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But the verdict of the people is unanimously given. He ought not to have fooled with Mother Gooly's immortal part, to the neglect of the wheat crop. That kind of thing is not popular at Whiskyville. It is not business.—"Bullwhacker's Own."

…. The railroad from this city north-west will be commenced as soon as the citizens get tired of killing the Chinamen brought up to do the work, which will probably be within three or four weeks. The carcases are accumulating about town and begin to become unpleasant.—Gravel Hill "Thunderbolt."

…. The man who was shot last week at the Gulch will be buried next Thursday. He is not yet dead, but his physician wishes to visit a mother-in-law at Lard Springs, and is therefore very anxious to get the case off his hands. The undertaker describes the patient as "the longest cuss in that section."—Santa Peggie "Times."

…. There is some dispute about land titles at Little Bilk Bar. About half a dozen cases were temporarily decided on Wednesday, but it is supposed the widows will renew the litigation. The only proper way to prevent these vexatious lawsuits is to hang the Judge of the County Court.—Cow-County "Outcropper."

POESY. 

Ye Idyll of Ye Hippopopotamus.

    With a Methodist hymn in his musical throat,     The Sun was emitting his ultimate note;     His quivering larynx enwrinkled the sea     Like an Ichthyosaurian blowing his tea;     When sweetly and pensively rattled and rang     This plaint which an Hippopopotamus sang:     "O, Camomile, Calabash, Cartilage-pie,     Spread for my spirit a peppermint fry;     Crown me with doughnuts, and drape me with cheese,     Settle my soul with a codliver sneeze.     Lo, how I stand on my head and repine—     Lollipop Lumpkin can never be mine!"     Down sank the Sun with a kick and a plunge,     Up from the wave rose the head of a Sponge;     Ropes in his ringlets, eggs in his eyes,     Tip-tilted nose in a way to surprise.     These the conundrums he flung to the breeze,     The answers that Echo returned to him these:         "Cobblestone, Cobblestone, why do you sigh—        Why do you turn on the tears?"         "My mother is crazy on strawberry jam,        And my father has petrified ears."         "Liverwort, Liverwort, why do you droop—        Why do you snuffle and scowl?"         "My brother has cockle-burs into his eyes,        And my sister has married an owl."         "Simia, Simia, why do you laugh—        Why do you cackle and quake?"         "My son has a pollywog stuck in his throat,        And my daughter has bitten a snake."     Slow sank the head of the Sponge out of sight,     Soaken with sea-water-then it was night.     The Moon had now risen for dinner to dress,     When sweetly the Pachyderm sang from his nest;     He sang through a pestle of silvery shape,     Encrusted with custard-empurpled with crape;     And this was the burden he bore on his lips,     And blew to the listening Sturgeon that sips     From the fountain of opium under the lobes     Of the mountain whose summit in buffalo robes     The winter envelops, as Venus adorns     An elephant's trunk with a chaplet of thorns:         "Chasing mastodons through marshes upon stilts of light ratan,         Hunting spiders with a shotgun and mosquitoes with an axe,         Plucking peanuts ready roasted from the branches of the oak,         Waking echoes in the forest with our hymns of blessed bosh,
       We roamed-my love and I.         By the margin of the fountain spouting thick with clabbered milk,         Under spreading boughs of bass-wood all alive with cooing toads,         Loafing listlessly on bowlders of octagonal design,         Standing gracefully inverted with our toes together knit,        We loved-my love and I."     Hippopopotamus comforts his heart     Biting half-moons out of strawberry tart.     Epitaph on George Francis Train.     (Inscribed on a Pork-barrel.)     Beneath this casket rots unknown     A Thing that merits not a stone,         Save that by passing urchin cast;     Whose fame and virtues we express     By transient urn of emptiness,         With apt inscription (to its past     Relating-and to his): "Prime Mess."     No honour had this infidel,     That doth not appertain, as well,         To altered caitiff on the drop;     No wit that would not likewise pass     For wisdom in the famished ass         Who breaks his neck a weed to crop,     When tethered in the luscious grass.     And now, thank God, his hateful name     Shall never rescued be from shame,         Though seas of venal ink be shed;     No sophistry shall reconcile     With sympathy for Erin's Isle,         Or sorrow for her patriot dead,     The weeping of this crocodile.     Life's incongruity is past,     And dirt to dirt is seen at last,         The worm of worm afoul doth fall.     The sexton tolls his solemn bell     For scoundrel dead and gone to-well,         It matters not, it can't recall     This convict from his final cell.     Jerusalem, Old and New.     Didymus Dunkleton Doty Don John         Is a parson of high degree;     He holds forth of Sundays to marvelling crowds         Who wonder how vice can still be     When smitten so stoutly by Didymus Don—         Disciple of Calvin is he.     But sinners still laugh at his talk of the New        Jerusalem-ha-ha, te-he!     And biting their thumbs at the doughty Don-John—         This parson of high degree—     They think of the streets of a village they know,         Where horses still sink to the knee,     Contrasting its muck with the pavement of gold         That's laid in the other citee.     They think of the sign that still swings, uneffaced         By winds from the salt, salt sea,     Which tells where he trafficked in tipple, of yore—         Don Dunkleton Johnny, D. D.     Didymus Dunkleton Doty Don John         Still plays on his fiddle—D. D.,     His lambkins still bleat in full psalmody sweet,         And the devil still pitches the key.     Communing with Nature.     One evening I sat on a heavenward hill,     The winds were asleep and all nature was still,     Wee children came round me to play at my knee,     As my mind floated rudderless over the sea.     I put out one hand to caress them, but held     With the other my nose, for these cherubim smelled.     I cast a few glances upon the old sun;     He was red in the face from the race he had run,     But he seemed to be doing, for aught I could see,     Quite well without any assistance from me.     And so I directed my wandering eye     Around to the opposite side of the sky,     And the rapture that ever with ecstasy thrills     Through the heart as the moon rises bright from the hills,     Would in this case have been most exceedingly rare,     Except for the fact that the moon was not there.     But the stars looked right lovingly down in the sea,     And, by Jupiter, Venus was winking at me!     The gas in the city was flaring up bright,     Montgomery Street was resplendent with light;     But I did not exactly appear to advance     A sentiment proper to that circumstance.     So it only remains to explain to the town     That a rainstorm came up before I could come down.     As the boots I had on were uncommonly thin     My fancy leaked out as the water leaked in.     Though dampened my ardour, though slackened my strain,     I'll "strike the wild lyre" who sings the sweet rain!     Conservatism and Progress.     Old Zephyr, dawdling in the West,     Looked down upon the sea,     Which slept unfretted at his feet,     And balanced on its breast a fleet     That seemed almost to be     Suspended in the middle air,     As if a magnet held it there,     Eternally at rest.     Then, one by one, the ships released     Their folded sails, and strove     Against the empty calm to press     North, South, or West, or East,     In vain; the subtle nothingness     Was impotent to move.     Ten Zephyr laughed aloud to see:—     "No vessel moves except by me,     And, heigh-ho! I shall sleep."     But lo! from out the troubled North     A tempest strode impatient forth,     And trampled white the deep;     The sloping ships flew glad away,     Laving their heated sides in spray.     The West then turned him red with wrath,     And to the North he shouted:     "Hold there! How dare you cross my path,     As now you are about it?"     The North replied with laboured breath—     His speed no moment slowing:—     "My friend, you'll never have a path,     Unless you take to blowing."     Inter Arma Silent Leges.     (An Election Incident.)     About the polls the freedmen drew,         To vote the freemen down;     And merrily their caps up-flew         As Grant rode through the town.     From votes to staves they next did turn,         And beat the freemen down;     Full bravely did their valour burn         As Grant rode through the town.     Then staves for muskets they forsook,         And shot the freemen down;     Right royally their banners shook         As Grant rode through the town.     Hail, final triumph of our cause!         Hail, chief of mute renown!     Grim Magistrate of Silent Laws,         A-riding freedom down!