So they for me may wish, But I must stay and cram ; With this horrible Exam :" With eyelids heavy and red, His hand supporting his head, And cram ! cram ! cram ! A. P. The Dunheved Mirror, Cornwall, December, 1876. THE SONG OF THE CRAM. With eyelids heavy and red, His hand supporting his head. With srantic excitement and dread, And still with a look of dolor and pain, He sat on the side of his bed. “ Throb ! throb! throb ! In my chamber next the roof; And work! work ! work ! From my friends I must keep aloof; French and German and Greek, Greek and German and French, Till my brow grows damp, and my breath comes hard, And my agonised hands I clench. “Work! work! work ! While my cousins are laughing beneath, And work! work ! work ! Till I scarcely can draw my breath ; My head with knowledge to cram, I'm going in for Exam ! “ Work ! work! work ! Till the brain begins to swim, And work! work! work ! Till my eyes are heavy and dim ; Greek and German and French, French and German and Greek, Till over the problems I have a nap, And work them out in my sleep. “ Throb! throb ! throb! My courage is ebbing fast ! Work ! work! work ! I fear that my brain won't last ! Throb ! throb! throb! O come and help me cram! I'm going to be a lunatic, If plucked in this Exam ! "O men with cousins dear! O men with mothers and wives ! I'd cram you, if I had you here, Within an inch of your lives ! And their wisdom is but a sham ; Or how hard we need to cram ! • Oh! but to play a game With my happy friends below! Oh! but to make a pun, Or try—but 'tis ali ‘no go? THE SLAVE OF THE PEN. I. With eyelids heavy and red, Spinning “Copy,” at morn to be read. Scratch ! scratch ! scratch ! In a gas-lighted steamy den, And still, in a voice of dolorous pitch, He sang the song of the pen. II, “Scratch ! scratch ! scratch ! While engines are shaking the roof; Scratch ! scratch ! scratch ! Till the “Devil" appears with a proof. And it's oh ! to be a slave Of the pen, whether steel or quill, Is as bad as being a worthless knave Doing his month at the “mill.' III. “ Scratch ! scratch ! scratch ! Is it farce or tragedy grim, Making up the requisite batch, With fact, and sancy, and whim? It fritters away my life, In the flow of this inky stream. And over the copy I fall asleep, And panctuate in a dream. a Oh! husband with slippered feet ; Oh! wife in morning gown: The latest news of the town Of these midnight slaves of the pen. Forgive them a caustic, or feeble phrase, And remember they are but men. Funny Folks, January 9th, 1875. THE SONG OF THE SWORD, Weary, and wounded, and worn, wounded and ready to die, A soldier they left, all alone and forlorn, on the field of the battle to lie. The dead and the dying alone could their presence and pity afford, Whilst, with a sad and terrible tone, he sing · the Song of the Sword. Fight-fight-fight! though a thousand fathers die ; Fight-light-fightthough a thousand children cry! Fight-fight-fight! while mothers and wives lament; And fight--fight-light! while millions of money are spent. * Fight--fight-fight! should the cause be foul or fair, Though all that's gained is an empty name, and a tax too great to bear ; An empty name, and a paltry fame, and thousands lying dead ; Whilst every glorious victory must raise the price of bread. War-war --war! fire, and famine, and sword ; Desolate fields and desolate towns, and thousands scattered abroad, With never a home, and never a shed, whilst kingdoms perish and fall; And hundreds of thousands are lying dead, .... and all for nothing at all! “War-war-war! musket, and powder, and ballAh! what do we fight so for? ah ! why have we battles at all? 'Tis Justice must be done, they say, the nation's honour to keep ; Alas! that Justice should be so dear, and human life so cheap! War-war-war! misery, murder, and crime ; Are all the blessings I've seen in thee, from my youth to the present time. Misery, murder, and crime--crime, misery, murder, and woe ; Ah! would I had known in my younger days half the horrors which now I know." Weary, and wounded, and worn, wounded and ready to die, A soldier they left, all alone and forlorn, on the field of the battle to lie. The dead and the dying alone could their presence and pity assord, And thus with a sad and a terrible tone (oh! would that these truths were more perfectly known !) he sang the Song of the Sword. ANONYMOUS. Oh! men with thoughtful minds, Oh ! men with a reason fair, From demon drink, stand clear. Both in slums and great highway, Is a curse that we too often meet In our walks by night or day. But why do I thus depict That fell demon of the soul? I do but so that my fellow men Themselves from drink control. Because of the scenes we see! In drink his misery! But soon the time will come, And what will be the end ? a soul that's lost, A drunkard's wretched home Neither victuals, fire, or light To meet the drunkard's sight ! From morning until night, Drink, drink, drink, 'Tis the drunkard's sole delight. Beer, brandy, gin, and rum, Rum, brandy, gin, and beer, Till his health is gone and his wealth as well, For the demon nought will spare. Drink, drink, drink, In mansion as well as in cot, 'Tis drink, drink, drink, With the highest and lowest sot ; While toiling thousands sleep Their rest of calm content, The night's in riot spent. That demon in form of drink; And from its presence shrink ! Rejoice in freedom then- And better far as men. The sorrow that drink entails ! As well the widow's wails. Sends thousands to their grave; A low dejected slave. a THE SONG OF A Sor. Words composed by Bro. J. B. Davies, P.M. (753). Dedicated to George Cruikshank, Esq., by his kind permission. With a visage pale and wan, With a vacant stare of eye ; In a tavern standing by. Was the demon that urged him on; For drink, till “his pence were gone." From morning until night! By the glare of bright gaslight. And a dreadful thought to think, To that fearful demon, drink. Till power of sense is gone, Till it's of health and wealth both shorn ; Rum, brandy, gin and beer, In the beast that you now appear! O, men, a While “ Tich, Tich, Tich," With gruesome and long-drawn face, “ The Doctor,” with voice of dolorous pitch, Sang the Song of “the Case.” “ Tich, Tich, Tich, In spite of all reproof; And Tich, Tich, Tich, Though the members stand aloof, It's I that ought to be classed Along with Chatham and Burke, And I'll never cease to raise my voice Against such monstrous work!" “ Tich, Tich, Tich, Till the brain begins to swim, Tich, Tich, Tich, Till their eyes are heavy and dim. Stream, and minnow, and twitch, Minnow, and twitch, and stream, Till over the tattoo they fall asleep, And see it done in a dream." “O, men, so callous and blind O, men, so bloated and richIt isn't Orton you're locking up, But the real and only · Tich' Tich, Tich, Tich, 'Prison'd, dishonour'd, opprest, Stitching at once with his sewing-machine. A shroud as well as a vest. (Four verses omitted here.) a Rape, and outrage, and murder, with sisters dear ! With spirits drooping and worn. With eyelids as heavy as lead, And wearily longed for bed ; With gruesome and long.drawn face, “ The Doctor,” with voice of dolorous pitch, (Ah me! to have to listen to sich), Sang the Song of “the Case.” Funny Folks, October 2nd, 1875. THE SONG OF THE TURK IN 1877. With arguments tattered and worn, With facts long torn to a shred, The statesman rose in eloquent rage To ply his political trade. Stump, stump, stump, Is this the successor of Burke, Who, with a voice of dolorous pitch, Still sings his song of the Turk? Turk, Turk, Turk ! While the Czar is biting the dust. And Turk, Turk, Turk, The incarnation of lust. It's O to be a slave, Along with the barbarous Turk, Where women have never a so:ul to save, And only a body for-werk ! Turk, Turk, Turk ! Till the brain begins to swim. Turk, Turk, Turk, Till the audience is eager and grim. THE SONG OF THE FLIRT, (Hood's Own--for Somebody Else.) In the loudest things that are worn, With her cheek a peculiar red, This one idea in her head : My work? May be! Had I a heart, My tears might flow apace ; carry away one's face ?" With her cheek a peculiar red, This one idea in her head : Yet a little more tight in her skirt ; Punch, September 18, 1880. He sang a To be stitched, stitched, stitched, Yet a little more tight in her skirt, The while, with her voice disdainfully pitched, She sang the “Song of the Flirt !" “Work, work, work. In the broiling drive and row, And work, work, work, At the stifling crush and show. That to-morrow I'd marry a Turk, Yes,-that would be Christian work ! “Work, work, work, On the lawn in the lazy shade; Work, work, work, In the blaze of the baked parade. Tea, and tennis, and band, Band, and tennis, and tea :If I can but ogle an eldest son, They're all the same to me. “ You men, do you dare to sneer, And point to your sisters and wives ! Because they simper ' Not nice, my dear;'-— As if they had ne'er in their lives Each prude in her own tight skirt, Had she had the chance—a Flirt ! “And why do I talk of a blush? Have I much of Modesty known? Why, no. Though, at times, her crimson cheek Grows not unlike my own. Could I redden as she does, deep. Laid on should come so cheap. “But, work, work, work, With powder, and puff, and pad : And, work, work, work, For every folly and fad ! No ?-Phryne's brazen stare ! I've all the fun of the fair. My labour never fags. And a place on the roll of hags. A playful kittenish thing ; Though my feet have lost their spring. “So at times, when I'm out of breath, And the men go off in a pack Who smirks like a garrison hack, To feel as I used to feel My hair, at least, was real It seems a sort of relief Before he came to grief.. The Janitor's Song. With visage sadly forlorn, Weary, and sleepy, and worn. 'Tis a fact, fact, fact ! He sat with a visage long; this Janitor's song: “Sweep, sweep, sweep,, In dirt, in smoke, and in dust, And sweep, sweep, sweep, Till I throw down my broom in disgust. Halls, and chapel, and stairs- And sleep brings release from my cares. “ From the very first crack of the gong, From the earliest gleam of daylight, Day after day and all day long, Far into the weary night, It's sweep, sweep, sweep, Till my broom doth a pillow seem ; Till over its handle I fall asleep, And sweep away in my dream. “ Oh! students of high degree, (I scorn to address a low fellow), “Oh! seniors most reverend, potent, and grave, (In the words of the great Othello), My story's a sad one indeed, Notwithstanding your laughter and sport ; My life is naught but a broken reed, And my broom is my only support." With visage sadly forlorn, Weary, and sleepy, and worn. He sat with a visage forlorn, Carmina Collegensia a a THE SONG OF THE SHIRK. With a countenance weary and worn, With eyelids all heavy and red, An Undergrad sat, in his nightgown torn, Reading his Paley in bed. O, but for one short look At the Euclid or Paley paper, And cut about and caper. But from those papers hated, Might make me rusticated. With his nose, alas ! awfully red, And settled himself in his bed. In his troubled sleep he said. P. M. W. Light Green, Cambridge (W. Metcalfe and Son), 1882. or a The BROOD ON THE BEARD. Read, read, read, Till his voice is quite feeble and low, He can read no more, so in accents poor, He sang of the dire Littlego. Read, read, read, While the Rooks are cawing around; And read, read, read, Till of Cabs I hear the sound. Aná had left all this Littlego work, Or perhaps a barbarous Turk. It's nothing but read all day; Read, read, read, Till I read myself away, Paley and Euclid so hard, Mathematics with Latin and Greek, I only wish I had read them besore, For the Exam begins in a week. 0, men, who Examiners are, Recollect when the period arrives 'Tis not only the papers you're setting this time, But a limit to Undergrad's lives. By days, by month, by year, That you feel excessively queer. Their hearts are like pieces of stone, I believe I ought to shun the thought Of Examiners when I'm alone. It makes me almost mad To think of that awful sight; 0, dear, that to some the papers are stiff, While to others they're easy and light. My reading will never stop ; Where the bottom's as good as the top. Yon room in disorder so great, It shows that I kept it up late. How full my time has been. No leisure to read Light Green. Hard Greek and odious Latin, Is the worst I ever sat in. Till my brain becomes infirm; In this and the Lenten Term. As I see them in the street, Whenever them I meet. A “Second " I would not mind, And the “Littlego " left behind. Who cannot these subjects acquire, (Not to mention the wrath of your sire). With face like a maiden's bare, With hair on his head strewn thin, A youth ill at ease, in an easy chair, Sat stroking his cheeks and chin. Stroke, stroke, stroke, I wish, wish, wish, Wish, wish, wish, Imperial, beard, moustache, Moustache, imperial, beard, Wove into a triad weird.. Young men with moustaches neat ; I shave, shave, shave, To make it utter a beard. But why should I dream of beards, For the pleasure of manhood pine ; Or think of the looks my soul so craves, That never may be mine? That never may be mine. Tho' my heart with hope may pant, And mourn that some with such are blest, Whilst I of such am scant. I watch, watch, watch Watch, watch, watch, That strop I so often whet ; Of what I ne'er may get. |