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A Certain Young Lady
- THERE'S a certain young lady,
- Who's just in her heyday,
- And full of all mischief, I ween;
- So teasing! so pleasing!
- Capricious! delicious!
- And you know very well whom I mean.
- With an eye dark as night,
- Yet than noonday more bright,
- Was ever a black eye so keen?
- It can thrill with a glance,
- With a beam can entrance,
- And you know very well whom I mean.
- With a stately step -- such as
- You'd expect in a duchess --
- And a brow might distinguish a queen,
- With a mighty proud air,
- That says "touch me who dare,"
- And you know very well whom I mean.
- With a toss of the head
- That strikes one quite dead,
- But a smile to revive one again;
- That toss so appalling!
- That smile so enthralling!
- And you know very well whom I mean.
- Confound her! devil take her! --
- A cruel heart-breaker --
- But hold! see that smile so serene.
- God love her! God bless her!
- May nothing distress her!
- You know very well whom I mean.
- Heaven help the adorer
- Who happens to bore her,
- The lover who wakens her spleen;
- But too blest for a sinner
- Is he who shall win her,
- And you know very well whom I mean.
- Washington Irving

The Falls of the Passaic
- IN A WILD, tranquil vale, fringed with forests of green,
- Where nature had fashion'd a soft, sylvan scene,
- The retreat of the ring-dove, the haunt of the deer,
- Passaic in silence roll'd gentle and clear.
- No grandeur of prospect astonish'd the sight,
- No abruptness sublime mingled awe with delight;
- Here the wild flow'ret blossom'd, the elm proudly waved,
- And pure was the current the green bank that laved.
- But the spirit that ruled o'er the thick tangled wood,
- And deep in its gloom fix'd his murky abode,
- Who loved the wild scene that the whirlwinds deform,
- And gloried in thunder, and lightning and storm;
- All flush'd from the tumult of battle he came,
- Where the red men encounter'd the children of flame,
- While the noise of the war-whoop still rang in his ears,
- And the fresh bleeding scalp as a trophy he bears:
- With a glance of disgust he the landscape survey'd,
- With its fragrant wild flowers, its wide-waving shade;--
- Where Passaic meanders through margins of green,
- So transparent its waters, its surface serene.
- He rived the green hills, the wild woods he laid low;
- He taught the pure stream in rough channels to flow;
- He rent the rude rock, the steep precipice gave,
- And hurl'd down the chasm the thundering wave.
- Countless moons have since rolled in the long lapse of time--
- Cultivation has softened those features sublime;
- The axe of the white man has lighten'd the shade,
- And dispell'd the deep gloom of the thicketed glade.
- But the stranger still gazes with wondering eye,
- On the rocks rudely torn, and groves mounted on high;
- Still loves on the cliff's dizzy borders to roam,
- Where the torrent leaps headlong embosom'd in foam.
- Washington Irving
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