Eugene Field, a Study in Heredity and Contradictions — Volume 2 by Slason Thompson
page 50 of 313 (15%)
page 50 of 313 (15%)
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and experience under any and all conditions. His fondness for
monologue frequently exposed him to raillery, like the above, in the column where Field daily held a monopoly of table talk. But the episode with the "Garrulous Sir Barbour" was not the rhyme of chief interest (to Field and me) forwarded by "this courier." This was confided to a third envelope even more elaborately addressed and embellished than either of the others, as follows: For the valorous, joyous, Triumphant and Glorious Knight, The ever gentle and Courteous Flower of Chivalry, Cream of Knight Errantry and Pole Star of Manly virtues, _Sir Slosson Thompson_, who doth for the nonce sojourn at _Mackinac Island, Michigan_, Where under the guise of a lone Fisherman he is regaled with sumptuous cheer and divers rejoicings, wherein he doth right merrily disport. The rhyme under this cover in which the impecunious knight did not "overpraise" himself bore the title "How the Good Knight protected Sir Slosson's Credit," and was well calculated to fill me with forebodings. It ran in this wise: _One midnight hour, Sir Ballantyne Addressed Old Field: "Good comrade mine, The times i' faith are drear; Since you have not a son to spend |
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