Songs from Vagabondia
the day were shorter, When Mariner B. puts out to sea With the wind in the proper quarter. Or, so they say! But I have my doubts; For the flowers are only human, And the valor and gold of a vagrant bold Were always dear to woman. He dares to boast, along the coast, The beauty of Highland Heather,— How he and she, with night on the sea, Lay out on the hills together. He pilfers from every port of the wind, From April to golden autumn; But the thieving ways of his mortal days Are those his mother taught him. His morals are mixed, but his will is fixed; He prospers after his kind, And follows an instinct, compass-sure, The philosophers call blind. And that is why, when he comes to die, He'll have an easier sentence Than some one I know who thinks just so, And then leaves room for repentance. He never could box the compass round; He doesn't know port from starboard; But he knows the gates of the Sundown Straits, Where the choicest goods are harbored. He never could see the Rule of Three, But he knows a rule of thumb Better than Euclid's, better than yours, Or the teachers' yet to come. He knows the smell of the hydromel As if two and two were five; And hides it away for a year and a day In his own hexagonal hive. Out in the day, hap-hazard, alone, Booms the old vagrant hummer, With only his whim to pilot him Through the splendid vast of summer. He steers and steers on the slant of the gale, Like the fiend or Vanderdecken; And there's never an unknown course to sail But his crazy log can reckon. He drones along with his rough sea-song And the throat of a salty tar, This devil-may-care, till he makes his lair By the light of a yellow star. He looks like a gentleman, lives like a lord, And works like a Trojan hero; Then loafs all winter upon his hoard, With the mercury at zero. 

A SONG BY THE SHORE.

 "Lose and love" is love's first art; So it was with thee and me, For I first beheld thy heart On the night I last saw thee. Pine-woods and mysteries! Sea-sands and sorrows! Hearts fluttered by a breeze That bodes dark morrows, morrows,— Bodes dark morrows! Moonlight in sweet overflow Poured upon the earth and sea! Lovelight with intenser glow In the deeps of thee and me! Clasped hands and silences! Hearts faint and throbbing! The weak wind sighing in the trees! The strong surf sobbing, sobbing,— The strong surf sobbing! 

A HILL SONG.

 Hills where once my love and I Let the hours go laughing by! All your woods and dales are sad,— You have lost your Oread. Falling leaves! Silent woodlands! Half your loveliness is fled. Golden-rod, wither now! Winter winds, 
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