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s handy, And since then he's kept her quite well. Which is why I remark, Though the lady was plain, For ways that are dark And tricks that are vain A husband is very peculiar, And the same I am free to maintain. Oscar Wilde, in a poetic fervor and a lily-like kimono, recited with tremulous intensity this masterpiece of his own: Oh, Peter! Pumpkin-fed and proud, Ah me; ah me! (Sweet squashes, mother!) Thy woe knells like a stricken cloud; (Ah me; ah me! Hurroo, Hurree!) Lo! vanisht like an anguisht wraith; Ah me; ah me! (Sweet squashes, mother!) Wan hope a dolorous musing saith; (Ah me; ah me! Dum diddle dee!) Hist! dare we soar? The Pumpkin Shell! Ah me; ah me! (Sweet squashes, mother!) Fast and forever! Sooth, 'tis well. (Ah me; ah me! Faloodle dee!) There was little to be said after this, so the meeting closed with a solo by Lady Arthur Hill, sung with a truly touching touch: In the pumpkin, oh, my darling, Think not bitterly of me; Though I went away in silence, Though I couldn't set you free. For my heart was filled with longing, For another piece of pie; It was best to leave you there, dear, Best for you and best for I. At Christmas the members of the Re-Echo Club voiced these pleasant sentiments: BY MR. TENNYSON: Give me no more! Though worsted slippers be The proper gift from woman unto man, Component of the universal plan; But, oh, too many hast thou given me, Give me no more! BY MR. SHAKESPEARE: To give or not to give, that is the question; Whether 'tis nobler on the whole to suffer The old exchange of trinkets, gauds and kickshaws, Or to take arms against this Christmas nuisance, And, by opposing, end it? To buy--to give-- No more; and by that gift to say we end The Christmas obligations to our friends We all are heir to! To buy--to give; To give--perchance to get; ay, there's the rub! For in those bundles gay what frights may come When we have shuffled off the ribbon bows And tissue paper! Who would gifts receive Of foolish books and little silver traps, That make us rather keep the things we buy, Than get these others that we know not of! Thus Christmas doth make cowards of us all, And, notwithstanding our good resolutions, Each year we bandy gifts, and follow out The same old C
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