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THE JAFFA AND JERUSALEM RAILWAY

Eugene Field

A tortuous double iron track; a station here, a station there;

A locomotive, tender, tanks; a coach with stiff reclining chair;

Some postal cars, and baggage, too; a vestibule of patent make;

With buffers, duffers, switches, and the soughing automatic brake--

This is the Orient's novel pride, and Syria's gaudiest modern gem:

The railway scheme that is to ply 'twixt Jaffa and Jerusalem.

 

Beware, O sacred Mooley cow, the engine when you hear its bell;

Beware, O camel, when resounds the whistle's shrill, unholy swell;

And, native of that guileless land, unused to modern travel's snare,

Beware the fiend that peddles books--the awful peanut-boy beware.

Else, trusting in their specious arts, you may have reason to condemn

The traffic which the knavish ply 'twixt Jaffa and Jerusalem.

 

And when, ah, when the bonds fall due, how passing wroth will wax the

state

From Nebo's mount to Nazareth will spread the cry "Repudiate"!

From Hebron to Tiberius, from Jordan's banks unto the sea,

Will rise profuse anathemas against "that ---- monopoly!"

And F.M.B.A. shepherd-folk, with Sockless Jerry leading them,

Will swamp that corporation line 'twixt Jaffa and Jerusalem.

 

 

 

HUGO'S "POOL IN THE FOREST"

 

How calm, how beauteous and how cool--

How like a sister to the skies,

Appears the broad, transparent pool

That in this quiet forest lies.

The sunshine ripples on its face,

And from the world around, above,

It hath caught down the nameless grace

Of such reflections as we love.

 

But deep below its surface crawl

The reptile horrors of the night--

The dragons, lizards, serpents--all

The hideous brood that hate the light;

Through poison fern and slimy weed

And under ragged, jagged stones

They scuttle, or, in ghoulish greed,

They lap a dead man's bleaching bones.

 

And as, O pool, thou dost cajole

With seemings that beguile us well,

So doeth many a human soul

That teemeth with the lusts of hell.