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And the cheek that has long been withered
With an old rose blooms once more,
As memories glow like the embers
Whose flashes sink and soar

With the Christmas fire's warm glory
Where the log burns red at the core.

Grandpa and the Foghorn

BY WILBUR D. NESBIT.

Is a fog-horn on th' shore
Where we live, an' it just make
Sometimes such a nawful roar
Till your ears inside they ache.

But it only roars just when

They's a fog-'cause ships they might

Try to sail right in, an' then

They be wrecked all up some night!

Grampa come to visit us,

An' las' night th' fog-horn start

Settin' up a nawful fuss

Roarin' awful close apart.

Course we go right on an' sleep,

'Cause we're used to it, you know,

An' don't hear it while it keep

"Waw-in'" an' a "Waw-in'” so.

But poor grampa he ain't been
Visitin' us since we come

To this house an' moved 'way in

From th' house we moved out from.

So he just don't sleep at all

An' he let his boiled egg fall

Purt' near right into his lap.

An' he ast us if some one

Ain't got cows some place that's near, An' pa say he guess there's noneIf there is, w'y he ain't hear. Grampa say, "I heard a cow Beller all night fer her calf. My, but she kicked up a row!" An' my goodness! How we laugh!

Vot to Call Him

BY GEORGE V. HOBART.

Der leedle boy vot yust arrived
Abouid some veeks ago,

His voice vas learning for to make
Dot noise vich is a crow.
Und also somedimes ven I vent
Und sboke mit him a vile
He tvists his leedle face arount
Und makes vot is a smile!—

I vonder vot to call him?

Some say Thomas,

Some say Tim;
Some say Stephen,
Some say Jim;

Some say Diederich,

Some say Matt;

Some say Daniel,

Some say Pat;

Some say Goethe,
Some say Choe;
Vot to call him

I doan'd know.

I ask dot leedle boy himself
Vot name he dinks vill do,
Und den he makes a funny vink
Und says py me, "Ah, Goo!"

Ah Goo! dot is a Chinese name!
I guess vot he doan'd like

To be called dot ven he grows ub,
Much better id vas Mike!

I vonder vot I call him?

Some say Heinrich,

Some say Net;
Some say Villum,
Some say Fret;
Some say Eddie,
Some say Bill;
Some say Teddy,
I doan'd tink I vill.
Some say Chasper,
Some say Snitz;
So I dink I

Call him Fritz.

The Vagabond

BY ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.

Give to me the life I love;
Let the lave go by me;
Give the jolly heaven above

And the highway nigh me.

Bed in the bush with stars to see,

Bread I dip in the river,

There's the life for a man like me! There's the life forever!

Let the blow fall soon or late,

Let what will be o'er me.
Give the face of earth around
And the road before me.

Wealth I ask not, hope nor love,
Nor a friend to know me;

All I ask, the heaven above
And the road below me.

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Livin' wid Pat Magee,

In a cabin fornent the bay, Sea in front an' bog behin', Stretchin' for miles away. An' often he comes an' says: "Honey," he says, says he,

"Do ye ever repent the day that ye went An' married wid Pat Magee?"

There's a bit av a childie now,

Playin' around the floor,

Runnin' about wid a laugh an' a shout,

In an out av the door;

Mick wid his father's eyes

Bits av the sky for blue,

An' aich hair av his head like a golden thread,

An' the voice av his father, too.

An' often he comes an' says:

"Honey," he says, says he,

"Do ye ever repent the day that ye went An' married wid Pat Magee?"

Times when the evenin' falls,

An' the work av the day is done,
An' the boy's in bed an' supper spread,
I sit in the settin' sun,

An' think av me girlhood's days,

An' the love that came me way,

An' the price, the price that a woman pays
An' is well content to pay.

An' I laugh when he comes an' says:
"Honey," he says, says he,

"Do ye ever repent the day that ye went An' married wid Pat Magee?"

Never be tellin' a man

All that he'd like to know,

Give him half av the whole that he wants
An' he'll love ye the better so;

But times I misdoubt he knows,
Nearly as well as me,

That I'll never repent the day that I went
An' married wid Pat Magee.

من من

Pat Magee

BY LENA BARRINGTON.

Walkin' wid Pat Magee

Down by the Tullah bog,

"Mind where ye're settin' yer stheps," says he,

"Lest yez put yer foot on a frog.

Frogs is the divil," says he.

"I'm thinkin'," he says, says he,

"Av I carried yez over to yondher wall

The sorry a frog we'd see.'

Sittin' wid Pat Magee

Atop of a loose-built wall,

"It's unaisy I am in me mind," says he, "Dhreadin' the stones might fall.

Stones is the divil to slip.

I'm thinkin'," he says, says he,

"Av I gave yer waist a bit of a clip, The sorry a fear there'd be."

Talkin' wid Pat Magee,

Wid the arm av him round me waist, An' the red sun sinkin'. "Arrah," says he, "Will yez let me speak to the praste? Delays is the divil's delight.

An' I'm thinkin'," he says, says he,

"Av the two av us settled this matther to-night, 'Tis married next week we'd be."

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