Mother Goose for Grown Folks
Adeline Whitney




A. D. T. Whitney

Mother Goose for Grown Folks





INTRODUCTORY


		Somewhere in that uncertain "long ago,"
		Whose dim and vague chronology is all
		That elfin tales or nursery fables know,
		Rose a rare spirit,—keen, and quick, and quaint,—
		Whom by the title, whether fact or feint,
		Mythic or real, Mother Goose we call.

		Of Momus and Minerva sprang the birth
		That gave the laughing oracle to earth:
		A brimming bowl she bears, that, frothing
		high
		With sparkling nonsense, seemeth non-
		sense all;
		Till, the bright, floating syllabub blown by,
		Lo, in its ruby splendor doth upshine
		The crimson radiance of Olympian wine
		By Pallas poured, in Jove's own banquet-
		hall.

		The world was but a baby when she came;
		So to her songs it listened, and her name
		Grew to a word of power, her voice a spell
		With charm to soothe its infant wearying
		well.

		But, in a later and maturer age,
		Developed to a dignity more sage,
		Having its Shakspeares and its Words-
		worths now,
		Its Southeys and its Tennysons, to wear
		A halo on the high and lordly brow,
		Or poet-laurels in the waving hair;
		Its Lowells, Whittiers, Longfellows, to sing
		Ballads of beauty, like the notes of spring,
		The wise and prudent ones to nursery use
		Leave the dear lyrics of old Mother Goose.

		Wisdom of babes,—the nursery Shak-
		speare stilly—
		Cackles she ever with the same good-will:
		Uttering deep counsels in a foolish guise,
		That come as warnings, even to the wise;
		As when, of old, the martial city slept,
		Unconscious of the wily foe that crept
		Under the midnight, till the alarm was heard
		Out from the mouth of Rome's plebeian
		bird.

		Full many a rare and subtile thing hath
		she,
		Undreamed of in the world's philosophy:
		Toss-balls for children hath she humbly
		rolled,
		That shining jewels secretly enfold;
		Sibylline leaves she casteth on the air,
		Twisted in fool's-caps, blown unheeded by,
		That, in their lines grotesque, albeit, bear
		Words of grave truth, and signal prophecy;
		And lurking satire, whose sharp lashes hit
		A world of follies with their homely writ;
		With here and there a roughly uttered hint,
		That makes you wonder at the beauty
		in't;
		As if, along the wayside's dusty edge,
		A hot-house flower had blossomed in a
		hedge.

		So, like brave Layard in old Nineveh,
		Among the memories of ancient song,
		As curious relics, I would fain bestir;
		And gather, if it might be, into strong
		And shapely show, some wealth of its
		lost lore;
		Fragments of Truth's own architecture,
		strewed
		In forms disjointed, whimsical, and rude,
		That yet, to simpler vision, grandly stood
		Complete, beneath the golden light of




BRAHMIC


		If a great poet think he sings,
		Or if the poem think it's sung,
		They do but sport the scattered plumes
		That Mother Goose aside hath flung.

		Far or forgot to me is near:
		Shakspeare and Punch are all the same;
		The vanished thoughts do reappear,
		And shape themselves to fun or fame.

		They use my quills, and leave me out,
		Oblivious that I wear the wings;
		Or that a Goose has been about,
		When every little gosling sings.

		Strong men may strive for grander thought,
		But, six times out of every seven,
		My old philosophy hath taught
		All they can master this side heaven.




LITTLE BOY BLUE


		"Little boy blue! come blow your horn!
		The sheep in the meadow, the cows in the corn!
		Where's little boy blue, that looks after the sheep?
		He's under the hay-mow, fast asleep!"

		Of morals in novels, we've had not a few;
		With now and then novel moralities too;
		And we 've weekly exhortings from pulpit
		to pew;
		But it strikes me,—and so it may chance
		to strike you,—

		Scarce any are better than "Little Boy
		Blue."
		For the veteran dame knows her business:
		right well,
		And her quaint admonitions unerringly
		tell:
		She strings a few odd, careless words in a
		jingle,
		And the sharp, latent truth fairly makes
		your ears tingle.

		"Azure-robed Youth!" she cries, "up to
		thy post!
		And watch, lest thy wealth be all scattered
		and lost:
		Silly thoughts are astray, beyond call of
		the horn,
		And passion breaks loose, and gets into the
		corn!

		Is this the way Conscience looks after her
		sheep?
		In the world's soothing shadow, gone sound-
		ly asleep?"

		Is n't that, now, a sermon? No lengthened
		vexation
		Of heads, and divisions, and argumenta-
		tion,
		But a straightforward leap to the sure ap-
		plication;
		And, though many a longer harangue is
		forgot,
		Of which careful reporters take notes on
		the spot,
		I think,—as the "Deacon" declared of his
		"shay,"
		Put together for lasting for ever and aye,—
		A like immortality holding in view,
		The old lady's discourse will undoubtedly
		"dew"!




HICCOKY, DICCORY, DOCK


		"Hiccory, diccory, dock!
		The mouse ran up the clock.
		The clock struck one, and down she run:
		Hiccory, diccory, dock!"

		She had her simple nest in a safe and cun-
		ning place,
		Away down in the quiet of the deep, old-
		fashioned case.
		A little crevice nibbled out led forth into
		the world,
		And overhead, on busy wheels, the hours
		and minutes whirled.

		High up in mystic glooms of space was
		awful scenery
		Of wires, and weights, and springs, and all
		great Time's machinery;
		But she had nought to do with these; a
		blessed little mouse,
		Whose only care beneath the sun was just
		to keep her house.

		For this was all she knew, or could; with-
		out her, just the same
		The earth's great centre drew the weight;
		the pendulum went and came;
		And days were born, and grew, and died;
		and stroke by stroke were told
		The hours by which the world and men
		are ever growing old.

		It suddenly occurred to her,—it struck her
		all at once,—
		That living among things of power, her-
		self had been a dunce.
		"Somebody winds the clock!" she cried
		"Somebody comes and brings
		An iron finger that feels through and fum-
		bles at the springs;

		"And then it happens; then the buzz is
		stirred afar and near,
		And the hour sounds, and everywhere the
		great world stops to hear.
		I don't think, after all, it seems so hard a
		thing to do.
		I know the way—I might run up and
		make folks listen too."

		She sprang upon the leaden weight; but
		not the merest whit
		Did all her added gravity avail to hurry it.
		She clambered up the steady cord; it wav-
		ered not a hair.
		She got among the earnest wheels; they
		knew not she was there.

		She sat beside the silent bell; the patient
		hammer lay
		Waiting an unseen bidding for the word
		that it should say.
		Only a solemn whisper thrilled the cham-
		bers of the clock,
		And the mouse listened: "Hiccory! hie—
		diccory! die—dock!"

		Something was coming. She had hit the
		ripeness of the time;
		No tiny second was outreached by that ex-
		ultant climb;
		In no wise did the planet turn the faster to
		the sun;
		She only met the instant, but the great
		clock sounded—"One!"
		What then? Did she stand gloriously
		among those central things,
		Her eye upon the vibrant bell, her heel
		upon the springs?
		Was her soul grand in unison with that
		resounding chime,
		And her pulse-beat identical with the high
		pulse of Time?

		Ah, she was little! When the air first
		shattered with that shock,
		Down ran the mouse into her hole. "Hic,
		diccory! die—dock!"
		Too plain to be translated is the truth the
		tale would show,
		Small souls, in solemn upshot, had better
		wait below.




BO-PEEP


		"Little Bo-Peep
		Has lost her sheep,
		And does n't know where to find 'em;
		Let 'em alone,
		And they 'll come home,
		And bring their tails behind 'em."

		Hope beckoned Youth, and bade him keep,
		On Life's broad plain, his shining sheep,
		And while along the sward they came,
		He called them over, each by name;
		This one was Friendship,—that was Health;
		Another Love,—another Wealth;
		One, fat, full-fleeced, was Social Station;
		Another, stainless, Reputation;
		In truth, a goodly flock of sheep,—
		A goodly flock, but hard to keep.

		Youth laid him down beside a fountain;
		Hope spread his wings to scale a mountain;
		And, somehow, Youth fell fast asleep,
		And left his crook to tend the sheep:
		No wonder, as the legend says,
		They took to very crooked ways.

		He woke—to hear a distant bleating,—
		The faithless quadrupeds were fleeting!

		Wealth vanished first, with stealthy tread,
		Then Friendship followed—to be fed,—
		And foolish Love was after led;
		Fair Fame,—alas! some thievish scamp
		Had marked him with his own black stamp!
		And he, with Honor at his heels,
		Was out of sight across the fields.

		Health just hangs doubtful,—distant Hope
		Looks backward from the mountain slope,—
		And Youth himself—no longer Youth—
		Stands face to face with bitter Truth.

		Yet let them go! 'T were all in vain
		To linger here in faith to find 'em;
		Forward!—nor pause to think of pain,—
		Till somewhere, on a nobler plain,
		A surer Hope shall lead the train
		Of joys withheld to come again
		With golden fleeces trailed behind 'em!




SOLOMON GRUNDY


		"Solomon Grundy
		Born on Monday,
		Christened on Tuesday,
		Married on Wednesday,
		Sick on Thursday,
		Worse on Friday,
		Dead on Saturday,
		Buried on Sunday:
		This was the end
		Of Solomon Grundy."

		So sings the unpretentious Muse
		That guides the quill of Mother Goose,
		And in one week of mortal strife
		Presents the epitome of Life:
		But down sits Billy Shakspeare next,
		And, coolly taking up the text,
		His thought pursues the trail of mine,
		And, lo! the "Seven Ages" shine!
		O world! O critics! can't you see
		How Shakspeare plagiarizes me?

		And other bards will after come,
		To echo in a later age,
		"He lived,—he died: behold the sum,
		The abstract of the historian's page"
		Yet once for all the thing was done,
		Complete in Grundy's pilgrimage.

		For not a child upon the knee
		But hath the moral learned of me;
		And measured, in a seven days' span,
		The whole experience of man.




BOWLS


		"Three wise men of Gotham
		Went to sea in a bowl:
		If the bowl had been stronger,
		My song had been longer."

		Mysteriously suggestive! A vague hint,
		Yet a rare touch of most effective art,
		That of the bowl, and all the voyagers in't,
		Tells nothing, save the fact that they did
		start.

		There ending suddenly, with subtle craft,
		The story stands—as 'twere a broken
		shafts—'
		More eloquent in mute signification,
		Than lengthened detail, or precise relation.
		So perfect in its very non-achieving,
		That, of a truth, I cannot help believing
		A rash attempt at paraphrasing it
		May prove a blunder, rather than a hit.

		Still, I must wish the venerable soul
		Had been explicit as regards the bowl
		Was it, perhaps, a railroad speculation?
		Or a big ship to carry all creation,
		That, by some kink of its machinery,
		Failed, in the end, to carry even three?
		Or other fond, erroneous calculation
		Of splendid schemes that died disastrously?

		It must have been of Gotham manufacture;
		Though strangely weak, and liable to frac-
		ture.

		Yet—pause a moment—strangely, did I
		say?
		Scarcely, since, after all, it was but clay;—
		The stuff Hope takes to build her brittle
		boat,
		And therein sets the wisest men afloat.
		Truly, a bark would need be somewhat
		stronger,
		To make the halting history much longer.

		Doubtless, the good Dame did but gener-
		alize,—
		Took a broad glance at human enterprise,
		And earthly expectation, and so drew,
		In pithy lines, a parable most true,—
		Kindly to warn us ere we sail away,
		With life's great venture, in an ark of
		clay,
		Where shivered fragments all around be-
		token,
		How even the "golden bowl" at last lies
		broken!




CRADLED IN GREEN


		"Rockaby, baby,
		Your cradle is green;
		Father's a nobleman,
		Mother's a queen;
		And Betty's a lady,
		And wears a gold ring,
		And Johnny's a drummer,
		And drums for the king!"

		O golden gift of childhood!
		That, with its kingly touch,
		Transforms to more than royalty
		The thing it loveth much!

		O second sight, bestowed alone
		Upon the baby seer,
		That the glory held in Heaven's reserve
		Discerneth even here!

		Though he be the humblest craftsman,
		No silk nor ermine piled
		Could make the father seem a whit
		More noble to the child;
		And the mother,—ah, what queenlier crown
		Could rest upon her brow,
		Than the fair and gentle dignity
		It weareth to him now?

		E'en the gilded ring that Michael
		For a penny fairing bought,
		Is the seal of Betty's ladyhood
		To his untutored thought;
		And the darling drum about his neck,—
		His very newest toy,—
		A bandsman unto Majesty
		Hath straightway made the boy!

		O golden gift of childhood!
		If the talisman might last,
		How the dull Present still should gleam
		With the glory of the Past!
		But the things of earth about us
		Fade and dwindle as we go,
		And the long perspective of our life
		Is truth, and not a show!




"SIMILIA SIMILIBUS."


		"There was a man in our town,
		And he was wondrous wise:
		He jumped into a bramble-bush,
		And scratched out both his eyes.
		But when he saw his eyes were out,
		With all his might and main
		He jumped into another bush,
		And scratched them in again!"

		Old Dr. Hahnemann read the tale,
		(And he was wondrous wise,)
		Of the man who, in the bramble-bush,
		Had scratched out both his eyes.

		And the fancy tickled mightily
		His misty German brain,
		That, by jumping in another bush,
		He got them back again.

		So he called it "homo-hop-athy".
		And soon it came about,
		That a curious crowd among the thorns
		Was hopping in and out.
		Yet, disguise it by the longest name
		They may, it is no use;
		For the world knows the discovery
		Was made by Mother Goose!

		And not alone in medicine
		Doth the theory hold good;
		In Life and in Philosophy,
		The maxim still hath stood:
		A morsel more of anything,
		When one has got enough,
		And Nature's energy disowns
		The whole unkindly stuff.

		A second negative affirms;
		And two magnetic poles
		Of charge identical, repel,—
		As sameness sunders souls.
		Touched with a first, fresh suffering,
		All solace is despised;
		But gathered sorrows grow serene,
		And grief is neutralized.

		And he who, in the world's mêlée,
		Hath chanced the worse to catch,
		May mend the matter, if he come
		Back, boldly, to the scratch;
		Minding the lesson he received
		In boyhood, from his mother.
		Whose cheery word, for many a bump,
		Was, Up and take another!




HOBBY-HORSES


		"I had a little pony,
		His name was Dapple Gray:
		I lent him to a lady
		To ride a mile away.
		She whipped him,
		She lashed him,
		She rode him through the mire;
		I would n't lend my pony now,
		For all the lady's hire."

		Our hobbies, of whatever sort
		They be, mine honest friend,
		Of fancy, enterprise, or thought,
		'T is hardly wise to lend.

		Some fair imagination, shrined
		In form poetic, maybe,
		You fondly trusted to the World,—
		That most capricious Lady.

		Or a high, romantic theory,
		Magnificently planned,
		In flush of eager confidence
		You bade her take in hand.

		But she whipped it, and she lashed it,
		And bespattered it with mire,
		Till your very soul felt stained within,
		And scourged with stripes of fire.

		Yet take this thought, and hold it fast,
		Ye Martyrs of To-day!
		That same great World, with all its scorn,
		You 've lifted on its way!




MISSIONS


		"Hogs in the garden,—
		Catch 'em, Towser!
		Cows in the cornfield,—
		Run, boys, run!
		Fire on the mountains,—
		Run, boys, run boys!
		Cats in the cream-pot,—
		Run, girls, run!"

		I don't stand up for Woman's Right
		Not I,—no, no!
		The real lionesses fight,—
		I let it go.

		Yet, somehow, as I catch the call
		Of the world's voice,
		That speaks a summons unto all
		Its girls and boys;

		In such strange contrast still it rings
		As church-bells' bome
		To the pert sound of tinkling things
		One hears at home;

		And wakes an impulse, not germane
		Perhaps, to woman,
		Yet with a thrill that makes it plain
		'T is truly human;—

		A sudden tingle at the springs
		Of noble feeling,
		The spirit-power for valiant things
		Clearly revealing.

		But Eden's curse doth daily deal
		Its certain dole,—
		And the old grasp upon the heel
		Holds back the soul!

		So, when some rousing deed's to do,
		To save a nation,
		Or, on the mountains, to subdue
		A conflagration,
		Woman! the work is not for you;
		Mind your vocation!
		Out from the cream-pot comes a mew
		Of tribulation!

		Meekly the world's great exploits leave
		Unto your betters;
		So bear the punishment of Eve,
		Spirit in fetters!

		Only, the hidden fires will glow,
		And, now and then,
		A beacon blazeth out below
		That startles men!

		Some Joan, through battle-field to stake,
		Danger embracing;
		Some Florence, for sweet mercy's sake
		Pestilence facing;
		Whose holy valor vindicates
		The royal birth
		That, for its crowning, only waits
		The end of earth;
		And, haply, when we all stand freed,
		In strength immortal,
		Such virgin-lamps the host shall lead
		Through heaven's portal!




GOING BACK TO OUR MUTTONS


		"There was an old man of Tobago,
		Who lived on rice, gruel, and sago,
		Till, much to his bliss,
		His physician said this:
		To a leg, sir, of mutton, you may go.
		He set a monkey to baste the mutton,
		And ten pounds of butter he put on."

		Chain up a child, and away he will go";
		I have heard of the proverb interpreted so;
		The spendthrift is son to the miser,—and
		still,

		When the Devil would work his most piti-
		less will,
		He sends forth the seven, for such embas-
		sies kept,
		To the house that is empty and garnished
		and swept:
		For poor human nature a pendulum seems.,
		That must constantly vibrate between two
		extremes.

		The closer the arrow is drawn to the
		bow,
		Once slipped from the string, all the further
		't will go:
		Let a panic arise in the world of finance,
		And the mad flight of Fashion be checked
		by the chance,
		It certainly seems a most wonderful thing,
		When the ropes are let go again, how it
		will swing!

		And even the decent observance of Lent,
		Stirs sometimes a doubt how the time has
		been spent,
		When Easter brings out the new bonnets
		and gowns,
		And a flood of gay colors o'erflows in the
		towns.

		So in all things the feast doth still follow
		the fast,
		And the force of the contrast gives zest to
		the last;
		And until he is tried, no frail mortal can
		tell,
		The inch being offered, he won't take the
		ell.
		We are righteously shocked at the follies
		of fashion;
		Nay, standing outside, may get quite in a
		passion
		At the prodigal flourishes other folks put
		on:
		But many good people this side of Tobago,
		If respited once from their diet of sago,
		Would outdo the monkey in basting the
		mutton!




GOING TO DOVER


		"Leg over leg
		As the dog went to Dover;
		When he came to a stile,
		Jump he went over."

		Perhaps you would n't see it here,
		But, to my fancy, 't is quite clear
		That Mother Goose just meant to show
		How the dog Patience on doth go:

		With steadfast nozzle, pointing low,—
		Leg over leg, however slow,—
		And labored breath, but naught complaining,
		Still, at each footstep, somewhat gaining,—
		Quietly plodding, mile on mile,
		And gathering for a nervous bound
		At every interposing stile,—
		So traversing the tedious ground,
		Till all at length, he measures over,
		And walks, a victor, into Dover.

		And, verily, no other way
		Doth human progress win the day;
		Step after step,—and o'er and o'er,—
		Each seeming like the one before,
		So that't is only once a while,—
		When sudden Genius springs the stile
		That marks a section of the plain,
		Beyond whose bound fresh fields again
		Their widening stretch untrodden sweep,—
		The world looks round to see the leap.

		Pale Science, in her laboratory,
		Works on with crucible and wire
		Unnoticed, till an instant glory
		Crowns some high issue, as with fire,
		And men, with wondering eyes awide,
		Gauge great Invention's giant stride.

		No age, no race, no single soul,
		By lofty tumbling gains the goal.
		The steady pace it keeps between,—
		The little points it makes unseen,—
		By these, achieved in gathering might,
		It moveth on, and out of sight,
		And wins, through all that's overpast,
		The city of its hopes at last.




RAGS AND ROBES


		"Hark, hark!
		The dogs do bark;
		Beggars are coming to town:
		Some in rags,
		Some in tags,"
		And some in velvet gowns!"

		Coming, coming always!
		Crowding into earth;
		Seizing on this human life,
		Beggars from the birth.

		Some in patent penury;
		Some, alas! in shame;
		And some in fading velvet
		Of hereditary fame;

		But all in deep, appeaseless want,
		As mendicants to live;
		And go beseeching through the world,
		For what the world may give.

		Beggars, beggars, all of us!
		Expectants from "our youth:
		With hands outstretched, and asking alms
		Of Hope and Love and Truth.

		Nor, verily, doth he escape
		Who, wrapt in cold contempt,
		Denies alike to give or take,
		And dreams himself exempt;

		Who never, in appeal to man,
		Nor in a prayer to Heaven,
		Will own that aught he doth desire,
		Or ask that aught be given.

		Whose human heart a stoic pride
		Folds as a velvet pall;
		Yet hides an eagreness within,
		Worse beggary than all!

		Coming, coming always!
		And the bluff Apostle waits
		As the throng pours upward from the earth
		To Heaven's eternal gates.

		In shreds of torn affection,
		In passion-rended rags;
		While scarcely at the portal
		The great procession flags;

		For the pillared doors of glory
		On their hinges hang awide;
		Where each asking soul may enter,
		And at last be satisfied!

		But a cold, calm shade arriveth,
		In self-complacent trim,—
		And Peter riseth up to see
		Especially to him.

		"Good morrow, saint! I'm going in
		To take a stroll, you know;
		Not that I want for anything,—
		But just to see the show!"

		"Hold!" thunders out the warden,
		"Be pleased to pause a bit!
		For seats celestial, let me say,
		You 're not apparelled fit:
		Yonder 's the brazen door that leads
		Spectators to the pit!

		Whatever may be thought on earth,
		We've other rules in heaven;
		And only poverty confessed
		Finds free admittance given!"




BLACKBIRDS


		"Sing a song o' sixpence, a pocket full of rye;
		Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie:
		When the pie was opened, they all began to sing,
		And was n't this a dainty dish to set before the king?
		The king was in his counting-house, counting out his money;
		The queen was in the parlor, eating bread and honey;
		The maid was in the garden, hanging out the clothes,
		And along came a blackbird, and nipt off her nose!"

		It doesn't take a conjurer to see
		The sort of curious pasty this might be;
		A flock of flying rumors, caught alive,
		And housed, like swarming bees within a
		hive,—
		Instead of what were far more wisely
		done,
		Having their worthless necks wrung, every
		one;—
		And so a dish of dainty gossip making,
		Smooth covered with a show of secrecy,
		That one but takes the pleasant pains of
		breaking,
		And out the wide-mouthed knaves pop,
		eagerly.

		Blackbirds, indeed! Each chattering on-
		dit
		Comes forth, full feathered, black as black
		can be;
		With quivering throats, all tremulous to
		sing,
		And please, forsooth, some little social
		king;
		Whose reign may last as long as he is able
		To call his court around a dinner-table.




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