Читать книгу Second Book of Verse - Field Eugene - Страница 14

LOVER'S LANE, SAINT JO

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SAINT JO, Buchanan County,

Is leagues and leagues away;

And I sit in the gloom of this rented room,

And pine to be there to-day.

Yes, with London fog around me

And the bustling to and fro,

I am fretting to be across the sea

In Lover's Lane, Saint Jo.


I would have a brown-eyed maiden

Go driving once again;

And I'd sing the song, as we snailed along,

That I sung to that maiden then:

I purposely say, "as we snailed along,"

For a proper horse goes slow

In those leafy aisles, where Cupid smiles,

In Lover's Lane, Saint Jo.


From her boudoir in the alders

Would peep a lynx-eyed thrush,

And we'd hear her say, in a furtive way,

To the noisy cricket, "Hush!"

To think that the curious creature

Should crane her neck to know

The various things one says and sings

In Lover's Lane, Saint Jo!


But the maples they should shield us

From the gossips of the place;

Nor should the sun, except by pun,

Profane the maiden's face;

And the girl should do the driving,

For a fellow can't, you know,

Unless he's neglectful of what's quite respectful

In Lover's Lane, Saint Jo.


Ah! sweet the hours of springtime,

When the heart inclines to woo,

And it's deemed all right for the callow wight

To do what he wants to do;

But cruel the age of winter,

When the way of the world says no

To the hoary men who would woo again

In Lover's Lane, Saint Jo!


In the Union Bank of London

Are forty pounds or more,

Which I'm like to spend, ere the month shall end,

In an antiquarian store;

But I'd give it all, and gladly,

If for an hour or so

I could feel the grace of a distant place, —

Of Lover's Lane, Saint Jo.


Let us sit awhile, beloved,

And dream of the good old days, —

Of the kindly shade which the maples made

Round the stanch but squeaky chaise;

With your head upon my shoulder,

And my arm about you so,

Though exiles, we shall seem to be

In Lover's Lane, Saint Jo.


Second Book of Verse

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