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You do not turn from me, nor call. Why do I never hear my name? Why are you fastened in a frame? You are the same, and not the same. Away from me why do you stare So far out in the distance where I am not? I am here! Not there! What has your little doggie done? You used to whistle me to run Beside you, or ahead, for fun! You used to pat me, and a glow Of pleasure through my life would go! How is it that I shiver so? My tail was once a waving flag Of welcome. Now I cannot wag It for the weight I have to drag. I know not what has come to me. 'Tis only in my sleep I see Things smiling as they used to be. I do not dare to bark; I plead But dumbly, and you never heed; Nor my protection seem to need. I watch the door, I watch the gate; I am watching early, watching late, Your doggie still!--I watch and wait. GERALD MASSEY. ADVICE TO A DOG PAINTER Happiest of the spaniel race, Painter, with thy colors grace, Draw his forehead large and high, Draw his blue and humid eye; Draw his neck, so smooth and round, Little neck with ribands bound; And the musely swelling breast Where the Loves and Graces rest; And the spreading, even back, Soft, and sleek, and glossy black; And the tail that gently twines, Like the tendrils of the vines; And the silky twisted hair, Shadowing thick the velvet ear; Velvet ears which, hanging low, O'er the veiny temples flow. JONATHAN SWIFT. MERCY'S REWARD Hast seen The record written of Salah-ud-Deen, The Sultan--how he met, upon a day, In his own city on the public way, A woman whom they led to die? The veil Was stripped from off her weeping face, and pale Her shamed cheeks were, and wild her fixed eye, And her lips drawn with terror at the cry Of the harsh people, and the rugged stones Borne in their hands to break her flesh and bones; For the law stood that sinners such as she Perish by stoning, and this doom must be; So went the adult'ress to her death. High noon it was, and the hot Khamseen's breath Blew from the desert sands and parched the town. The crows gasped, and the kine went up and down With lolling tongues; the camels moaned; a crowd Pressed with their pitchers, wrangling high and loud About the tank; and one dog by a well, Nigh dead with thirst, lay where he yelped and fel
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