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A SPRING POEM FROM BION

Eugene Field

One asketh:

"Tell me, Myrson, tell me true:

What's the season pleaseth you?

Is it summer suits you best,

When from harvest toil we rest?

Is it autumn with its glory

Of all surfeited desires?

Is it winter, when with story

And with song we hug our fires?

Or is spring most fair to you--

Come, good Myrson, tell me true!"

 

Another answereth:

"What the gods in wisdom send

We should question not, my friend;

Yet, since you entreat of me,

I will answer reverently:

Me the summertime displeases,

For its sun is scorching hot;

Autumn brings such dire diseases

That perforce I like it not;

As for biting winter, oh!

How I hate its ice and snow!

 

"But, thrice welcome, kindly spring,

With the myriad gifts you bring!

Not too hot nor yet too cold,

Graciously your charms unfold--

Oh, your days are like the dreaming

Of those nights which love beseems,

And your nights have all the seeming

Of those days of golden dreams!

Heaven smiles down on earth, and then

Earth smiles up to heaven again!"

 

 

 

BÉRANGER'S "TO MY OLD COAT."

 

Still serve me in my age, I pray,

As in my youth, O faithful one;

For years I've brushed thee every day--

Could Socrates have better done?

What though the fates would wreak on thee

The fulness of their evil art?

Use thou philosophy, like me--

And we, old friend, shall never part!

 

I think--I _often_ think of it--

The day we twain first faced the crowd;

My roistering friends impeached your fit,

But you and I were very proud!

Those jovial friends no more make free

With us (no longer new and smart),

But rather welcome you and me

As loving friends that should not part.

 

The patch? Oh, yes--one happy night--

"Lisette," says I, "it's time to go"--

She clutched this sleeve to stay my flight,

Shrieking: "What! leave so early? No!"

To mend the ghastly rent she'd made,

Three days she toiled, dear patient heart!

And I--right willingly I staid--

Lisette decreed we should not part!

 

No incense ever yet profaned

This honest, shiny warp of thine,

Nor hath a courtier's eye disdained

Thy faded hue and quaint design;

Let servile flattery be the price

Of ribbons in the royal mart--

A roadside posie shall suffice

For us two friends that must not part!

 

Fear not the recklessness of yore

Shall re-occur to vex thee now;

Alas, I am a youth no more--

I'm old and sere, and so art thou!

So bide with me unto the last

And with thy warmth caress this heart

That pleads, by memories of the Past,

That two such friends should never part!