MAUD MULLER all that summer day Raked the meadow sweet with hay;
Yet, looking down the distant lane,
But when he came, with smile and bow,
And spoke of her “pa,” and wondered whether
Old Muller burst in tears, and then
For trade was dull, and wages low,
And ere the languid summer died,
But on the day that they were mated,
And Maud’s relations, twelve in all,
And when the summer came again,
And the Judge was blest, but thought it strange
For Maud grew broad and red and stout,
Was more than he now could span; and he
How that which in Maud was native grace
And thought of the twins, and wished that they
On Muller’s farm, and dreamed with pain
And looking down that dreary track,
For, had he waited, he might have wed
For there be women fair as she,
Alas for maiden! alas for judge!
For Maud soon thought the Judge a bore,
And the Judge would have bartered Maud’s fair face
If, of all words of tongue and pen,
More sad are these we daily see: |