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Page 5
... LADIES OF ST . JAMES'S Dobson 29 A SONG OF THE FOUR SEASONS AT HER WINDOW ROTTEN Row LOULOU AND HER CAT Dobson 30 Locker 32 Locker · · 33 OUR BALL Locker Praed 34 · · 35 317452 6 CONTENTS . PAGE THE MILKMAID BEAUTY AND TIME Dobson.
... LADIES OF ST . JAMES'S Dobson 29 A SONG OF THE FOUR SEASONS AT HER WINDOW ROTTEN Row LOULOU AND HER CAT Dobson 30 Locker 32 Locker · · 33 OUR BALL Locker Praed 34 · · 35 317452 6 CONTENTS . PAGE THE MILKMAID BEAUTY AND TIME Dobson.
Page 6
... GOOD - NIGHT , BABETTE Dobson 64 OUR PHOTOGRAPHS Locker 66 TO MY GRANDMOTHER Locker 66 SKETCH OF A YOUNG LADY FIVE MONTHS OLD Praed SCHOOL AND SCHOOLFELLOWS 68 Praed 888888 70 POEMS BY THE OLD SEDAN CHAIR . What's not destroy'd.
... GOOD - NIGHT , BABETTE Dobson 64 OUR PHOTOGRAPHS Locker 66 TO MY GRANDMOTHER Locker 66 SKETCH OF A YOUNG LADY FIVE MONTHS OLD Praed SCHOOL AND SCHOOLFELLOWS 68 Praed 888888 70 POEMS BY THE OLD SEDAN CHAIR . What's not destroy'd.
Page 8
... Lady Codille , for my Lady Bellair , It has waited , and waited , that old Sedan chair ! Oh , the scandals it knows ! Oh , the tales it could tell hands , With his cinnamon coat , with his laced solitaire , As he lifts her out light ...
... Lady Codille , for my Lady Bellair , It has waited , and waited , that old Sedan chair ! Oh , the scandals it knows ! Oh , the tales it could tell hands , With his cinnamon coat , with his laced solitaire , As he lifts her out light ...
Page 15
... lady to the place , Dove - eyed , dove - robed , and something wan and pale- An inner beauty shining from her face . She , as if listless with a lonely love , Straying among the alleys with a book , - spread His gold - green glory ...
... lady to the place , Dove - eyed , dove - robed , and something wan and pale- An inner beauty shining from her face . She , as if listless with a lonely love , Straying among the alleys with a book , - spread His gold - green glory ...
Page 19
... her honey - moon Slow rising hither ? Oh , lady , wan and marvellous ! How often have we communed thus ! Sweet memory shall dwell with us , And joy go with her . Frederick Locker . WE have loiter'd and laugh'd in the flow- ery croft.
... her honey - moon Slow rising hither ? Oh , lady , wan and marvellous ! How often have we communed thus ! Sweet memory shall dwell with us , And joy go with her . Frederick Locker . WE have loiter'd and laugh'd in the flow- ery croft.
Common terms and phrases
1892 BY FREDERICK Angel Araminta Austin Dobson BABETTE sings BABY Ball Belle Marquise bliss blooms the eglantine blue Boots Bride brow celadon charm cheek Childhood COPYRIGHT 1892 COUSINS Cradle curls d'Amour DAINTY BEAUTY STEPT dance Dear dimpled Dolly Dorothy eyes fair feet filly flower FRANK FREDERICK A.STOKES COMPANY Frederick Locker frown'd Geraldine's glory Glove glow gout grace green green umbrella hair hand happy hear heart Heaven James's kiss knew ladies of St laugh on to-day laugh'd lida Lily lips look look'd Love's M'sieu Maud Humphrey milkmaids morning NAIADS Neighbour NELLIE nineteen or twenty o'er old Sedan chair once Painted by Maud Pall Mall Phyl Phyllida POEMS BY DOBSON Pons poor porcelain trifle Puss rhyme slipped smile soft song spray is white sunny sweet taste tell THOU to-morrow Twixt VICAR VIEUXBOIS voice Where's the draught Winthrop wonder'd yeux
Popular passages
Page 24 - Through sunny May, through sultry June, I loved her with a love eternal ; I spoke her praises to the moon, I wrote them to the Sunday JournaL...
Page 24 - She smiled on many just for fun — I knew that there was nothing in it ; I was the first, the only one Her heart had thought of for a minute ; I knew it, for she told me so, In phrase which was divinely moulded; She wrote a charming hand, and oh ! How sweetly all her notes were folded ! Our love was like most other loves — A little glow, a little shiver ; A rosebud and a pair of gloves, And
Page 43 - Some years ago, ere time and taste Had turned our parish topsy-turvy, When Darnel Park was Darnel Waste, And roads as little known as scurvy, The man who lost his way, between St. Mary's Hill and Sandy Thicket, Was always shown across the green, And guided to the Parson's wicket. Back flew the bolt of lissom lath; Fair Margaret, in her tidy kirtle, Led the lorn traveller up the path, Through...
Page 67 - Romney's touch be true, What a lucky dog were you, Grandpapa! Her lips are sweet as love; They are parting! Do they move? Are they dumb ? Her eyes are blue, and beam Beseechingly, and seem To say, "Come!
Page 44 - That Earth is foul, that Heaven is gracious, Without refreshment on the road From Jerome, or from Athanasius; And sure a righteous zeal inspired The hand and head that penned and planned them, For all who understood, admired, And some who did not understand them.
Page 66 - THIS Relative of mine Was she seventy-and-nine When she died ? By the canvas may be seen How she look'd at seventeen, As a Bride. Beneath a summer tree Her maiden reverie Has a charm ; Her ringlets are in taste ; What an arm ! and what a waist For an arm...
Page 33 - You'll come to our Ball; - since we parted, I've thought of you more than I'll say; Indeed, I was half broken-hearted For a week, when they took you away. Fond fancy brought back to my slumbers Our walks on the Ness and the Den, And echoed the musical numbers Which you used to sing to me then. I know the romance, since it's over, 'Twere idle, or worse, to recall; I know you're a terrible rover; But Clarence, you'll come to our Ball!
Page 30 - BEATING Heart ! we come again Where my Love reposes : This is Mabel's window-pane ; These are Mabel's roses. Is she nested ? Does she kneel In the twilight stilly, Lily clad from throat to heel, She, my virgin Lily ? Soon the wan, the wistful stars, Fading, will forsake her ; Elves of light, on beamy bars, Whisper then, and wake her. So AT HER WINDOW 51 Let this friendly pebble plead At her flowery grating ; If she hear me will she heed ? Mabel, I am waiting.
Page 43 - His talk was like a stream which runs With rapid change from rocks to roses : It slipped from politics to puns : It passed from Mahomet to Moses : Beginning with the laws which keep The planets in their radiant courses, And ending with some precept deep For dressing eels or shoeing horses.
Page 34 - Miss Manners, who always abused you, For talking so much about Hock ; And her sister who often amused you, By raving of rebels and Rock ; And something which surely would answer, An heiress quite fresh from Bengal ; — So, though you were seldom a dancer, You'll dance, just for once, at our Ball.