<p><SPAN name="ch-11"></SPAN></p>
<h2>XI. OGS</h2>
<p><br/>
<br/>
It chanced one day, in the middle of May,<br/>
There came to the great King Splosh<br/>
A policeman, who said, while scratching his head,<br/>
"There isn't a stone in Gosh<br/>
To throw at a dog; for the crafty Og,<br/>
Last Saturday week, at one,<br/>
Took our last blue-metal, in order to settle<br/>
A bill for a toy pop-gun."<br/>
Said the King, jokingly,<br/>
"Why, how provokingly<br/>
Weird; but we have the gun."<br/>
<br/>
And the King said, "Well, we are stony-broke."<br/>
But the Queen could not see it was much of a joke.<br/>
And she said, "If the metal is all used up,<br/>
Pray what of the costume I want for the Cup?<br/>
It all seems so dreadfully simple to me.<br/>
The stones? Why, import them from over the sea."<br/>
But a Glug stood up with a mole on his chin,<br/>
And said, with a most diabolical grin,<br/>
"Your Majesties, down in the country of Podge,<br/>
A spy has discovered a very 'cute dodge.<br/>
And the Ogs are determined to wage a war<br/>
On Gosh, next Friday, at half-past four."<br/>
Then the Glugs all cried, in a terrible fright,<br/>
"How did our grandfathers manage a fight?"<br/>
<br/>
Then the Knight, Sir Stodge, he opened his Book,<br/>
And he read, "Some very large stones they took,<br/>
And flung at the foe, with exceeding force;<br/>
Which was very effective, tho' rude, of course."<br/>
And lo, with sorrowful wails and moans,<br/>
The Glugs cried, "Where, Oh, where are the stones?"<br/>
And some rushed North, and a few ran West;<br/>
Seeking the substitutes seeming best.<br/>
And they gathered the pillows and cushions and rugs<br/>
From the homes of the rich and middle-class Glugs.<br/>
And a hasty message they managed to send<br/>
Craving the loan of some bricks from a friend.<br/>
<br/>
On the Friday, exactly at half-past four,<br/>
Came the Ogs with triumphant glee.<br/>
And the first of their stones hit poor Mister Ghones,<br/>
The captain of industry.<br/>
Then a pebble of Podge took the Knight, Sir Stodge,<br/>
In the curve of his convex vest.<br/>
He gurgled "Un-Gluggish!" His heart growing sluggish,<br/>
He solemnly sank to rest.<br/>
'Tis inconceivable,<br/>
Scarcely believable,<br/>
Yet, he was sent to rest.<br/>
<br/>
And the King said, "Ouch!" And the Queen said, "0o!<br/>
My bee-ootiful drawing-room! What shall I do?"<br/>
But the warlike Ogs, they hurled great rocks<br/>
Thro' the works of the wonderful eight-day clocks<br/>
They had sold to the Glugs but a month before--<br/>
Which was very absurd; but, of course, 'twas war.<br/>
And the Glugs cried, "What would our grandfathers do<br/>
If they hadn't the stones that they one time threw?"<br/>
But the Knight, Sir Stodge, and his mystic Book<br/>
Oblivious slept in a grave-yard nook.<br/>
<br/>
Then a Glug stood out with a pot in his hand,<br/>
As the King was bewailing the fate of his land,<br/>
And he said, "If these Ogs you desire to retard,<br/>
Then hit them quite frequent with anything hard."<br/>
So the Glugs seized anvils, and editors' chairs,<br/>
And smote the Ogs with them unawares;<br/>
And bottles of pickles, and clocks they threw,<br/>
And books of poems, and gherkins, and glue,<br/>
Which they'd bought with the stones--as, of course, you know--<br/>
From the Ogs but a couple of months ago.<br/>
Which was simply inane, when you reason it o'er;<br/>
And uneconomic, but then, it was war.<br/>
<br/>
When they'd fought for a night and the most of a day,<br/>
The Ogs threw the last of their metal away.<br/>
Then they went back to Podge, well content with their fun,<br/>
And, with much satisfaction, declared they had won.<br/>
And the King of the Glugs gazed around on his land,<br/>
And saw nothing but stones strewn on every hand:<br/>
Great stones in the palace, and stones in the street,<br/>
And stones on the house-tops and under the feet.<br/>
And he said, with a desperate look on his face,<br/>
"There is nothing so ghastly as stones out of place.<br/>
And, no doubt, this Og scheme was a very smart dodge.<br/>
But whom does it profit--my people, or Podge?"<br/>
<br/></p>
<p align="center"><SPAN name="glugs-19"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="" src="images/glugs-19.jpg"></p>
<hr align="center" width="50%">
<p><SPAN name="ch-12"></SPAN></p>
<h2>XII. EMILY ANN</h2>
<center>
<p><SPAN name="glugs-20"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="" src="images/glugs-20.jpg"></p>
<p><b>On the royal door-mat</b></p>
</center>
<p><br/>
<br/>
Government muddles, departments dazed,<br/>
Fear and confusion wherever he gazed;<br/>
Order insulted, authority spurned,<br/>
Dread and distraction wherever he turned--<br/>
Oh, the great King Splosh was a sad, sore king,<br/>
With never a statesman to straighten the thing.<br/>
<br/>
Glus all importunate urging their claims,<br/>
With selfish intent and ulterior aims,<br/>
Glugs with petitions for this and for that,<br/>
Standing ten-deep on the royal door-mat,<br/>
Raging when nobody answered their ring--<br/>
Oh, the great King Splosh was a careworn king.<br/>
<br/>
And he looked to the right, and he glanced to the left,<br/>
And he glared at the roof like a monarch bereft<br/>
Of his wisdom and wits and his wealth all in one;<br/>
And, at least once a minute, asked, "What's to be done?"<br/>
But the Swanks stood around him and answered, with groans,<br/>
"Your majesty, Gosh is half buried in stones!"<br/>
<br/>
"How now?" cried the King. "Is there not in my land<br/>
One Glug who can cope with this dreadful demand:<br/>
A rich man, a poor man, a beggar man, thief--<br/>
I reck not his rank so he lessen my grief--<br/>
A soldier, a sailor, a--" Raising his head,<br/>
With relief in his eye, "Now, I mind me!" he said.<br/>
<br/>
"I mind me a Tinker, and what once befel,<br/>
When I think, on the whole, he was treated not well.<br/>
But he shall be honoured, and he shall be famed<br/>
If he read me this riddle. But how is he named?<br/>
Some commonplace title, like-Simon?-No-Sym!<br/>
Go, send out my riders, and scour Gosh for him."<br/>
<br/>
They rode for a day to the sea in the South,<br/>
Calling the name of him, hand to the mouth.<br/>
They rode for a day to the hills in the East,<br/>
But signs of a tinker saw never the least.<br/>
Then they rode to the North thro' a whole day long,<br/>
And paused in the even to hark to a song.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
"Kettles and pans! Kettles and pans!<br/>
Oh, who can show tresses like Emily Ann's?<br/>
Brown in the shadow and gold at the tips,<br/>
Bright as the smile on her beckoning lips.<br/>
Bring out your kettle! 0 kettle or pan!<br/>
So I buy me a ribband for Emily Ann."<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
With his feet in the grass, and his back to a tree,<br/>
Merry as only a tinker can be,<br/>
Busily tinkering, mending a pan,<br/>
Singing as only a merry man can . . .<br/>
"Sym!" cried the riders. " 'Tis thus you are styled?"<br/>
And he paused in his singing, and nodded and smiled.<br/>
<br/>
Said he: "Last eve, when the sun was low,<br/>
Down thro' the bracken I watched her go--<br/>
Down thro' the bracken, with simple grace--<br/>
And the glory of eve shone full on her face;<br/>
And there on the sky-line it lingered a span,<br/>
So loth to be leaving my Emily Arm."<br/>
<br/>
With hands to their faces the riders smiled.<br/>
"Sym," they said--"be it so you're styled--<br/>
Behold, great Splosh, our sorrowing King,<br/>
Has sent us hither, that we may bring<br/>
To the palace in Gosh a Glug so named,<br/>
That he may be honoured and justly famed."<br/>
<br/>
"Yet," said Sym, as he tinkered his can,<br/>
"What should you know of her, Emily Ann?<br/>
Early as cock-crow yester morn<br/>
I watched young sunbeams, newly born,<br/>
As out of the East they frolicked and ran,<br/>
Eager to greet her, my Emily Arm."<br/>
<br/>
"King Splosh," said the riders, "is bowed with grief;<br/>
And the glory of Gosh is a yellowing leaf.<br/>
Up with you, Tinker! There's work ahead.<br/>
With a King forsaken, and Swanks in dread,<br/>
To whom may we turn for the salving of man?"<br/>
And Sym, he answered them, "Emily Ann."<br/>
<br/>
Said he: "Whenever I watch her pass,<br/>
With her skirts so high o'er the dew-wet grass,<br/>
I envy every blade the bruise<br/>
It earns in the cause of her twinkling shoes.<br/>
Oh, the dew-wet grass, where this morn she ran,<br/>
Was doubly jewelled for Emily Ann."<br/>
<br/>
"But haste!" they cried. "By the palace gates<br/>
A sorrowing king for a tinker waits.<br/>
And what shall we answer our Lord the King<br/>
If never a tinker hence we bring,<br/>
To tinker a kingdom so sore amiss?"<br/>
But Sym, he said to them, "Answer him this:<br/>
<br/>
'Every eve, when the clock chimes eight,<br/>
I kiss her fair, by her mother's gate:<br/>
Twice, all reverent, on the brow-<br/>
Once for a pray'r, and once for a vow;<br/>
Twice on her eyes that they may shine,<br/>
Then, full on the mouth because she's mine."'<br/>
<br/>
"Calf!" sneered the riders. "O Tinker, heed!<br/>
Mount and away with us, we must speed.<br/>
All Gosh is agog for the coming of Sym.<br/>
Garlands and greatness are waiting for him:<br/>
Garlands of roses, and garments of red<br/>
And a chaplet for crowning a conqueror's head."<br/>
<br/>
"Listen," quoth Sym, as he stirred his fire.<br/>
"Once in my life have I known desire.<br/>
Then, Oh, but the touch of her kindled a flame<br/>
That burns as a sun by the candle of fame.<br/>
And a blessing and boon for a poor tinker man<br/>
Looks out from the eyes of my Emily Ann."<br/>
<br/>
Then they said to him, "Fool! Do you cast aside<br/>
Promise of honour, and place, and pride,<br/>
Gold for the asking, and power o'er men-<br/>
Working your will with the stroke of a pen?<br/>
Vexed were the King if you ride not with us."<br/>
But Sym, he said to them, "Answer him thus:<br/>
<br/>
'Ease and honour and leave to live--<br/>
These are the gifts that a king may give<br/>
'Twas over the meadow I saw her first;<br/>
And my lips grew parched like a man athirst<br/>
Oh, my treasure was ne'er in the gift of man;<br/>
For the gods have given me Emily Ann."<br/>
<br/>
"Listen," said they, "O you crazy Sym.<br/>
Roses perish, and eyes grow dim.<br/>
Lustre fades from the fairest hair.<br/>
Who weds a woman links arms with care.<br/>
But women there are in the city of Gosh--<br/>
Ay, even the daughters of good King Splosh. . ."<br/>
<br/>
"Care," said Sym, "is a weed that springs<br/>
Even to-day in the gardens of kings.<br/>
And I, who have lived 'neath the tent of the skies,<br/>
Know of the flowers, and which to prize . . .<br/>
Give you good even! For now I must jog."<br/>
And he whistled him once to his little red dog.<br/>
<br/>
Into the meadow and over the stile,<br/>
Off went the tinker man, singing the while;<br/>
Down by the bracken patch, over the hill,<br/>
With the little red dog at the heel of him still.<br/>
And back, as he soberly sauntered along,<br/>
There came to the riders the tail of his song.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>"Kettles and pots! Kettles and pans!<br/>
Strong is my arm if the cause it be man's.<br/>
But a fig for the cause of a cunning old king;<br/>
For Emily Ann will be mine in the Spring.<br/>
Then nought shall I labour for Splosh or his plans;<br/>
Tho' I'll mend him a kettle. Ho, kettles and pans!"</i><br/>
<br/></p>
<p align="center"><SPAN name="glugs-21"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="" src="images/glugs-21.jpg"></p>
<hr align="center" width="50%">
<p><SPAN name="ch-13"></SPAN></p>
<h2>XIII. THE LITTLE RED DOG</h2>
<center>
<p><SPAN name="glugs-22"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="" src="images/glugs-22.jpg"></p>
<p><b>Taking the air</b></p>
</center>
<p><br/>
<br/>
The Glugs still live in the land of Gosh,<br/>
Under the rule of the great King Splosh.<br/>
And they climb the trees in the Summer and Spring,<br/>
Because it is reckoned the regular thing.<br/>
Down in the valley they live their lives,<br/>
Taking the air with their aunts and wives.<br/>
And they climb the trees in the Winter and Fall,<br/>
And count it improper to climb not at all.<br/>
<br/>
And they name their trees with a thousand names,<br/>
Calling them after their Arts and Aims;<br/>
And some, they climb for the fun of the thing,<br/>
But most go up at the call of the King.<br/>
Some scale a tree that they fear to name,<br/>
For it bears great blossoms of scarlet shame.<br/>
But they eat of the fruit of the nameless tree,<br/>
Because they are Glugs, and their choice is free.<br/>
<br/>
But every eve, when the sun goes West,<br/>
Over the mountain they call The Blest,<br/>
Whose summit looks down on the city of Gosh,<br/>
Far from the reach of the great King Splosh,<br/>
The Glugs gaze up at the heights above,<br/>
And feel vague promptings to wondrous love.<br/>
And they whisper a tale of a tinker man,<br/>
Who lives in the mount with his Emily Ann.<br/>
<br/>
A great mother mountain, and kindly is she,<br/>
Who nurses young rivers and sends them to sea.<br/>
And, nestled high up on her sheltering lap,<br/>
Is a little red house with a little straw cap<br/>
That bears a blue feather of smoke, curling high,<br/>
And a bunch of red roses cocked over one eye.<br/>
And the eyes of it glisten and shine in the sun,<br/>
As they look down on Gosh with a twinkle of fun.<br/>
<br/>
There's a gay little garden, a tidy white gate,<br/>
And a narrow brown pathway that will not run straight;<br/>
For it turns and it twists and it wanders about<br/>
To the left and the right, as in humorous doubt.<br/>
'Tis a humorous path, and a joke from its birth<br/>
Till it ends at the door with a wriggle of mirth.<br/>
And here in the mount lives the queer tinker man<br/>
With his little red dog and his Emily Arm.<br/>
<br/>
And, once in a while, when the weather is clear,<br/>
When the work is all over, and even is near,<br/>
They walk in the garden and gaze down below<br/>
On the Valley of Gosh, where the young rivers go;<br/>
Where the houses of Gosh seem so paltry and vain,<br/>
Like a handful of pebbles strewn over the plain;<br/>
Where tiny black forms crawl about in the vale,<br/>
And stare at the mountain they fear them to scale.<br/>
<br/>
And Sym sits him down by his little wife's knee,<br/>
With his feet in the grass and his back to a tree;<br/>
And he looks on the Valley and dreams of old years,<br/>
As he strokes his red dog with the funny prick ears.<br/>
And he says, "Still they climb in their whimsical way,<br/>
While we stand on earth, yet are higher than they.<br/>
Oh, who trusts to a tree is a fool of a man!<br/>
For the wise seek the mountains, my Emily Ann."<br/>
<br/>
So lives the queer tinker, nor deems it a wrong,<br/>
When the spirit so moves him, to burst into song.<br/>
'Tis a comical song about kettles and pans,<br/>
And the graces and charms that are Emily Ann's.<br/>
'Tis a mad, freakish song, but he sings it with zest,<br/>
And his little wife vows it of all songs the best.<br/>
And he sings quite a lot, as the Summer days pass,<br/>
With his back to a tree and his feet in the grass.<br/>
<br/>
And the little red dog, who is wise as dogs go,<br/>
He will hark to that song for a minute or so,<br/>
'With his head on one side, and a serious air.<br/>
Then he makes no remark; but he wanders elsewhere.<br/>
And he trots down the garden to gaze now and then<br/>
At the curious pranks of a certain blue wren:<br/>
Not a commonplace wren, but a bird marked for fame<br/>
Thro' a grievance in life and a definite aim.<br/>
<br/>
Now, they never fly far and they never fly high,<br/>
And they probably couldn't, suppose they should try.<br/>
So the common blue wren is content with his lot:<br/>
He will eat when there's food, and he fasts when there's not.<br/>
He flirts and he flutters, his wife by his side,<br/>
With his share of content and forgiveable pride.<br/>
And he keeps to the earth, 'mid the bushes and shrubs,<br/>
And he dines very well upon corpulent grubs.<br/>
<br/>
But the little blue wren with a grievance in life,<br/>
He was rude to his neighbours and short with his wife.<br/>
For, up in the apple-tree over his nest,<br/>
There dwelt a fat spider who gave him no rest:<br/>
A spider so fat, so abnormally stout<br/>
That he seemed hardly fitted to waddle about.<br/>
But his eyes were so sharp, and his legs were so spry,<br/>
That he could not be caught; and 'twas folly to try.<br/>
<br/>
Said the wren, as his loud lamentations he hurled<br/>
At the little red dog, "It's a rotten old world!<br/>
But my heart would be glad, and my life would be blest<br/>
If I had that fat spider well under my vest.<br/>
Then I'd call back my youth, and be seeking to live,<br/>
And to taste of the pleasures the world has to give.<br/>
But the world is all wrong, and my mind's in a fog!"<br/>
"Aw, don't be a Glug!" said the little red dog.<br/>
<br/>
Then, up from the grass, where he sat by his tree,<br/>
The voice of the Tinker rose fearless and free.<br/>
<br/>
The little dog listened, his head on one side;<br/>
Then sought him a spot where a bored dog could hide.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>"Kettles and pans! Ho, kettles and pans!<br/>
The stars are the gods' but the earth, it is man's!<br/>
Yet down in the shadow dull mortals there are<br/>
Who climb in the tree-tops to snatch at a star:<br/>
Seeking content and a surcease of care,<br/>
Finding but emptiness everywhere.<br/>
Then make for the mountain, importunate man!<br/>
With a kettle to mend . . . and your Emily Ann.</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
As he cocked a sad eye o'er a sheltering log,<br/>
"Oh, a Glug is a Glug!" sighed the little red dog.<br/>
<br/></p>
<h3>THE END</h3>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />