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FATE.

  Alas, alas, for the tourist's guide!—   He turned from the beaten trail aside,   Wandered bewildered, lay down and died.   O grim is the Irony of Fate:   It switches the man of low estate   And loosens the dogs upon the great.   It lights the fireman to roast the cook;   The fisherman squirms upon the hook,   And the flirt is slain with a tender look.   The undertaker it overtakes;   It saddles the cavalier, and makes   The haughtiest butcher into steaks.   Assist me, gods, to balk the decree!   Nothing I'll do and nothing I'll be,   In order that nothing be done to me.

PHILOSOPHER BIMM.

  Republicans think Jonas Bimm     A Democrat gone mad,   And Democrats consider him     Republican and bad.   The Tough reviles him as a Dude     And gives it him right hot;   The Dude condemns his crassitude     And calls him sans culottes.   Derided as an Anglophile     By Anglophobes, forsooth,   As Anglophobe he feels, the while,     The Anglophilic tooth.   The Churchman calls him Atheist;     The Atheists, rough-shod,   Have ridden o'er him long and hissed     "The wretch believes in God!"   The Saints whom clergymen we call     Would kill him if they could;   The Sinners (scientists and all)     Complain that he is good.   All men deplore the difference     Between themselves and him,   And all devise expedients     For paining Jonas Bimm.   I too, with wild demoniac glee,     Would put out both his eyes;   For Mr. Bimm appears to me     Insufferably wise!

REMINDED.

  Beneath my window twilight made   Familiar mysteries of shade.   Faint voices from the darkening down   Were calling vaguely to the town.   Intent upon a low, far gleam   That burned upon the world's extreme,   I sat, with short reprieve from grief,   And turned the volume, leaf by leaf,   Wherein a hand, long dead, had wrought   A million miracles of thought.   My fingers carelessly unclung   The lettered pages, and among   Them wandered witless, nor divined   The wealth in which, poor fools, they mined.   The soul that should have led their quest   Was dreaming in the level west,   Where a tall tower, stark and still,   Uplifted on a distant hill,   Stood lone and passionless to claim   Its guardian star's returning flame.   I know not how my dream was broke,   But suddenly my spirit woke   Filled with a foolish fear to look   Upon the hand that clove the book,   Significantly pointing; next   I bent attentive to the text,   And read—and as I read grew old—   The mindless words: "Poor Tom's a-cold!"   Ah me! to what a subtle touch   The brimming cup resigns its clutch   Upon the wine. Dear God, is 't writ   That hearts their overburden bear   Of bitterness though thou permit   The pranks of Chance, alurk in nooks,   And striking coward blows from books,   And dead hands reaching everywhere?

SALVINI IN AMERICA.

  Come, gentlemen—your gold.     Thanks: welcome to the show.   To hear a story told     In words you do not know.   Now, great Salvini, rise     And thunder through your tears,   Aha! friends, let your eyes     Interpret to your ears.   Gods! 't is a goodly game.     Observe his stride—how grand!   When legs like his declaim     Who can misunderstand?   See how that arm goes round.     It says, as plain as day:   "I love," "The lost is found,"     "Well met, sir," or, "Away!"   And mark the drawing down     Of brows. How accurate   The language of that frown:     Pain, gentlemen—or hate.   Those of the critic trade     Swear it is all as clear   As if his tongue were made     To fit an English ear.   Hear that Italian phrase!     Greek to your sense, 't is true;   But shrug, expression, gaze—     Well, they are Grecian too.   But it is Art! God wot     Its tongue to all is known.   Faith! he to whom 't were not     Would better hold his own.   Shakespeare says act and word     Must match together true.   From what you've seen and heard,     How can you doubt they do?   Enchanting drama! Mark     The crowd "from pit to dome",   One box alone is dark—     The prompter stays at home.   Stupendous artist! You     Are lord of joy and woe:   We thrill if you say "Boo,"     And thrill if you say "Bo."

ANOTHER WAY.

  I lay in silence, dead. A woman came     And laid a rose upon my breast and said:   "May God be merciful." She spoke my name,     And added: "It is strange to think him dead.   "He loved me well enough, but 't was his way     To speak it lightly." Then, beneath her breath:   "Besides"—I knew what further she would say,     But then a footfall broke my dream of death.   To-day the words are mine. I lay the rose     Upon her breast, and speak her name and deem   It strange indeed that she is dead. God knows     I had more pleasure in the other dream.

ART.

  For Gladstone's portrait five thousand pounds     Were paid, 't is said, to Sir John Millais.     I cannot help thinking that such fine pay   Transcended reason's uttermost bounds.   For it seems to me uncommonly queer     That a painted British stateman's price     Exceeds the established value thrice   Of a living statesman over here.

AN ENEMY TO LAW AND ORDER.

  A is defrauded of his land by B,   Who's driven from the premises by C.   D buys the place with coin of plundered E.   "That A's an Anarchist!" says F to G.