Men prize the heartless hound who quits dry-eyed his
native land;
Who wags a mercenary tail and licks a tyrant hand.
The leal true cat they prize not, that if e’er
compell’d to roam
Still flies, when let out of the bag, precipitately
home.
They call me cruel. Do I know if mouse or songbird
feels?
I only know they make me light and salutary meals:
And if, as ’tis my nature to, ere I devour I
tease ’em,
Why should a low-bred gardener’s boy pursue
me with a besom?
Should china fall or chandeliers, or anything but
stocks —
Nay stocks, when they’re in flowerpots—the
cat expects hard knocks:
Should ever anything be missed—milk, coals,
umbrellas, brandy —
The cat’s pitch’d into with a boot or
any thing that’s handy.
“I remember, I remember,” how one night
I “fleeted by,”
And gain’d the blessed tiles and gazed into
the cold clear sky.
“I remember, I remember, how my little lovers
came;”
And there, beneath the crescent moon, play’d
many a little game.
They fought—by good St. Catharine, ’twas
a fearsome sight to see
The coal-black crest, the glowering orbs, of one gigantic
He.
Like bow by some tall bowman bent at Hastings or Poictiers,
His huge back curved, till none observed a vestige
of his ears:
He stood, an ebon crescent, flouting that ivory moon;
Then raised the pibroch of his race, the Song without
a Tune;
Gleam’d his white teeth, his mammoth tail waved
darkly to and fro,
As with one complex yell he burst, all claws, upon
the foe.
It thrills me now, that final Miaow—that
weird unearthly din:
Lone maidens heard it far away, and leap’d out
of their skin.
A potboy from his den o’erhead peep’d
with a scared wan face;
Then sent a random brickbat down, which knock’d
me into space.
Nine days I fell, or thereabouts: and, had we
not nine lives,
I wis I ne’er had seen again thy sausage-shop,
St. Ives!
Had I, as some cats have, nine tails, how gladly I
would lick
The hand, and person generally, of him who heaved
that brick!
For me they fill the milkbowl up, and cull the choice
sardine:
But ah! I nevermore shall be the cat I once have
been!
The memories of that fatal night they haunt me even
now:
In dreams I see that rampant He, and tremble at that
Miaow.
Companions.
A tale of A Grandfather.
By the author of “Dewy
memories,” &c.
I know not of what we ponder’d
Or made pretty
pretence to talk,
As, her hand within mine, we wander’d
Tow’rd the
pool by the limetree walk,
While the dew fell in showers from the passion flowers
And the blush-rose bent on her stalk.
I cannot recall her figure:
Was it regal as
Juno’s own?
Or only a trifle bigger
Than the elves
who surround the throne
Of the Faery Queen, and are seen, I ween,
By mortals in dreams alone?