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ONE OF THE UNFAIR SEX.

  She stood at the ticket-seller's     Serenely removing her glove,   While hundreds of strugglers and yellers,     And some that were good at a shove,     Were clustered behind her like bats in       a cave and unwilling to speak their love.   At night she still stood at that window     Endeavoring her money to reach;   The crowds right and left, how they sinned—O,     How dreadfully sinned in their speech!     Ten miles either way they extended       their lines, the historians teach.   She stands there to-day—legislation     Has failed to remove her. The trains   No longer pull up at that station;     And over the ghastly remains     Of the army that waited and died of       old age fall the snows and the rains.

THE LORD'S PRAYER ON A COIN.

  Upon this quarter-eagle's leveled face,   The Lord's Prayer, legibly inscribed, I trace.   "Our Father which"—the pronoun there is funny,   And shows the scribe to have addressed the money—   "Which art in Heaven"—an error this, no doubt:   The preposition should be stricken out.   Needless to quote; I only have designed   To praise the frankness of the pious mind   Which thought it natural and right to join,   With rare significancy, prayer and coin.

A LACKING FACTOR.

  "You acted unwisely," I cried, "as you see     By the outcome." He calmly eyed me:   "When choosing the course of my action," said he,     "I had not the outcome to guide me."

THE ROYAL JESTER.

  Once on a time, so ancient poets sing,   There reigned in Godknowswhere a certain king.   So great a monarch ne'er before was seen:   He was a hero, even to his queen,
  In whose respect he held so high a place   That none was higher,—nay, not even the ace.   He was so just his Parliament declared   Those subjects happy whom his laws had spared;   So wise that none of the debating throng   Had ever lived to prove him in the wrong;   So good that Crime his anger never feared,   And Beauty boldly plucked him by the beard;   So brave that if his army got a beating   None dared to face him when he was retreating.   This monarch kept a Fool to make his mirth,   And loved him tenderly despite his worth.   Prompted by what caprice I cannot say,   He called the Fool before the throne one day   And to that jester seriously said:   "I'll abdicate, and you shall reign instead,   While I, attired in motley, will make sport   To entertain your Majesty and Court."   'T was done and the Fool governed. He decreed   The time of harvest and the time of seed;   Ordered the rains and made the weather clear,   And had a famine every second year;   Altered the calendar to suit his freak,   Ordaining six whole holidays a week;   Religious creeds and sacred books prepared;   Made war when angry and made peace when scared.   New taxes he inspired; new laws he made;   Drowned those who broke them, who observed them, flayed,   In short, he ruled so well that all who'd not   Been starved, decapitated, hanged or shot   Made the whole country with his praises ring,   Declaring he was every inch a king;   And the High Priest averred 't was very odd   If one so competent were not a god.   Meantime, his master, now in motley clad,   Wore such a visage, woeful, wan and sad,   That some condoled with him as with a brother   Who, having lost a wife, had got another.   Others, mistaking his profession, often   Approached him to be measured for a coffin.   For years this highborn jester never broke   The silence—he was pondering a joke.   At last, one day, in cap-and-bells arrayed,   He strode into the Council and displayed   A long, bright smile, that glittered in the gloom   Like a gilt epithet within a tomb.   Posing his bauble like a leader's staff,   To give the signal when (and why) to laugh,   He brought it down with peremptory stroke   And simultaneously cracked his joke!   I can't repeat it, friends. I ne'er could school   Myself to quote from any other fooclass="underline"   A jest, if it were worse than mine, would start   My tears; if better, it would break my heart.   So, if you please, I'll hold you but to state   That royal Jester's melancholy fate.   The insulted nation, so the story goes,   Rose as one man—the very dead arose,   Springing indignant from the riven tomb,   And babes unborn leapt swearing from the womb!   All to the Council Chamber clamoring went,   By rage distracted and on vengeance bent.   In that vast hall, in due disorder laid,   The tools of legislation were displayed,   And the wild populace, its wrath to sate,   Seized them and heaved them at the Jester's pate.   Mountains of writing paper; pools and seas   Of ink, awaiting, to become decrees,   Royal approval—and the same in stacks   Lay ready for attachment, backed with wax;   Pens to make laws, erasers to amend them;   With mucilage convenient to extend them;   Scissors for limiting their application,   And acids to repeal all legislation—   These, flung as missiles till the air was dense,   Were most offensive weapons of offense,   And by their aid the Fool was nigh destroyed.   They ne'er had been so harmlessly employed.   Whelmed underneath a load of legal cap,   His mouth egurgitating ink on tap,   His eyelids mucilaginously sealed,   His fertile head by scissors made to yield   Abundant harvestage of ears, his pelt,   In every wrinkle and on every welt,   Quickset with pencil-points from feet to gills   And thickly studded with a pride of quills,   The royal Jester in the dreadful strife   Was made (in short) an editor for life!   An idle tale, and yet a moral lurks   In this as plainly as in greater works.   I shall not give it birth: one moral here   Would die of loneliness within a year.