The Glugs of Gosh by C. J. (Clarence James) Dennis
page 40 of 72 (55%)
page 40 of 72 (55%)
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And remark, with an air, "'Tis a very fine day."
"Now ain't he a marvel?" they'd shout. "Hip, Hooray!" "To live," would Sym answer, "To live is to feel!" "And ain't he a poet?" a fat Glug would squeal. Sym had a quaint fancy in phrase and in text; When he'd fed them with one they would howl for the next. Thus he'd cry, "Love is love 1" and the welkin they'd lift With their shouts of surprise at his wonderful gift. He would say "After life, then a Glug must meet death!" And they'd clamour for more ere he took the next breath. But Sym grew aweary of this sort of praise, And he longed to be back with his out-o'-door days, With his feet in the grass and his back to a tree, Rhyming and tinkering, fameless and free. He said so one day to the Mayor of Quog, And declared he'd as lief live the life of a dog. But the Mayor was vexed; for the Movement had grown, And his dreams had of late soared as high as a throne. "Have a care! What is written is written," said he. "And the dullest Glug knows what is written must be. 'Tis the prophet of Gosh who has prophesied it; And 'tis thus that 'tis written by him who so writ: "'Lo, the Tinker of Gosh he shall make him three rhymes: One on the errors and aims of his times, One on the symptoms of sin that he sees, And the third and the last on whatever he please. |
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