<h2><SPAN name="page39"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>HAUNTED</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Haunted</span>? Ay,
in a social way<br/>
By a body of ghosts in dread array;<br/>
But no conventional spectres they—<br/>
Appalling, grim, and tricky:<br/>
I quail at mine as I’d never quail<br/>
At a fine traditional spectre pale,<br/>
With a turnip head and a ghostly wail,<br/>
And a splash of blood on the
dickey!</p>
<p class="poetry">Mine are horrible, social ghosts,—<br/>
Speeches and women and guests and hosts,<br/>
Weddings and morning calls and toasts,<br/>
In every bad variety:<br/>
Ghosts who hover about the grave<br/>
Of all that’s manly, free, and brave:<br/>
You’ll find their names on the architrave<br/>
Of that charnel-house,
Society.</p>
<p class="poetry">Black Monday—black as its school-room
ink—<br/>
With its dismal boys that snivel and think<br/>
Of its nauseous messes to eat and drink,<br/>
And its frozen tank to wash in.<br/>
That was the first that brought me grief,<br/>
And made me weep, till I sought relief<br/>
In an emblematical handkerchief,<br/>
To choke such baby bosh in.</p>
<p class="poetry">First and worst in the grim array—<br/>
Ghosts of ghosts that have gone their way,<br/>
Which I wouldn’t revive for a single day<br/>
For all the wealth of <span class="smcap">Plutus</span>—<br/>
Are the horrible ghosts that school-days scared:<br/>
If the classical ghost that <span class="smcap">Brutus</span>
dared<br/>
Was the ghost of his “Cæsar” unprepared,<br/>
I’m sure I pity <span class="smcap">Brutus</span>.</p>
<p class="poetry">I pass to critical seventeen;<br/>
The ghost of that terrible wedding scene,<br/>
When an elderly Colonel stole my Queen,<br/>
And woke my dream of heaven.<br/>
No schoolgirl decked in her nurse-room curls<br/>
Was my gushing innocent Queen of Pearls;<br/>
If she wasn’t a girl of a thousand girls,<br/>
She was one of forty-seven!</p>
<p class="poetry">I see the ghost of my first cigar,<br/>
Of the thence-arising family jar—<br/>
Of my maiden brief (I was at the Bar,<br/>
And I called the Judge “Your
wushup!”)<br/>
Of reckless days and reckless nights,<br/>
With wrenched-off knockers, extinguished lights,<br/>
Unholy songs and tipsy fights,<br/>
Which I strove in vain to hush
up.</p>
<p class="poetry">Ghosts of fraudulent joint-stock banks,<br/>
Ghosts of “copy, declined with thanks,”<br/>
Of novels returned in endless ranks,<br/>
And thousands more, I suffer.<br/>
The only line to fitly grace<br/>
My humble tomb, when I’ve run my race,<br/>
Is, “Reader, this is the resting-place<br/>
Of an unsuccessful
duffer.”</p>
<p class="poetry">I’ve fought them all, these ghosts of
mine,<br/>
But the weapons I’ve used are sighs and brine,<br/>
And now that I’m nearly forty-nine,<br/>
Old age is my chiefest bogy;<br/>
For my hair is thinning away at the crown,<br/>
And the silver fights with the worn-out brown;<br/>
And a general verdict sets me down<br/>
As an irreclaimable fogy.</p>
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