world's relentless scorn
     The knowing her child were happier never born.

     Whence are the halo and the fiery shame
      That fashion thus a crown and curse of love?
     Have roted words such power to bless and blame?
      Ay, men have stained a raven from many a dove,
      And all the grace and all the grief hereof
     Are the two words which bore one's lips apart
     And which the other hoarded in her heart.

     He who stooped down and wrote upon the sand,
      The God-heart in him touched to tenderness,
     Saw deep, saw what we cannot understand,--
      We, who draw near the shrine of one to bless
      The while we scourge another's sore distress,
     And judge like gods between the ill and good,
     The glory and the guilt of womanhood.



October



     The thought of old, dear things is in thine eyes,
     O, month of memories!
     Musing on days thine heart hath sorrow of,
     Old joy, dead hope, dear love,

     I see thee stand where all thy sisters meet
     To cast down at thy feet
     The garnered largess of the fruitful year,
     And on thy cheek a tear.

     Thy glory flames in every blade and leaf
     To blind the eyes of grief;
     Thy vineyards and thine orchards bend with fruit
     That sorrow may be mute;

     A hectic splendor lights thy days to sleep,
     Ere the gray dusk may creep
     Sober and sad along thy dusty ways,
     Like a lone nun, who prays;

     High and faint-heard thy passing migrant calls;
     Thy lazy lizard sprawls
     On his gray stone, and many slow winds creep
     About thy hedge, asleep;

     The sun swings farther toward his love, the south,
     To kiss her glowing mouth;
     And Death, who steals among thy purpling bowers,
     Is deeply hid in flowers.

     Would that thy streams were Lethe, and might flow
     Where lotus blossoms blow,
     And all the sweets wherewith thy riches bless
     Might hold no bitterness!

     Would, in thy beauty, we might all forget
     Dead days and old regret,
     And through thy realm might fare us forth to roam,
     Having no thought for home!

     And yet I feel, beneath thy queen's attire,
     Woven of blood and fire,
     Beneath the golden glory of thy charm
     Thy mother heart beats warm,

     And if, mayhap, a wandering child of thee,
     Weary of land and sea,
     Should turn him homeward from his dreamer's quest
     To sob upon thy breast,

     Thine arm would fold him tenderly, to prove
     How thine eyes brimmed with love,
     And thy dear hand, with all a mother's care,
     Would rest upon his hair.



The Old Clock



     All day low clouds and slanting rain
     Have swept the woods and dimmed the plain.
     Wet winds have swayed the birch and oak,
     And caught and swirled away the smoke,
     But, all day long, the wooden clock
             Went on, Nic-noc, nic-noc.

     When deep at night I wake with fear,
     And shudder in the dark to hear
     The roaring storm's unguided strength,
     Peace steals into my heart at length,
     When, calm amid the shout and shock,
             I hear, Nic-noc, nic-noc.

     And all the winter long 't is I
     Who bless its sheer monotony--
     Its scorn of days, which cares no whit
     For time, except to measure it:
     The prosy, dozy, cosy clock,
             Nic-noc, nic-noc, nic-noc!



Tear Stains



     Tear-marks stain from page to page
      This book my fathers left to me,--
     So dull that nothing but its age
      Were worth its freight across the sea.

     But tear stains!  When, by whom, and why?
      Thus takes my fancy to its wings;
     For grief is old, and one may cry
      About so many things!



A Prayer



     If many years should dim my inward sight,
      Till, stirred with no emotion,
     I might stand gazing at the fall of night
      Across the gloaming ocean;

     Till storm, and sun, and night, vast with her stars,
      Would seem an oft-told story,
     And the old sorrow of heroic wars
      Be faded of its glory;

     Till, hearing, while June's roses blew their musk,
      The noise of field and city,
     The human struggle, sinking tired at dusk,
      I felt no thrill of pity;

     Till dawn should come without her old desire,
      And day brood o'er her stages,--
     O let me die, too frail for nature's hire,
      And rest a million ages.



She Being Young



     The home of love is her blue eyes,
     Wherein all joy, all beauty lies,
     More sweet than hopes of paradise,
         She being young.

     Speak of her with a miser's praise;
     She craves no golden speech; her ways
     Wind through charmed nights and magic days,
         She being young.

     She is so far from pain and death,
     So warm her cheek, so sweet her breath
     Glad words are all the words she saith,
         She being young.

     Seeing her face, it seems not far
     To Troy's heroic field of war,
     To Troy and all great things that are,
         She being young.



Paul Jones



     A century of silent suns
      Have set since he was laid on sleep,
     And now they bear with booming guns
      And streaming banners o'er the deep
     A withered skin and clammy hair
      Upon a frame of human bones:
     Whose corse?  We neither know nor care,
      Content to name it John Paul Jones.

     His dust were as another's dust;
      His bones--what boots it where they lie?
     What matter where his sword is rust,
      Or where, now dark, his eagle eye?
     No foe need fear his arm again,
      Nor love, nor praise can make him whole;
     But o'er the farthest sons of men
      Will brood the glory of his soul.

     Careless though cenotaph or tomb
      Shall tower his country's monument,
     Let banners float and cannon boom,
      A million-throated shout be spent,
     Until his widowed sea shall laugh
      With sunlight in her mantling foam,
     While, to his tomb or cenotaph,
      We bid our hero welcome home.

     Twice exiled, let his ashes rest
      At home, afar, or in the wave,
     But keep his great heart with us, lest
      Our nation's greatness find its grave;
     And, while the vast deep listens by,
      When armored wrong makes terms to right,
     Keep on our lips his proud reply,
      "Sir, I have but begun to fight!"



The Drudge



     Repose upon her soulless face,
      Dig the grave and leave her;
     But breathe a prayer that, in his grace,
     He who so loved this toiling race
      To endless rest receive her.

     Oh, can it be the gates ajar
      Wait not her humble quest,
     Whose life was but a patient war
     Against the death that stalked from far
      With neither haste nor rest;

     To whom were sun and moon and cloud,
      The streamlet's pebbly coil,
     The transient, May-bound, feathered crowd,
     The storm's frank fury, thunder-browed,
      But witness of her toil;

     Whose weary feet knew not the bliss
      Of dance by jocund reed;
     Who never dallied at a kiss!
     If heaven refuses her, life is
      A tragedy indeed!



The Wife



     They locked him in a prison cell,
         Murky and mean.
     She kissed him there a wife's farewell
         The bars between.
     And when she turned to go, the crowd,
     Thinking to see her shamed and bowed,
     Saw her pass out as calm and proud
         As any queen.

     She passed a kinsman on the street,
         To whose sad eyes
     She made reply with smile as sweet
         As April skies.
     To one who loved her once and knew
     The sorrow of her life, she threw
     A gay word, ere his tale was due
         Of sympathies.

     She met a playmate, whose red rose
         Had never a thorn,
     Whom fortune guided when she chose
         Her marriage morn,
     And, smiling, looked her in the eye;
     But, seeing the tears of sympathy,
     Her smile died, and she passed on by
         In quiet scorn.

     They could not know how, when by night
         The city slept,
     A sleepless woman, still and white,
         The watches kept;
     How her wife-loyal heart had borne
     The keen pain of a flowerless thorn,
     How hot the tears that smiles and scorn
         Had held unwept.



Vision



     The wintry sun was pale
      On hill and hedge;
     The wind smote with its flail
      The seeded sedge;
     High up above the world,
      New taught to fly,
     The withered leaves were hurled
      About the sky;
     And there, through death and dearth,
      It went and came,--
     The Glory of the earth
      That hath no name.

     I know not what it is;
      I only know
     It quivers in the bliss
      Where roses blow,
     That on the winter's breath
      It broods in space,
     And o'er the face of death
      I see its face,
     And start and stand between
      Delight and dole,
     As though mine eyes had seen
      A living Soul.

     And I have followed it,
      As thou hast done,
     Where April shadows flit
      Beneath the sun;
     In dawn and dusk and star,
      In joy and fear,
     Have seen its glory far
      And felt it near,
     And dared recall his name
      Who stood unshod
     Before a fireless flame,
      And called it God.



September



     I have not been among the woods,
     Nor seen the milk-weeds burst their hoods,

     The downy thistle-seeds take wing,
     Nor the squirrel at his garnering.

     And yet I know that, up to God,
     The mute month holds her goldenrod,

     That clump and copse, o'errun with vines,
     Twinkle with clustered muscadines,

     And in deserted churchyard places
     Dwarf apples smile with sunburnt faces.

     I know how, ere her green is shed,
     The dogwood pranks herself with red;

     How the pale dawn, chilled through and through,
     Comes drenched and draggled with her dew;

     How all day long the sunlight seems
     As if it lit a land of dreams,

     Till evening, with her mist and cloud,
     Begins to weave her royal shroud.

     If yet, as in old Homer's land,
     Gods walk with mortals, hand in hand,

     Somewhere to-day, in this sweet weather,
     Thinkest thou not they walk together?



Barefooted



     The girls all like to see the bluets in the lane
      And the saucy johnny-jump-ups in the meadow,
     But, we boys, we want to see the dogwood blooms again,
      Throwin' a sort of summer-lookin' shadow;
     For the very first mild mornin' when the woods are white
      (And we needn't even ask a soul about it)
     We leave our shoes right where we pulled them off at night,
      And, barefooted once again, we run and shout it:
       You may take the country over--
       When the bluebird turns a rover,
       And the wind is soft and hazy,
       And you feel a little lazy,
       And the hunters quit the possums--
       It's the time for dogwood blossoms.

     We feel so light we wish there were more fences here;
      We'd like to jump and jump them, all together!
     No sleds for us, no guns, nor even 'simmon beer,
      No nothin' but the blossoms and fair weather!
     The meadow is a little sticky right at first,
      But a few short days 'll wipe away that trouble.
     To feel so good and gay, I wouldn't mind the worst
      That could be done by any field o' stubble.
       O, all the trees are seemin' sappy!
       O, all the folks are smilin' happy!
      And there's joy in every little bit of room;
       But the happiest of them all
       At the Shanghai rooster's call
      Are we barefoots when the dogwoods burst abloom!



Pardon Time



     Give over now; forbear.  The moonlight steeps
     In silver silence towered castle-keeps
      And cottage crofts, where apples bend the bough.
     Peace guards us round, and many a tired heart sleeps.
      Let me brush back the shadow from your brow.
             Give over now.

     On such a night, how sweet, how sweet is life,
     Even to the insect piper with his fife!
      And must your troubled face still bear the blight
     Of strength that runs itself to waste in strife?
      For love's own heart should throb through all the light
             Of such a night.



The Rattlesnake



     Coiled like a clod, his eyes the home of hate,
     Where rich the harvest bows, he lies in wait,
     Linking earth's death and music, mate with mate.

     Is 't lure, or warning?  Those small bells may sing
     Like Ariel sirens, poised on viewless wing,
     To lead stark life where mailed death is king;

     Else nature's voice, in that cold, earthy thrill,
     Bids good avoid the venomed fang of ill,
     And life and death fight equal in her will.



The Prisoner



     From pacing, pacing without hope or quest
     He leaned against his window-bars to rest
     And smelt the breeze that crept up from the west.

     It came with sundown noises from the moors,
     Of milking time and loud-voiced rural chores,
     Of lumbering wagons and of closing doors.

     He caught a whiff of furrowed upland sweet,
     And certain scents stole up across the street
     That told him fireflies winked among the wheat.

     Over the dusk hill woke a new moon's light,
     Shadowed the woods and made the waters white,
     And watched above the quiet tents of night.

     Alas, that the old Mother should not know
     How ached his heart to be entreated so,
     Who heard her calling and who could not go!



Sonnet



     To-day was but a dead day in my hands.
      Hour by hour did nothing more than pass,
      Mere idle winds above the faded grass.
     And I, as though a captive held in bands,
     Who, seeing a pageant, wonders much, but stands
      Apart, saw the sun blaze his course with brass
      And sink into his fabled sea of glass
     With glory of farewell to many lands.

     Thou knowest, thou who talliest life by days,
      That I have suffered more than pain of toil,
      Ah, more than they whose wounds are soothed with oil,
     And they who see new light on beaten ways!
     The prisoner I, who grasps his iron bars
     And stares out into depth on depth of stars!



Folk Song



     When merry milkmaids to their cattle call
             At evenfall
             And voices range
     Loud through the gloam from grange to quiet grange,

     Wild waif-songs from long distant lands and loves,
             Like migrant doves,
             Wake and give wing
     To passion dust-dumb lips were wont to sing.

     The new still holds the old moon in her arms;
             The ancient charms
             Of dew and dusk
     Still lure her nomad odors from the musk,

     And, at each day's millennial eclipse,
             On new men's lips,
             Some old song starts,
     Made of the music of millennial hearts,

     Whereto one listens as from long ago
             And learns to know
             That one day's tears
     And love and life are as a thousand years',

     And that some simple shepherd, singing of
             His pain and love,
             May haply find
     His heart-song speaks the heart of all his kind.



"97":  The Fast Mail



     Where the rails converge to the station yard
     She stands one moment, breathing hard,

     And then, with a snort and a clang of steel,
     She settles her strength to the stubborn wheel,

     And out, through the tracks that lead astray,
     Cautiously, slowly she picks her way,

     And gathers her muscle and guards her nerve,
     When she swings her nose to the westward curve,

     And takes the grade, which slopes to the sky,
     With a bound of speed and a conquering cry.

     The hazy horizon is all she sees,
     Nor cares for the meadows, stirred with bees,

     Nor the long, straight stretches of silent land,
     Nor the ploughman, that shades his eye with his hand,

     Nor the cots and hamlets that know no more
     Than a shriek and a flash and a flying roar;

     But, bearing her tidings, she trembles and throbs,
     And laughs in her throat, and quivers and sobs;

     And the fire in her heart is a red core of heat,
     That drives like a passion through forest and street,

     Till she sees the ships in their harbor at rest,
     And sniffs at the trail to the end of her quest.

     If I were the driver who handles her reins,
     Up hill and down hill and over the plains,

     To watch the slow mountains give back in the west,
     To know the new reaches that wait every crest,

     To hold, when she swerves, with a confident clutch,
     And feel how she shivers and springs to the touch,

     With the snow on her back and the sun in her face,
     And nothing but time as a quarry to chase,

     I should grip hard my teeth, and look where she led,
     And brace myself stooping, and give her her head,

     And urge her, and soothe her, and serve all her need,
     And exult in the thunder and thrill of her speed.



Sundown



     Hills, wrapped in gray, standing along the west;
      Clouds, dimly lighted, gathering slowly;
     The star of peace at watch above the crest--
      Oh, holy, holy, holy!

     We know, O Lord, so little what is best;
      Wingless, we move so lowly;
     But in thy calm all-knowledge let us rest--
      Oh, holy, holy, holy!



At Sea



     When the dim, tall sails of the ships were in motion,
      Ghostly, and slow, and silent-shod,
     We gazed where the dusk fled over the ocean,
      A great gray hush, like the shadow of God.

     The sky dome cut with its compass in sunder
      A circle of sea from the darkened land,--
     A circle of tremulous waste and wonder,
      O'er which one groped with a childish hand.

     The true stars came to their stations in heaven,
      The false stars shivered deep down in the sea,
     And the white crests went like monsters, driven
      By winds that never would let them be,

     And there, where the elements mingled and muttered,
      We stood, each man with a lone dumb heart,
     Full of the vastness that never was uttered
      By symbol of words or by echo of art.



L'envoi



     God willed, who never needed speech,
        "Let all things be:"
     And, lo, the starry firmament
        And land and sea
     And his first thought of life that lives
        In you and me.

     His circle of eternity
        We see in part;
     Our spirits are his breath, our hearts
        Beat from his heart;
     Hence we have played as little gods
        And called it art.

     Lacking his power, we shared his dream
        Of perfect things;
     Between the tents of hope and sweet
        Rememberings
     Have sat in ashes, but our souls
        Went forth on wings.

     Where life fell short of some desire
        In you and me,
     Feeling for beauty which our eyes
        Could never see,
     Behold, from out the void we willed
        That it should be,

     And sometimes dreamed our lisping songs
        Of humanhood
     Might voice his silent harmony
        Of waste and wood,
     And he, beholding his and ours,
        Might find it good.



[End of original text.]



Notes:


John Charles McNeill was born in Scotland County, near Laurinburg, North
Carolina, on 26 July 1874, and died on 17 October 1907 (when he was 33
years old). He only produced this one volume before he died, though he
planned a second, which was published posthumously. "Songs, Merry and
Sad", first published in Charlotte in 1906, went through at least five
printings over more than 60 years. (This text is taken from the very
first edition.)

Both of McNeill's grandfathers came from Scotland.

McNeill attended Wake Forest College, where he received both his
Bachelor's and Master's degrees. In 1899-1900 he taught English at
Mercer University.

Some of his poems were published nationally as early as 1901. More of
his poems were published by `The Charlotte Observer' starting in 1903,
and in 1904 he joined its staff.


This etext was created by entering the text (manually) twice, once from
the first printing (1906) and once from the second printing (no date),
and comparing the two. There were some slight differences in the two
printings.

A portrait of John Charles McNeill faces the title page (p. 3) in the
second printing, but is absent in the first.

The first printing gives the publisher as Stone & Barringer Co. and
gives the date as 1906. The second printing gives the publisher as
Stone Publishing Co., and gives no date. Both were printed in
Charlotte, N.C.

One error was corrected (the second printing also corrected this error):

   (p. 73)
   [ A holy presence hovers round here there, ]
    changed to:
   [ A holy presence hovers round her there, ]


The second printing also changed the title of the poem [ To Melvin
Gardner: Suicide ], on p. 19, to [ To Melvin Gardner: ]--in the text,
but not in the table of Contents. This may have been done in deference
to the family--attitudes on suicide were once quite different than
now--but as it has been quite some time, and the original title gives
more meaning to the poem, it has been retained.

The Title of the poem [ Now! ] did not have the exclamation point in the
table of Contents. It has been added to match the text. The Title of
the poem [ "97": The Fast Mail ] appeared as such in the text, but as
["97:" The Fast Mail ] in the Contents. The latter was changed to match
the text.

In the original, the book's title does not separate the Contents from
the first poem. It has been placed there as a sort of divider.

In two places ASCII fails to provide enough characters for a correct
rendering. They are the words Provencal (the c with a cedilla) and
mailed (the e with an acute accent, to indicate that the word is to be
said with two syllables). These occur in "Reminiscence" and "The
Rattlesnake".





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Songs, Merry and Sad" ***

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