There’s a lodger lives on the first
floor,
(My lodgings are up in the
garret,)
At night and at morn he taketh a horn
And calleth his neighbors
to share it,—
A horn so long, and a horn so strong,
I wonder how they can bear
it.
I don’t mean to say that he drinks,
For that were a joke or a
scandal;
But, every one knows it, he night and
day blows it;—
I wish he’d blow out
like a candle!
His horn is so long, and he blows it so
strong,
He would make Handel fly off
the handle.
By taking a horn I don’t hint
That he swigs either rum,
gin, or whiskey;
It’s we who drink in his
din worse than gin,
His strains that attempt to
be frisky,
But are grievously sad.—A donkey,
I add,
Is as musical, braying in
his key.
It’s a puzzle to know what he’s
at;
I could pity him, if it were
madness:
I never yet knew him to play a tune through,
And it gives me more anger
than sadness
To hear his horn stutter and stammer to
utter
Its various abortions of badness.
At his wide open window he stands,
Overlooking his bit of a garden;
One can see the great ass at one end of
his brass
Blaring out, never asking
your pardon:
This terrible blurting he thinks is not
hurting,
As long as his own ear-drums
harden.
He thinks, I’ve no doubt, it is
sweet,
While thus Time and Tune he
is flaying;
The little house-sparrows feel all through
their marrows
The jar and the fuss of his
playing,—
The windows all shaking, the babies all
waking,
The very dogs howling and
baying.
One note out of twenty he hits,
And, cheered, blows pianos
like fortes.
His time is his own. He goes sounding
alone,
(A sort of Columbus or Cortes,)
On a perilous ocean, without any notion
Whereabouts in the dim deep
his port is.
Like a man late from club, he has lost
His key, and around stumbles
moping,
Touching this, trying that, now a sharp,
now a flat,
Till he strikes on the note
he is hoping,
And a terrible blare at the end of the
air
Shows he’s got through
at last with his groping.
There,—he’s finished,—at
least, for a while;
He is tired, or come to his
senses;
And out of his horn shakes the drops that
were borne
By the winds of his musical
frenzies.
There’s a rest, thank our stars,
of ninety-nine bars,
Ere the tempest of sound recommences.
When all the bad players are sent
Where all their false notes
are protested,
I am sure that Old Nick will play him
a trick,
When his bad trump and he
are arrested,
And down in the regions of Discord’s
own legions
His head with two French horns
be crested.
* * * * *