A
MORE ANCIENT MARINER
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THE
swarthy bee is a buccaneer,
A burly velveted rover,
Who loves the booming wind in his ear
As he sails the seas of clover.
A
waif of the goblin pirate crew,
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With
not a soul to deplore him,
He steers for the open verge of blue
With the filmy world before him.
His
flimsy sails abroad on the wind
Are shivered with fairy thunder;
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On
a line that sings to the light of his wings
He makes for the lands of wonder.
He
harries the ports of the Hollyhocks,
And levies on poor Sweetbrier;
He drinks the whitest wine of Phlox,
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And
the Rose is his desire.
He
hangs in the Willows a night and a day;
He rifles the Buckwheat patches;
Then battens his store of pelf galore
Under the tautest hatches.
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He woos the Poppy and weds the Peach,
Inveigles Daffodilly,
And then like a tramp abandons each
For the gorgeous Canada Lily.
There's
not a soul in the garden world
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But
wishes 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,
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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, |
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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.
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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,
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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;
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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,
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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.
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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,
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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,
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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,
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| With
the mercury at zero. |
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