Spaces:
Sleeping
Sleeping
| Produced by Emmy, Tor Martin Kristiansen and the Online | |
| Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This | |
| file was produced from images generously made available | |
| by The Internet Archive) | |
| THE.RUBAIYAT OF.A.BACHELOR | |
| [Illustration] | |
| [Illustration: PROMISED TO PAY A WOMAN'S BILLS FOR LIFE.] | |
| THE.RUBAIYAT OF.A.BACHELOR | |
| [Illustration] | |
| BY HELEN ROWLAND | |
| DECORATIONS .... BY .... HAROLD .... SPEAKMAN | |
| DODGE PUBLISHING COMPANY | |
| NEW YORK | |
| COPYRIGHT 1915 BY | |
| DODGE PUBLISHING COMPANY | |
| TO | |
| MY HUSBAND | |
| WILLIAM HILL-BRERETON | |
| THIS LITTLE BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY | |
| DEDICATED | |
| WAKE! For the Spring has scattered into flight | |
| The Vows of Lent, and bids the heart be light. | |
| Bring on the Roast, and take the Fish away! | |
| The Season calls--and Woman's eyes are bright! | |
| BEFORE the phantom of Pale Winter died, | |
| Methought the Voice of Spring within me cried, | |
| "When Hymen's rose-decked altars glow within, | |
| Why nods the laggard _Bachelor_ outside?" | |
| AND, at the Signal, I who stood before | |
| In idle musing, shouted, "Say no more! | |
| You know how little while we have to Love-- | |
| And Love's light Hand is knocking at the door!" | |
| NOW, the New Moon reviving old desires, | |
| The gallant Youth to Sentiment aspires; | |
| And ere he saunters forth on conquest bent, | |
| Himself, like unto Solomon, attires. | |
| [Illustration: HIS WINTER GARMENTS HUNG--WHERE, NO ONE KNOWS!] | |
| HOW blithely through the smiling throng he goes, | |
| His Winter garments hung--where, no one knows! | |
| A Symphony in radiant scarfs and hose, | |
| Wrought t'inspire a maiden's "Ah's!" and "Oh's!" | |
| INTO a new Flirtation, why not knowing, | |
| Nor whence, his heart with madness overflowing; | |
| Then out of it--and thence, without a pause, | |
| Into _another_, willy-nilly blowing. | |
| WHAT if the conscience feel, perchance, a sting? | |
| No danger waits him--save the _Wedding Ring_. | |
| A Kiss is not the sin that yesterday | |
| It was--for that was _Lent_, and this is _Spring_! | |
| SOME simple ones may sigh for wealth or fame, | |
| And some, for the sweet Domestic Life, and tame; | |
| But ah! give me a supper, a cigar, | |
| A charming Woman--and the old Love-Game! | |
| SOME blue points on the half-shell, in a row, | |
| Some iced champagne, a melting bird--and Thou | |
| Beside me flirting, 'neath a picture hat-- | |
| Oh, single life were Paradise enow! | |
| A COZY-CORNER tete-a-tete--what bliss! | |
| A murmured word, a sigh, a stolen kiss-- | |
| Ah, tell me, does the Promised Paradise | |
| Hold anything one-half so sweet as this? | |
| AND yet, since I am made of common clay, | |
| One charm I'd add to this divine array; | |
| Lord make me _careful_, and whate'er betide, | |
| Without proposing, let me slip away! | |
| FOR, some I've known, the bravest and the best, | |
| Who laughed at Love, as but an idle jest, | |
| Have, one by one, walked straight into the Net, | |
| Helpless, before the _Cozy Corner_ test! | |
| THUS, oft, beside some damsel fond and fair, | |
| I've sat, thrilled by the perfume of her hair, | |
| And madly longed to murmur, lip-to-lip, | |
| "Beloved, marry me!"--but did not dare! | |
| FOR some I've wooed, when I felt blithe and gay, | |
| Have looked _so different_, when we met next day, | |
| That I have simply stopped to say, "So charmed!" | |
| And shuddering, sped hurriedly away! | |
| LOOK to the Married Men! Alas, their gains | |
| Are neither here nor there, for all their pains. | |
| For wedding bells are rung--and loudly rung | |
| To drown the clanking of the _Marriage Chains_! | |
| A MOMENT'S halt--a little word or two-- | |
| And you have done what you can ne'er undo; | |
| Promised to pay a Woman's bills for life-- | |
| _Anchored_ yourself--and there's an end of you! | |
| AND we, who now make merry at the gloom | |
| Of those who thus have gone to meet their doom-- | |
| May we, ourselves, not some day follow suit, | |
| Ourselves to be the Butt of jests--for whom? | |
| INDEED, 'tis better to have loved and lost-- | |
| Taken the Kiss and fled, at any cost, | |
| Than to have loved and married, and for aye, | |
| Thereafter, by a _Woman_, to be bossed. | |
| WITH me, along that strip of Broadway strewn | |
| With lovely maids, each radiant afternoon, | |
| And think, of all the thousands you behold, | |
| That you can marry one--and _only one_! | |
| BUT, if the lip I kiss, the hand I press, | |
| Upon the morrow seem to charm me less, | |
| Ah well, am I not still a _Bachelor_, | |
| And thus, entitled to--another Guess? | |
| [Illustration: SOME FOR THE COMFORTS OF A CLUB MAY SIGH.] | |
| SOME for the comforts of a club may sigh, | |
| And some for a hermit's lonely life. Not I! | |
| Give me a cozy hearthside, and a Girl | |
| Always "at home" when _I_ chance by! | |
| HER cushioned chair a spot where I may curl | |
| My weary form, and rest, beyond the whirl | |
| Of madd'ning cares; to rise at half-past ten, | |
| And call next night--upon _another girl_! | |
| WHY, if a man can thus, at ease, abide | |
| Each evening by a different damsel's side, | |
| Were't not a shame--were't not a shame, for him | |
| To any _one_, forever to be tied? | |
| AND so, the girls I've set my heart upon, | |
| I've flattered, wooed a little--and anon, | |
| Just as they thought to slip the fatal Noose | |
| About my neck, behold--the Bird had flown! | |
| FOR this the argument that I submit-- | |
| Refute it, if you can, with all your wit! | |
| That Luck in Love, for such as you and I, | |
| Consists in safely keeping _out_ of it! | |
| * * * * * | |
| THIS morn, I've quaffed at least a quart or more | |
| Of water--yet am thirsty as before; | |
| And that dark taste still lingers in the mouth | |
| With which, last night, I reformation swore. | |
| [Illustration: SOME ANGEL, WITH A SAVING DRINK.] | |
| YET, when some Angel, with a saving drink | |
| Of iced Nepenthe comes, I shall not shrink; | |
| But, having drunk of it, shall feel again | |
| As good and noble as before, I think. | |
| EACH morn some fresh repentance brings, you say? | |
| Yes--but where leaves the vows of Yesterday? | |
| For I shall make and break them all, again, | |
| When Time hath taken _this_ Headache away. | |
| WHAT if my conscience seem an idle joke-- | |
| My good resolves all disappear in smoke? | |
| This thought remains--and is it not enough?-- | |
| _I do not wear the Matrimonial Yoke!_ | |
| NAY! There is no one waiting at the door, | |
| Whene'er I wander in at half-past four, | |
| No one to question, no one to accuse, | |
| No one, my shocking frailty to deplore! | |
| NO one to greet me with her tear-stained eyes, | |
| No one to doubt my quaint, fantastic lies, | |
| No one my foolish looks to criticize-- | |
| Ah, but the knots, the KNOTS in marriage-ties! | |
| OH Friend, could you and I, somehow, conspire, | |
| To grasp the Matrimonial Scheme entire, | |
| Would we not shatter it to bits--and then, | |
| Make of its bonds a rousing Funeral Pyre? | |
| MYSELF, when young, did eagerly frequent | |
| The weddings of my friends on Bondage bent; | |
| But evermore thanked Fate, when I escaped | |
| Scot-free, by that same door wherein I went. | |
| INTO the fatal compact, why not knowing, | |
| I've seen them go, nor dream where they were going; | |
| Then out again, with shouts of "Westward, ho!" | |
| The bitter seeds of _Alimony_ sowing! | |
| AH well, they say that, sometimes, side by side, | |
| A cat and dog may peacefully abide. | |
| Perhaps--perhaps. But that is only when | |
| That cat and dog are not together tied! | |
| OFT, to some patient married man I turn, | |
| The secret of his dumb content to learn, | |
| But lip-to-ear, he mutters, "Fool, beware! | |
| _This_ is the path, whence there is no return!" | |
| [Illustration: BUT, LIP-TO-EAR, HE MUTTERS, "FOOL, BEWARE!"] | |
| OH, threats of Hell, and hopes of Paradise! | |
| One thing is certain--when a Husband dies, | |
| No wife shall greet him _there_ with "Where's" or "Why's" | |
| Nor mock with laughter his most subtle lies! | |
| NO matter whether up or down he goes, | |
| He neither cares nor questions, I suppose; | |
| Since Death can hold no bitterness for him, | |
| Because--because--Oh well, he knows, HE KNOWS! | |
| WOULD you the spangle of existence spend | |
| In Matrimony? Slow about, my Friend! | |
| A maiden's hair is more oft false than true, | |
| And on the chemist may her blush depend. | |
| A MAIDEN'S hair is more oft false than true! | |
| Aye, and her Modiste is, perchance, the clue, | |
| Could you but know it, to her sylph-like grace, | |
| And, peradventure, to her _Figure_, too. | |
| WHY, for this NOTHING, then, should you provoke | |
| The gods, or lightly don the galling yoke | |
| Of unpermitted pleasure, under pain | |
| Of Alimony-until-Death, if broke? | |
| WHY, when to-day your bills are promptly paid, | |
| Assume the whims of some capricious maid, | |
| Incur the debts you never did contract, | |
| And yet must settle? Oh, the sorry trade! | |
| [Illustration: I SWORE--BUT WAS I SOBER WHEN I SWORE?] | |
| TO "settle down and marry," oft of yore, | |
| I swore--but was I sober when I swore? | |
| And then there came another girl--and I | |
| Turned gaily to the old Love-Game, once more. | |
| AND, much as I repented things like this, | |
| And fondly dreamed of sweet Domestic Bliss, | |
| I sometimes wonder what a wife can give, | |
| One half so thrilling as a stolen kiss! | |
| YET, if the hair should vanish from my brow, | |
| My girth, in time, to great dimensions grow-- | |
| If youth's sweet-scented "Buds" should pass me by, | |
| Accounting me an antiquated beau-- | |
| WHY then, some winged angel, ere too late-- | |
| Some maiden verging onto twenty-eight-- | |
| Will gladly take what's left of me, I trow, | |
| And, leading me to wedlock, thank her Fate! | |
| * * * * * | |
| ALAS, for those who may to-day prepare | |
| The wedding trousseau for the morrow's wear, | |
| A voice of warning cried, "There's many a slip | |
| Betwixt the Altar and the Solitaire!" | |
| INTO this pact, man glides like water flowing, | |
| But _out_ of it is not such easy going; | |
| For they, who once were simple, guileless things, | |
| In Breach-of-Promise lore are now more knowing. | |
| [Illustration: WHAT! WOULD YOU CAST A LOVING WOMAN HENCE?] | |
| WHAT! Would you cast a loving Woman hence? | |
| Thou, Fickle One, prepare for penitence! | |
| Full many a golden ducat shall you pay | |
| To drown the memory of such insolence. | |
| AND every note, that, in your cups, you write, | |
| In cold black Type, perchance shall see the light; | |
| While all the World, across its coffee urn, | |
| Shall titter gaily at the sorry sight. | |
| AH yes! For all the papers, which discussed | |
| Your wedding plans, shall turn your cake to crust, | |
| Publish your letters and your photographs, | |
| And trail your Egotism in the dust! | |
| THE Opera Queens, that men have wooed and won, | |
| Have loved them for a while, and then--anon, | |
| Like snow upon Broadway, with lightsome "touch," | |
| Annexed their millions, and alas, have flown! | |
| OH look you, in the long and varied list | |
| Of Millionaires thus rifled and dismissed, | |
| How, rich man, after rich man, bode his hour, | |
| Then went his way, to swell the golden grist. | |
| WHAT Diva's rubies ever glow so red | |
| As when some Gilded Chappie hath been bled? | |
| And every diamond the Show Girl wears, | |
| Dropped in her lap, when some Fool lost his head. | |
| AND those who hung around the green-room door, | |
| And those who backed the Show and paid the score, | |
| Alike, to no such "Angels" have been turned, | |
| As, once repentant, men feel sorry for. | |
| OH, my Good Fellow, keep the cash, that clears | |
| To-day of unpaid debts and future fears. | |
| To-morrow! Why, to-morrow, you may be, | |
| Yourself, with Yesterday's cast-off millionaires. | |
| THEN, make the most of what you still may spend, | |
| Ere you, too, into bankruptcy descend, | |
| Bill upon bill, and under bill, to lie, | |
| Sans Cash, sans Love, sans Lady--What an end! | |
| * * * * * | |
| WASTE not your evenings in the vain pursuit | |
| Of this or that girl. Bittersweet the fruit! | |
| Better be jocund with them, one and all, | |
| And loving _many_, thus your love dilute. | |
| SOME, with vivacity have sought to charm | |
| Away my fears, and still my soul's alarm; | |
| To win me subtly, with a smile or sigh, | |
| Or sweet appealing touch upon the arm. | |
| OTHERS have tempted me with festive cheer, | |
| And Chafing-dish Concoctions, quaint and queer; | |
| With dear, domestic airs have plied their arts-- | |
| Yet, all their wiles were neither there nor here! | |
| BUT when _Platonic Friendship_ they have tried, | |
| Then, to the gods for Mercy, have I cried! | |
| For, in the Husband-hunt, all other snares | |
| Sink into Nothingness, _this_ game beside! | |
| THERE is the Trap, from which you may not flee; | |
| There is the Net, through which no man may see. | |
| Some jest at "love," some talk of "chums," and then, | |
| Into the Consomme, for thee and me! | |
| [Illustration: THERE IS THE TRAP, FROM WHICH YOU MAY NOT FLEE.] | |
| WHETHER to Church, or to the Magistrate, | |
| You follow, after that, 'tis all too late! | |
| For, from your Pipe-dream, you, at last, shall wake, | |
| A MARRIED MAN, to rail in vain at Fate! | |
| LOVE, but the Vision of a dear desire! | |
| Marriage, the Ashes, whence has fled the fire! | |
| Cast into chains which you, yourself, have forged! | |
| Caught, like a sheep upon a stray barbed wire! | |
| * * * * * | |
| OH Thou, who first the Apple Tree didst shake, | |
| And e'en in Eden flirted with the Snake, | |
| Still, as in that first moment 'neath the Bough, | |
| Dost thou, to-day, of Man a puppet make! | |
| BUT this I know--whether the one True Mate, | |
| Or just some Fluffy Thing with hook and bait, | |
| Eve-like, tempt _me_--one flash of Common Sense, | |
| And all her sorcery shall be too late! | |
| THEN, let her never look for me, again; | |
| For, once escaped, how many moons shall wane, | |
| And wax and wane full oft, while still she looks | |
| Down that same street--but ah, for ME, in vain! | |
| YET, much as I have played the Infidel, | |
| If, as the fated Pitcher to the Well, | |
| _Too oft_ to Love's empyrean Font I stray, | |
| To fall, at last, beneath some Siren's spell, | |
| THEN, in your mercy, Friend, forbear to smile, | |
| And with the grape my last few hours beguile, | |
| Or, let me in some Caravanserie, | |
| My Cynic's soul to _shackles_ reconcile. | |
| AND when, with me, some fair, triumphant lass, | |
| Up to the rose-decked Altar-Rail shall pass, | |
| And, in her joyous errand, reach the spot, | |
| Where we're made _One_--oh, drain a silent glass! | |
| Tamam. | |
| [Illustration: T A M A M] | |
| End of Project Gutenberg's The Rubaiyat of a Bachelor, by Helen Rowland | |