A cloud of cinder-dotted smoke, whose billows rise and swell A solemn Sabbath stillness lies along the Mudville lanes A stretch of hill and valley, swathed thick in robes of white Almost every other evenin', jest as reg'lar as the clock "Blessed are the poor in spirit": there, I'll just remember that Climb to my knee, little boy, little boy,— For years I've seen the frothy lines go thund'rin' down the shore From the window of the chapel softly sounds an organ's note Grandfather's "summer sweets" are ripe He ain't no gold-laced "Belvidere" Hey, you swelled-up turkey feller! Home from college came the stripling, calm and cool and debonair I hain't no great detective, like yer read about,—the kind I never was naturally vicious; I remember, when a youngster, all the happy hours I spent I s'pose I hain't progressive, but I swan, it seems ter me I'll write, for I'm witty, a popular ditty I'm pretty nearly certain that 't was 'bout two weeks ago,— I've got a little yaller dog, a wuthless kind of chap In Mother's room still stands the chair In the gleam and gloom of the April weather It's a wonderful world we're in, my dear It's alone in the dark of the old wagon-shed It's getting on ter winter now, the nights are crisp and chill It stands at the bend where the road has its end Jason White has come ter town Just a simple little picture of a sunny country road Kind er like a stormy day, take it all together,— Little bare feet, sunburned and brown, Little foot, whose lightest pat Me and Billy's in the woodshed; Ma said, "Run out-doors and play; My dream-ship's decks are of beaten gold My sister's best feller is 'most six-foot-three My son Hezekiah's a painter; yes, that's the purfession he's at; Now Councilman O'Hoolihan do'n't b'lave in annixation O, it's Christmas Eve, and moonlight, and the Christmas air is chill O you boys grown gray and bearded, you that used ter chum with me Oh, the cool September mornin's! now they 're with us once agin Oh, the Friday evening meetings in the vestry, long ago Oh! the horns are all a-tootin' as we rattle through the town Oh, the song of the Sea— Oh, the story-book boy! he's a wonderful youth Oh, the wild November wind Oh! they've swept the parlor carpet, and they've dusted every chair Oh, those sweet old-fashioned posies, that were mother's pride and joy Old Dan'l Hanks he says this town On a log behind the pigsty of a modest little farm Once, by the edge of a pleasant pool Our Aunt 'Mandy thinks that boys Our Sary Emma is possessed ter be at somethin' queer; Pavements a-frying in street and in square Say, I've got a little brother She's little and modest and purty Sometimes when we're in school, and it's the afternoon and late South Pokus is religious,—that's the honest, livin' truth; Summer nights at Grandpa's—ain't they soft and still! Sun like a furnace hung up overhead Sure, Felix McCarty he lived all alone The fog was so thick yer could cut it The spring sun flashes a rapier thrust The tired breezes are tucked to rest To my office window, gray Up in the attic I found them, locked in the cedar chest Want to see me, hey, old chap? We'd never thought of takin' 'em,—'twas Mary Ann's idee,— When Ezry, that's my sister's son, came home from furrin parts When Papa's sick, my goodness sakes! When the farm work's done, at the set of sun When the great, gray fog comes in, and the damp clouds cloak the shore When the hot summer daylight is dyin' When the Lord breathes his wrath above the bosom of the waters When the tide goes out, how the foam-flakes dance When the toil of day is over When Twilight her soft robe of shadow spreads down Where leap the long Atlantic swells Where the warm spring sunlight, streaming Ye children of the mountain, sing of your craggy peaks You know the story—it's centuries old— THE END
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