Settin’ down, when—Jeemses-whizz!
Whole durn winder-sash fell
out!
An’ there laid Doc McGriff, and
Mike
A-straddlin’ him, all bloody-like,
An’ both a-gittin’
down to biz!—
An’ I wuz a-standin’ as clost
to ’em
As me an’
you is!
I wuz the on’y man aroun’—
(Durn old-fogy town!
’Peared more like, to
me,
Sund’y
’an Saturd’y!)
Dog come ’crost the
road
An’ tuck
a smell
An’
put right back;
Mishler driv by ’ith
a load
O’ cantalo’pes
he couldn’t sell—
Too
mad, ’y jack!
To even ast
What wuz up, as he went past!
Weather most outrageous hot!—
Fairly hear it
sizz
Roun’ Dock an’ Mike—till
Dock he shot,
An’ Mike
he slacked that grip o’ his
An’ fell,
all spraddled out. Dock riz
‘Bout half up, a-spittin’
red,
An’ shuck his head—
An’ I wuz a-standin’ as clost
to ’em
As me an’ you is!
An’ Dock he says,
A-whisperin’-like,—
“It hain’t no
use
A-tryin’!—Mike
He’s jes’
ripped my daylights loose!—
Git that blame-don fiddler to
Let up, an’ come out here—You
Got some burryin’ to do,—
Mike makes one, an’
I expects
In ten seconds I’ll make two!”
And he drapped back, where
he riz,
’Crost Mike’s body, black
and blue,
Like a great big letter X!—
An’ I wuz a-standin’ as clost
to ’em
As me an’ you is!
THE DRUM.
O the drum!
There is some
Intonation
in thy grum
Monotony of utterance that strikes the
spirit dumb,
As we hear
Through the clear
And
unclouded atmosphere,
Thy palpitating syllables roll in upon
the car!
There’s a part
Of the art
Of
thy music-throbbing heart
That thrills a something in us that awakens
with a start,
And in rhyme
With the chime
And
exactitude of time,
Goes marching on to glory to thy melody
sublime.
And the guest
Of the breast
That
thy rolling robs of rest
Is a patriotic spirit as a Continental
dressed;
And he looms
From the glooms
Of
a century of tombs,
And the blood he spilled at Lexington
in living beauty blooms.
And his eyes
Wear the guise
Of
a purpose pure and wise,
As the love of them is lifted to a something
in the skies
That is bright
Red and white,
With
a blur of starry light,
As it laughs in silken ripples to the
breezes day and night.
There are deep
Hushes creep
O’er
the pulses as they leap,
As thy tumult, fainter growing, on the
silence falls asleep,
While the prayer
Rising there
Wills
the sea and earth and air
As a heritage to Freedom’s sons
and daughters everywhere.