In My Nursery. Richards Laura Elizabeth Howe

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the damask rose has blown,

      Dropping all her velvet bloom,

      Carpeting your leafy room:

      Here while you shall sit in pride,

      Butterflies all rainbow-pied,

      Dandy beetles gold and green,

      Creeping, flying, shall be seen,

      Every bird that shakes his wings,

      Every katydid that sings,

      Wasp and bee with buzz and hum.

      Hither, hither see them come,

      Creeping all before your feet,

      Rendering their homage meet.

      But 'tis I that call you mine,

      Valentine, O Valentine!

      THE RAIN

      The rain came down from the sky,

      And we asked it the reason why

      It would ne'er stay away

      On washing day,

      To let our poor clothes get dry.

      The rain came down on the ground,

      With a clattering, pelting sound,

      "Indeed, if I stayed

      Till you called me," it said,

      "I should not come all the year round!"

      The Ballad Of The Fairy Spoon

      The little wee baby came tripping

      All out of the fairy land,

      With a nosegay of fairy flowers

      Clasped close in each little wee hand;

      The flower of baby beauty,

      The flower of baby health,

      And all the blossomy sweetness

      That makes up a baby's wealth.

      But still he kept sighing and sobbing,

      Sighing and sobbing away,

      Till I said, "Now what ails my Baby,

      And why does he cry all day?"

      And he answered, "Oh! as I came tripping,

      I spied a rose by the way:

      And on it the loveliest dewdrop

      I'd seen since I came away.

      "But as I was stooping to sip it,

      A wind came up from the south;

      And it blew my little wee spoonie

      Away from my little wee mouth."

      "And what was your little wee spoonie?

      And what does my Baby mean?"

      "Oh! the little wee fairy spoonie

      That was given me by the queen.

      "For whenever a baby leaves her,

      The queen she grants him a boon, —

      She fills both his hands with flowers,

      And puts in his mouth a spoon.

      "And some are made of the hazel,

      And some are made of the horn;

      And some are made of the silver white,

      For the good-luck babes that are born."

      "But what are they for, my Baby?"

      "Nay! that part I cannot tell!

      But send for the fairy Spoonman,

      For he knows it all right well.

      "Oh! the little old fairy Spoonman,

      He lives in the white, white moon.

      Send a whisper up by a moonbeam,

      And he will be down here soon."

      Then I whispered along a moonbeam

      That silvered the grass so clear,

      "Oh! little old fairy Spoonman,

      Come down and comfort my dear!"

      Then something came sliding, sliding

      Down out of the white, white moon.

      And something came gliding, gliding

      Straight in at my window soon.

      And there stood a little old fairy,

      All bent and withered and black,

      With a leathern apron about him,

      And a bundle of spoons at his back.

      And first he looked at my baby,

      And then he looked at me;

      And then he looked at his apron,

      But never a word spake he.

      "Oh! Spoonman dear," said the baby,

      "The wind blew my spoon away.

      So now will you give me another,

      You little black Spoonman, pray?

      "For I did not lose my spoonie,

      Nor drop it carelessly;

      But a wind came up to my poor little mouth,

      And blew it away from me."

      "Now well for you," said the Spoonman,

      "Little Baby, if this be so.

      For if you had carelessly lost your spoon,

      Without it through life you'd go.

      "And well for you, little Baby,

      If you know your spoon again.

      For but if you know the very same one,

      Your asking will be in vain.

      "So say: was it made of the hazel,

      Or was it made of the horn,

      Or was it made of the silver white,

      If a good-luck babe you were born?"

      "Oh! it was nor horn nor hazel,

      But all of the silver bright;

      For a good-luck babe I was born indeed,

      To be my Mammy's delight."

      "Then take your spoon, little Baby,

      With the fairies' blessing free,

      For the south wind blew it around the world,

      And blew it again to me."

      With that he gave to my baby

      The tiniest silver spoon.

      Then out he slipped in the moonlight,

      And we lost him from sight right soon.

      Now some may think I am foolish,

      And some may think I am mad;

      But never once since that very night

      Has my baby been cross or sad.

      And I counsel all anxious mothers

      Whose babies are crying in pain,

      To send for the fairy Spoonman,

      And get them their spoons again.

      SONG OF THE LITTLE WINDS

      The birdies may sleep, but the winds must wake

      Early and late, for the birdies' sake.

      Kissing

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