Public Domain Poetry And Stories - De Amicitiis by Eugene Field
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De Amicitiis

    By Eugene Field



    Though care and strife
    Elsewhere be rife,
    Upon my word I do not heed 'em;
    In bed I lie
    With books hard by,
    And with increasing zest I read 'em.

    Propped up in bed,
    So much I've read
    Of musty tomes that I've a headful
    Of tales and rhymes
    Of ancient times,
    Which, wife declares, are "simply dreadful!"

    They give me joy
    Without alloy;
    And isn't that what books are made for?
    And yet--and yet--
    (Ah, vain regret!)
    I would to God they all were paid for!

    No festooned cup
    Filled foaming up
    Can lure me elsewhere to confound me;
    Sweeter than wine
    This love of mine
    For these old books I see around me!

    A plague, I say,
    On maidens gay;
    I'll weave no compliments to tell 'em!
    Vain fool I were,
    Did I prefer
    Those dolls to these old friends in vellum!

    At dead of night
    My chamber's bright
    Not only with the gas that's burning,
    But with the glow
    Of long ago,--
    Of beauty back from eld returning.

    Fair women's looks
    I see in books,
    I see them, and I hear their laughter,--
    Proud, high-born maids,
    Unlike the jades
    Which men-folk now go chasing after!

    Herein again
    Speak valiant men
    Of all nativities and ages;
    I hear and smile
    With rapture while
    I turn these musty, magic pages.

    The sword, the lance,
    The morris dance,
    The highland song, the greenwood ditty,
    Of these I read,
    Or, when the need,
    My Miller grinds me grist that's gritty!

    When of such stuff
    We've had enough,
    Why, there be other friends to greet us;
    We'll moralize
    In solemn wise
    With Plato or with Epictetus.

    Sneer as you may,
    I'm proud to say
    That I, for one, am very grateful
    To Heaven, that sends
    These genial friends
    To banish other friendships hateful!

    And when I'm done,
    I'd have no son
    Pounce on these treasures like a vulture;
    Nay, give them half
    My epitaph,
    And let them share in my sepulture.

    Then, when the crack
    Of doom rolls back
    The marble and the earth that hide me,
    I'll smuggle home
    Each precious tome,
    Without a fear my wife shall chide me!



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