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NINETY-EIGHT IN THE SHADE

       SUMMER NIGHTS AT GRANDPA'S

       GRANDFATHER'S "SUMMER SWEETS"

       MIDSUMMER

       "SEPTEMBER MORNIN'S"

       NOVEMBER'S COME

       THE WINTER NIGHTS AT HOME

       "THE LITTLE FELLER'S STOCKIN'"

       THE ANT AND THE GRASSHOPPER

       THE CROAKER

       THE OLD-FASHIONED GARDEN

       THE LIGHT-KEEPER

       THE LITTLE OLD HOUSE BY THE SHORE

       WHEN THE TIDE GOES OUT

       THE WATCHERS

       "THE REG'LAR ARMY MAN"

       FIREMAN O'RAFFERTY

       LITTLE BARE FEET

       A RAINY DAY

       THE HAND-ORGAN BALL

       "JIM"

       IN MOTHER'S ROOM

       SUNSET-LAND

       THE SURF ALONG THE SHORE

       AT EVENTIDE

       INDEX TO FIRST LINES

       Table of Contents

      A friend has objected to the title of this book on the ground that, as many of the characters and scenes described are to be found in almost any coast village of the United States, the title might, with equal fitness, be "New Jersey Ballads," or "Long Island Ballads," or something similar.

      The answer to this is, simply, that while "School-committee Men" and "Village Oracles" are, doubtless, pretty much alike throughout Yankeedom, the particular specimens here dealt with were individuals whom the author knew in his boyhood "down on the Cape." So, "Cape Cod Ballads" it is.

      The verses in this collection originally appeared in Harper's Weekly, The Youth's Companion, The Saturday Evening Post, Puck, Types, The League of American Wheelmen Bulletin, and the publications of the American Press Association. Thanks are due to the editors of these periodicals for their courteous permission to reprint.

      J.C.L.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Where leap the long Atlantic swells

       In foam-streaked stretch of hill and dale,

       Where shrill the north-wind demon yells,

       And flings the spindrift down the gale;

       Where, beaten 'gainst the bending mast,

       The frozen raindrop clings and cleaves,

       With steadfast front for calm or blast

       His battered schooner rocks and heaves.

       To same the gain, to some the loss, To each the chance, the risk, the fight: For men must die that men may live— Lord, may we steer our course aright.. The dripping deck beneath him reels, The flooded scuppers spout the brine; He heeds them not, he only feels The tugging of a tightened line. The grim white sea-fog o'er him throws Its clammy curtain, damp and cold; He minds it not—his work he knows, 'T is but to fill an empty hold. Oft, driven through the night's blind wrack, He feels the dread berg's ghastly breath, Or hears draw nigh through walls of black A throbbing engine chanting death; But with a calm, unwrinkled brow He fronts them, grim and undismayed, For storm and ice and liner's bow— These are but chances of the trade. Yet well he knows—where'er it be, On low Cape Cod or bluff Cape Ann— With straining eyes that search the sea A watching woman waits her man: He knows it, and his love is deep, But work is work, and bread is bread, And though men drown and women weep The hungry thousands must be fed. To some the gain, to some the loss, To each his chance, the game with Fate: For men must die that men may liveDear Lord, be kind to those who wait.

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      Oh, the song of the Sea—

       The wonderful song of the Sea!

       Like the far-off hum of a throbbing drum

       It steals through the night to me:

       And my fancy wanders free

       To a little seaport town,

       And a spot I knew, where the roses grew

       By a cottage small and brown;

       And a child strayed up and down

       O'er hillock and beach and lea,

       And crept at dark to his bed, to hark

       To the wonderful song of the Sea.

       Oh, the song of the Sea—

       The mystical song of the Sea!

       What strains of joy to a dreaming

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