<p><SPAN name="ch-05"></SPAN></p>
<h2>V. THE GROWTH OF SYM</h2>
<p><br/>
<br/>
Now Sym was a Glug; and 'tis mentioned so<br/>
That the tale reads perfectly plain as we go.<br/>
In his veins ran blood of that stupid race<br/>
Of docile folk, who inhabit the place<br/>
Called Gosh, sad Gosh, where the tall trees sigh<br/>
With a strange, significant sort of cry<br/>
When the gloaming creeps and the wind is high.<br/>
<br/>
When the deep shades creep and the wind is high<br/>
The trees bow low as the gods ride by:<br/>
Gods of the gloaming, who ride on the breeze,<br/>
Stooping to heaften the birds and the trees.<br/>
But each dull Glug sits down by his door,<br/>
And mutters, " 'Tis windy!" and nothing more,<br/>
Like the long-dead Glugs in the days of yore.<br/>
<br/>
When Sym was born there was much to-do,<br/>
And his parents thought him a joy to view;<br/>
But folk not prejudiced saw the Glug,<br/>
As his nurse remarked, "In the cut of his mug."<br/>
For he had their hair, and he had their eyes,<br/>
And the Glug expression of pained surprise,<br/>
And their predilection for pumpkin pies.<br/>
<br/>
And his parents' claims were a deal denied<br/>
By his maiden aunt on his mother's side,<br/>
A tall Glug lady of fifty-two<br/>
With a slight moustache of an auburn hue.<br/>
"Parental blither!" she said quite flat.<br/>
"He's an average Glug; and he's red and fat!<br/>
And exceedingly fat and red at that!"<br/>
<br/>
But the father, joi, when he gazed on Sym,<br/>
Dreamed great and wonderful things for him.<br/>
Said he, "If the mind of a Glug could wake<br/>
Then, Oh, what a wonderful Glug he'd make!<br/>
We shall teach this laddie to play life's game<br/>
With a different mind and a definite aim:<br/>
A Glug in appearance, yet not the same."<br/>
<br/>
But the practical aunt said, "Fudge! You fool!<br/>
We'll pack up his dinner and send him to school.<br/>
He shall learn about two-times and parsing and capes,<br/>
And how to make money with inches on tapes.<br/>
We'll apprentice him then to the drapery trade,<br/>
Where, I've heard it reported, large profits are made;<br/>
Besides, he can sell us cheap buttons and braid."<br/>
<br/>
So poor young Sym, he was sent to school,<br/>
Where the first thing taught is the Golden Rule.<br/>
"Do unto others," the teacher said . . .<br/>
Then suddenly stopped and scratched his head.<br/>
"You may look up the rest in a book," said he.<br/>
"At present it doesn't occur to me;<br/>
But do it, whatever it happens to be."<br/>
<br/>
"And now," said the teacher, "the day's task brings<br/>
Consideration of practical things.<br/>
If a man makes a profit of fifteen pounds<br/>
On one week's takings from two milk rounds,<br/>
How many . . ." And Sym went dreaming away<br/>
To the sunlit lands where the field-mice play,<br/>
And wrens hold revel the livelong day.<br/>
<br/>
He walked in the welcoming fields alone,<br/>
While from far, far away came the pedagogue's drone:<br/>
"If a man makes . . .Multiply . . . Abstract nouns . . .<br/>
From B take . . .Population of towns . . .<br/>
Rods, poles or perches . . . Derived from Greek<br/>
Oh, the hawthorn buds came out this week,<br/>
And robins are nesting down by the creek.<br/>
<br/>
So Sym was head of his class not once;<br/>
And his aunt repeatedly dubbed him "Dunce."<br/>
But, "Give him a chance," said his father, Joi.<br/>
"His head is abnormally large for a boy."<br/>
But his aunt said, "Piffie! It's crammed with bosh!<br/>
Why, he don't know the rivers and mountains of Gosh,<br/>
Nor the names of the nephews of good King Splosh!"<br/>
<br/>
In Gosh, when a youth gets an obstinate look,<br/>
And copies his washing-bill into a book,<br/>
And blackens his boot-heels, and frowns at a joke,<br/>
"Ah, he's getting sense," say the elderly folk.<br/>
But Sym, he would laugh when he ought to be sad;<br/>
Said his aunt, "Lawk-a-mussy! What's wrong with the lad?<br/>
He romps with the puppies, and talks to the ants,<br/>
And keeps his loose change in his second-best pants,<br/>
And stumbles all over my cauliflower plants!"<br/>
<br/>
"There is wisdom in that," laughed the father, Joi.<br/>
But the aunt said, "Toity!" and, "Drat the boy!"<br/>
"He shall play," said the father, "some noble part.<br/>
Who knows but it may be in letters or art?<br/>
'Tis a dignified business to make folk think."<br/>
But the aunt cried, "What! Go messing with ink?<br/>
And smear all his fingers, and take to drink?<br/>
Paint hussies and cows, and end in the clink?"<br/>
<br/></p>
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<p><b>"And now," said the teacher . . .</b></p>
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<p><br/>
So the argument ran; but one bright Spring day<br/>
Sym settled it all in his own strange way.<br/>
"'Tis a tramp," he announced, "I've decided to be;<br/>
And I start next Monday at twenty to three . . ."<br/>
When the aunt recovered she screamed, "A tramp?<br/>
A low-lived, pilfering, idle scamp,<br/>
Who steals people's washing, and sleeps in the damp?"<br/>
<br/>
Sharp to the hour Sym was ready and dressed.<br/>
"Young birds," sighed the father, "must go from the nest.<br/>
When the green moss covers those stones you tread,<br/>
When the green grass whispers above my head,<br/>
Mark well, wherever your path may turn,<br/>
They have reached the valley of peace who learn<br/>
That wise hearts cherish what fools may spurn."<br/>
<br/>
So Sym went off; and a year ran by,<br/>
And the father said, with a smile-masked sigh,<br/>
"It is meet that the young should leave the nest."<br/>
Said the aunt, "Don't spill that soup on your vest!<br/>
Nor mention his name! He's our one disgrace!<br/>
And he's probably sneaking around some place<br/>
With fuzzy black whiskers all over his face."<br/>
<br/>
But, under a hedge, by a flowering peach,<br/>
A youth with a little blue wren held speech.<br/>
With his back to a tree and his feet in the grass,<br/>
He watched the thistle-down drift and pass,<br/>
And the cloud-puffs, borne on a lazy breeze,<br/>
Move by on their errand, above the trees,<br/>
Into the vault of the mysteries.<br/>
<br/>
"Now, teach me, little blue wren," said he.<br/>
"'Tis you can unravel this riddle for me.<br/>
I am 'mazed by the gifts of this kindly earth.<br/>
Which of them all has the greatest worth?"<br/>
He flirted his tail as he answered then,<br/>
He bobbed and he bowed to his coy little hen:<br/>
"Why, sunlight and worms!" said the little blue wren.<br/>
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<p><SPAN name="ch-06"></SPAN></p>
<h2>VI. THE END OF JOI</h2>
<p><br/>
<br/>
They climbed the trees . . . As was told before,<br/>
The Glugs climbed trees in the days of yore,<br/>
When the oldes tree in the land to-day<br/>
Was a tender little seedling--Nay,<br/>
This climbing habit was old, so old<br/>
That even the cheeses could not have told<br/>
When the past Glug people first began<br/>
To give their lives to the climbing plan.<br/>
And the legend ran<br/>
That the art was old as the mind of man.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>And even the mountains old and hoar,<br/>
And the billows that broke on Gosh's shore<br/>
Since the far-off neolithic night,<br/>
All knew the Glugs quite well by sight.<br/>
And they tell of a perfectly easy way:<br/>
For yesterday's Glug is the Glug of to-day.<br/>
And they climb the trees when the thunder rolls,<br/>
To solemnly salve their shop-worn souls.<br/>
For they fear the coals<br/>
That threaten to frizzle their shop-worn souls.</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
They climbed the trees. 'Tis a bootless task<br/>
To say so over again, or ask<br/>
The cause of it all, or the reason why<br/>
They never felt happier up on high.<br/>
For Joi asked why; and Joi was a fool,<br/>
And never a Glug of the fine old school<br/>
With fixed opinions and Sunday clothes,<br/>
And the habit of looking beyond its nose,<br/>
And treating foes<br/>
With the calm contempt of the One Who Knows.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>And every spider who heaves a line<br/>
And trusts to his luck when the day is fine,<br/>
Or reckless swings from an awful height,<br/>
He knows the Glugs quite well by sight.<br/>
"You can never mistake them," he will say;<br/>
"For they always act in a Gluglike way.<br/>
And they climb the trees when the glass points fair,<br/>
With circumspection and proper care,<br/>
For they fear to tear<br/>
The very expensive clothes they wear."</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
But Joi was a Glug with a twisted mind<br/>
Of the nasty, meditative kind.<br/>
He'd meditate on the modes of Gosh,<br/>
And dared to muse on the acts of Splosh;<br/>
He dared to speak, and, worse than that,<br/>
He spoke out loud, and he said it flat.<br/>
"Why climb?" said he. "When you reach the top<br/>
There's nowhere to go, and you have to stop,<br/>
Unless you drop.<br/>
And the higher you are the worse you flop."<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>And every cricket that chirps at eve,<br/>
And scoffs at the folly of fools who grieve,<br/>
And the furtive mice who revel at night,<br/>
All know the Glugs quite well by sight.<br/>
For, "Why," they say, " in the land of Gosh<br/>
There is no one else who will bow to Splosh.<br/>
And they climb the trees when the rain pelts down<br/>
And feeds the gutters that thread the town;<br/>
For they fear to drown,<br/>
When floods are frothy and waters brown."</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Said the Glug called Joi, "This climbing trees<br/>
Is a foolish art, and things like these<br/>
Cause much distress in the land of Gosh.<br/>
Let's stay on the ground and kill King Splosh!"<br/>
But Splosh, the king, he smiled a smile,<br/>
And beckoned once to his hangman, Guile,<br/>
Who climbed a tree when the weather was calm;<br/>
And they hanged poor Joi on a Snufflebust Palm;<br/>
Then they sang a psalm,<br/>
Did those pious Glugs 'neath the Snufflebust Palm.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>And every bee that kisses a flow'r,<br/>
And every blossom, born for an hour,<br/>
And every bird on its gladsome flight,<br/>
All know the Glugs quite well by sight.<br/>
For they say, "'Tis a simple test we've got:<br/>
If you know one Glug, why, you know the lot!"<br/>
So, they climbed a tree in the bourgeoning Spring,<br/>
And they hanged poor Joi with some second-hand string.<br/>
'Tis a horrible thing<br/>
To be hanged by Glugs with second-hand string.</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Then Splosh, the king, rose up and said,<br/>
"It's not polite; but he's safer dead.<br/>
And there's not much room in the land of Gosh<br/>
For a Glug named Joi and a king called Splosh!"<br/>
And every Glug flung high his hat,<br/>
And cried, "We're Glugs! and you can't change that!"<br/>
So they climbed the trees, since the weather was cold,<br/>
While the brazen bell of the city tolled<br/>
And tolled, and told<br/>
The fate of a Glug who was over-bold.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>And every cloud that sails the blue,<br/>
And every dancing sunbeam too,<br/>
And every sparkling dewdrop bright<br/>
All know the Glugs quite well by sight.<br/>
"We tell," say they, "by a simple test;<br/>
For any old Glug is like the rest.<br/>
And they climb the trees when there's weather about,<br/>
In a general way, as a cure for gout;<br/>
Tho' some folks doubt<br/>
If the climbing habit is good for gout."</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
So Joi was hanged, and his race was run,<br/>
And the Glugs were tickled with what they'd done.<br/>
And, after that, if a day should come<br/>
When a Glug felt extra specially glum,<br/>
He'd call his children around his knee,<br/>
And tell that tale with a chuckle of glee.<br/>
And should a little Glug girl or boy<br/>
See naught of a joke in the fate of Joi,<br/>
Then he'd employ<br/>
Stern measures with such little girl or boy.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>But every dawn that paints the sky,<br/>
And every splendid noontide high,<br/>
All know the Glugs so well, so well.<br/>
'Tis an easy matter, and plain to tell.<br/>
For, lacking wit, with a candour smug,<br/>
A Glug will boast that he is a Glug.<br/>
And they climb the trees, if it shines or rains,<br/>
To settle the squirming in their brains,<br/>
And the darting pains<br/>
That are caused by rushing and catching trains.</i><br/>
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