FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  
ing the verses through I find these pronouns should all read "You.")] [Illustration: Mr. Shakespeare needn't mind _Page 70._] BETWEEN TWO THIEVES. Sure! I am one who disbelieves In thieves; At which you interrupt to cry "Aye, aye, and I." Hmf! you're so sudden to agree. Suppose we see. I know a thief. No matter whether I ought to know a thief, or not. Perhaps "we went to school together;" That old excuse is worked a lot. One day he "copped a rummy's leather," Which means--I hate to tell you what. It's such a vulgar thing to steal A drunkard's purse to buy a meal. "Hey, pal," said he, "come help me dine; I've hit a pit and got the swag; To-day, Delmonico's is mine; To-morrow once again a vag. Come on and tell me all the stunts Of all the boys who knew me--once." "Did I go with him?" I did not. Would you have gone? Could you be bought By dinners--when the trail was hot And any hour he might be caught? I know a thief, whose operations Are colored by a kindly law. Your income and a beggar's rations Contribute to his cunning claw; Cities and counties, courts and nations Pay portion to his monstrous maw. He gave a dinner not long since In honor of some played-out Prince. The decorations, ah, how chaste! And how delicious was the wine! For Mrs. Thief has perfect taste And Mr. Thief knows how to dine. And so the world has long agreed Quite to forgive, forget--and feed. But really I was shocked to see How many decent folks could be Induced to come and bow the knee; I think you were my _vis-a-vis_. Yes, yes, I quite despise him, too, Like you; And (though it's not a thing to brag) I somehow like the vag. But, oh, the difference one perceives Between two thieves! THE SPECTATOR. Look at the man with the crown Weighing him down. Plumed and petted, Galled and fretted! Why do you eye him askance With a quiver of hate in your glance? Why not conceive him as human, Nursed at the breast of a woman, Growing, mayhap, as he could, Not as he would? How are you sure you would be Better and wiser than he? Look at the woman whose eye Follows you by. Silked and satined, Scented, fatten
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  



Top keywords:

thieves

 

decent

 

courts

 

agreed

 

counties

 
forgive
 

shocked

 

forget

 

portion

 

Prince


decorations
 

played

 

dinner

 

nations

 

perfect

 

monstrous

 

chaste

 
delicious
 

glance

 

conceive


Nursed

 

quiver

 

Galled

 

petted

 

fretted

 

askance

 
breast
 
Growing
 

Silked

 
Follows

satined

 

Scented

 

fatten

 
mayhap
 

Better

 

Plumed

 

despise

 

Cities

 
Induced
 

SPECTATOR


Weighing

 

Between

 

difference

 

perceives

 

Perhaps

 

matter

 
sudden
 
Suppose
 

school

 

leather