XsX^^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Shelf ,ik?-M 3 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. |1aIlo By CHARLES HENRY LUDERS AND S. D. S!, Jr. ^ ^ ^Sik—^? / -^ ^NV'-^S Halloo ! my fancie, whither zvilt thou go ? — William Cleland. Quid vetat? qtianquam ridentevi dicere verutii — Horace — Satires. «r c© MAY 11 1887^ PHILADELPHIA: DAVID McKAY, 23 South Ninth Street. 1887. tms'' Copyright, 1887, DAVID McKAY. THE ALDINE PRESS ; PHILADELPHIA. THE APOLOGY, TN fancfs fields, 7vith eager feet The poets wander; there they 7tieet The fickle maid, and cry, *' ^ Hallo! My fancy, whither wilt thou go?"* Thi'ough woodland dim, or meadow sweet?'' ^ Hallo P within their deep retreat The drowsy echoes, waked, repeat. ^ Hallo P cry all the winds that blow In fancy"* s fields . These are the answers, incomplete, We two have gained; each quaint conceit, Each word with life or love aglow. But echoes, tenderly and low. Fair fancy' s footsteps, flying fleet In fancy s fields. S. D. S.,Jr. (iii) Many of the following verses having originally appeared in "Life," "Puek," and. other humorous journals, and a few in various Magazines, the authors take this opportunity of acknowledging the courtesy of the publishers by -whose pern:iission they are enabled to reprint them. (iv) ^oQteQts: Page The Apology S. D. S., Jr. iii A BOUTONNIERE . . . , C. H. L. 9 Unafraid .... . (( lO Cynicism . , . s. D. S., Jr. II Christmas Roses . . (( 13 The Phantom Lute . C. H. L. 14 Transition .... s. D. S., Jr. 15 Deception C. H. L. 16 The Draught , « 17 An Echo of Bar Harf.or s. D. S., Jr. 18 Serenade .... <( 19 Ivory and Gold C. H. L. 20 Sun Kissed .... s. D. S., Jr. 21 The Tryst C. H. L. 22 V. Lempriere s. D. S., Jr. 23 The New Arcadia C. H. L. 24 Francois Villon . s. D. S., Jr. 26 To Q. H. F. C. H. L. 27 A Portrait .... s. D. S., Jr. 28 Eleanore .... C. II. L. 30 Star- Dust .... , . (( 32 (V) VI CONTENTS. My New Year's Dinner . Runaway Brook . Old Ocean's Edge Abandoned • . . . Unspoken .... The Captive Quail The Masquerade Under the Pines , At the Edge of a Shower A Woman's Wp:apons Quatrains The Poet to his Lyre . Cupid Deceived Love and a Compass In Winter Outward Bound . Ophelia .... Triolets .... A Corsage Bouquet A Kiss To an Autumn Leaf A Late Supper Jack Loquitur .... March Winds and April Showers The Poet's Aim A Shorthand Sonnet . Farm Fruits .... Ten Lines on Tennis A Roman Singer An Inventory — with Comments . Of Misstresse Luce : — Her Eyes Meleager to Lesbia S. D. S., . C. H S. D. S., . C. H S. D. S., C. . H S. D. S., . C. H it S. D. S., (< . C. H S. D. S., (( C. . H. S. D. S., . C. H. Jr. . L. Jr. . L. Jr. . L. Jr. . L. Jr. Jr. , L. Jr. L. 33 35 37 39 41 42 44 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 58 S. D. S., Jr. 60 . C. H. L. 62 S. D. S., Jr. 63 " 64 C. H. L. 65 . " 67 68 S. D. S., Jr. 72 73 . C. H. L. 74 Trio . Sacrifice Clover Hay Sa Carte des Danses • My Lady Weeps — at A Time- Worn Tale Quatrains Time and Eternity An Old Thought Love's Rosary Chanson de la Franco- Americaine Rescued It's a Way We Have — In Society The Hollow of the Sea To Pegasus The Redbreast . . . Unanswered ..... An Autumn Ramble in The Catskills The First Lyric .... CONTENTS. VI 1 , ^ . S. D. S., Jr. 75 . i( 76 • C. H. l. 77 . S, D. S-, Jr. 78 Times' . « 79 . « 80 . C. H. l. 81 S. D. S-, Jr. 82 C. H. L. 84 S. D. S„ Jr. 86 . C. H, L. 87 S- D. S., Jr. SS , C. H. L. 90 S. D. S., Jr. 91 C. H. L. 93 <( 96 e}l. I: A BOUTONNIERE. A DEWY fragrance drifts at times Across my willing senses, And leads the rillet of my rhymes From city gutters, gusts and grimes To lowland fields and fences. I seem to see, as I inhale This perfume faint and fleeting, Green hillsides sloping to a vale. Whose leafy shadows screen the pale Wood-flowers from noonday's greeting. I hear the song — the sweet heartache — Of just a pair of thrushes ; And hear, half dreaming, half awake. The ripple of a streamlet break Their momentary hushes. 10 ^. H. I, And why, dear heart, do I to-day, . Hemmed in by court and alley. Seem lost in haunts of faun and fay? Look! — on my coat I've pinned your spray Of lilies-of-the-valley. UNAFRAID. A CHILD, in some far heathen isle. Murdered to win a false god's smile. Laughed as the strangler's cord was laid About its throat; and, unafraid, Caught at the crimson loop of death That straightway stilled its joyous breath. So the fool wantons, nor may check The harlot's clasp about his neck. S. D. S.,Jr. II CYNICISM. A Duet. 'Le duvet du ccetir, ah ! quel donaire ! Heuretcx qui Pa — sot qui PespereP^ — Augusts Sauliere. '< T T APPY the man who wins a heart JL J. Untouched by passion. But let him hide himself apart — He's not in fashion. ''And you, O too confiding youth, When you would marry, Where is the maid whose bosom's truth Her lips do carry? '* You think her love has just been won, And yours the glory j But — maids were maids since A. D. i. And here's her story: 12 S. D. S.,Jr. "At ten her childish love she gave Unto her cousin, A youngster handsome, tender, brave His years a dozen. ''A quarrel over toy or game, And then they parted ; He to illume some other flame — She — broken-hearted. "Love's wounds at ten last but a day. Another lover (Like unto like, physicians say,) Her hurt did cover. "And so, to take revenge on men For her delusion, She traps, then sets them free again In great profusion. "And I, a victim of its wiles. Would give you warning That love, in all its various styles. You'd best be scorning." \. D. S., Jr. 13 *'And in return, my cynic friend Of counsel plenty, What age does all this wisdom lend?" *«0h! — I'm—just twenty." CHRISTMAS ROSES. WHAT! roses now? Ah! yes, and fairer Than e'er the earth has known before; They bloom with tints and colors rarer Than roses ever wore. They bloom with ever-deepening pleasure ; They pale to still more perfect white; And Christmas joy in fullest measure. These roses know to-night. Ah! happy flowers! what though your beauty Fades in the ballroom's heated air? Though death's the price of such sweet duty. You've graced my darling's hair. H ^. H. I: THE PHANTOM LUTE. Venice, i6 — A LOVER singing a serenade Unto an air divinely played, Stands where shadows are deepest laid. So rapt he is — so wrought with love For the lady listening just above, That nothing he hears. The rippling shove Of gondola-oars that rise and dip — The wash of eddies that backward slip, Send no pallor to cheek or lip. Sudden he stops— a blow! — a groan ! — A splashing of oars ! and a lute, down-thrown, Floats on the shuddering waves alone. Floats and floats — and forever shall, A spirit haunting the old canal — Humming the ghost of a madrigal. S. D, S.,Jr. 15 TRANSITION. HER eyes looked out across thisworld of ours — Seen through her lashes as a silken veil — Wondering that striving mortals e'er could fail, Startled to see the earth bear aught but flowers. Her childish heart lay fallow, as a field Yearning for seed to nourish, and n^^ke fair; For ripened fruit upon its breast to bear. And more to give as more it still may yield. And all her senses seemed to watch and wait For something that would touch and stir them all. And something, lifeless yet, to being call ; She wished it come, yet, timid, feared her fate. And ere she knew the name of Love, one day (All flushed her cheek, and tear-bedewed her eyes,) He kissed her lips. With tender, sweet surprise The woman lived — the child had passed away. i6