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THE NAVAL CONSTRUCTOR.

  He looked upon the ships as they     All idly lay at anchor,   Their sides with gorgeous workmen gay—     The riveter and planker—   Republicans and Democrats,     Statesmen and politicians.   He saw the swarm of prudent rats     Swimming for land positions.   He marked each "belted cruiser" fine,     Her poddy life-belts floating   In tether where the hungry brine     Impinged upon her coating.   He noted with a proud regard,     As any of his class would,   The poplar mast and poplar yard     Above the hull of bass-wood.   He saw the Eastlake frigate tall,     With quaintly carven gable,   Hip-roof and dormer-window—all     With ivy formidable.   In short, he saw our country's hope     In best of all conditions—   Equipped, to the last spar and rope,     By working politicians.   He boarded then the noblest ship     And from the harbor glided.   "Adieu, adieu!" fell from his lip.     Verdict: "He suicided." 1881.

DETECTED.

  In Congress once great Mowther shone,     Debating weighty matters;   Now into an asylum thrown,     He vacuously chatters.   If in that legislative hall     His wisdom still he 'd vented,   It never had been known at all     That Mowther was demented.

BIMETALISM.

  Ben Bulger was a silver man,     Though not a mine had he:   He thought it were a noble plan     To make the coinage free.   "There hain't for years been sech a time,"     Said Ben to his bull pup,   "For biz—the country's broke and I'm     The hardest kind of up.   "The paper says that that's because     The silver coins is sea'ce,   And that the chaps which makes the laws     Puts gold ones in their place.   "They says them nations always be     Most prosperatin' where   The wolume of the currency     Ain't so disgustin' rare."   His dog, which hadn't breakfasted,     Dissented from his view,   And wished that he could swell, instead,     The volume of cold stew.   "Nobody'd put me up," said Ben,     "With patriot galoots   Which benefits their feller men     By playin' warious roots;   "But havin' all the tools about,     I'm goin' to commence   A-turnin' silver dollars out     Wuth eighty-seven cents.   "The feller takin' 'em can't whine:     (No more, likewise, can I):   They're better than the genooine,     Which mostly satisfy.   "It's only makin' coinage free,     And mebby might augment   The wolume of the currency     A noomerous per cent."   I don't quite see his error nor     Malevolence prepense,   But fifteen years they gave him for     That technical offense.

THE RICH TESTATOR.

  He lay on his bed and solemnly "signed,"     Gasping—perhaps 'twas a jest he meant:   "This of a sound and disposing mind     Is the last ill-will and contestament."

TWO METHODS.

  To bucks and ewes by the Good Shepherd fed   The Priest delivers masses for the dead,   And even from estrays outside the fold   Death for the masses he would not withhold.   The Parson, loth alike to free or kill,   Forsakes the souls already on the grill,   And, God's prerogative of mercy shamming,   Spares living sinners for a harder damning.

FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATE

  Observe, dear Lord, what lively pranks   Are played by sentimental cranks!   First this one mounts his hinder hoofs   And brays the chimneys off the roofs;   Then that one, with exalted voice,   Expounds the thesis of his choice,   Our understandings to bombard,   Till all the window panes are starred!   A third augments the vocal shock   Till steeples to their bases rock,   Confessing, as they humbly nod,   They hear and mark the will of God.   A fourth in oral thunder vents   His awful penury of sense   Till dogs with sympathetic howls,   And lowing cows, and cackling fowls,   Hens, geese, and all domestic birds,   Attest the wisdom of his words.   Cranks thus their intellects deflate   Of theories about the State.   This one avers 'tis built on Truth,   And that on Temperance. This youth   Declares that Science bears the pile;   That graybeard, with a holy smile,   Says Faith is the supporting stone;   While women swear that Love alone   Could so unflinchingly endure   The heavy load. And some are sure   The solemn vow of Christian Wedlock   Is the indubitable bedrock.   Physicians once about the bed   Of one whose life was nearly sped   Blew up a disputatious breeze   About the cause of his disease:   This, that and t' other thing they blamed.   "Tut, tut!" the dying man exclaimed,   "What made me ill I do not care;   You've not an ounce of it, I'll swear.   And if you had the skill to make it   I'd see you hanged before I'd take it!"

AN IMPOSTER.

  Must you, Carnegie, evermore explain   Your worth, and all the reasons give again   Why black and red are similarly white,   And you and God identically right?   Still must our ears without redress submit   To hear you play the solemn hypocrite   Walking in spirit some high moral level,   Raising at once his eye-balls and the devil?   Great King of Cant! if Nature had but made   Your mouth without a tongue I ne'er had prayed   To have an earless head. Since she did not,   Bear me, ye whirlwinds, to some favored spot—   Some mountain pinnacle that sleeps in air   So delicately, mercifully rare   That when the fellow climbs that giddy hill,   As, for my sins, I know at last he will,   To utter twaddle in that void inane   His soundless organ he will play in vain.