Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Old Cambridge by Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Old Cambridge

    By Oliver Wendell Holmes



    And can it be you've found a place
    Within this consecrated space,
    That makes so fine a show,
    For one of Rip Van Winkle's race?
    And is it really so?
    Who wants an old receipted bill?
    Who fishes in the Frog-pond still?
    Who digs last year's potato hill? -
    That's what he'd like to know!

    And were it any spot on earth
    Save this dear home that gave him birth
    Some scores of years ago,
    He had not come to spoil your mirth
    And chill your festive glow;
    But round his baby-nest he strays,
    With tearful eye the scene surveys,
    His heart unchanged by changing days,
    That's what he'd have you know.

    Can you whose eyes not yet are dim
    Live o'er the buried past with him,
    And see the roses blow
    When white-haired men were Joe and Jim
    Untouched by winter's snow?
    Or roll the years back one by one
    As Judah's monarch backed the sun,
    And see the century just begun? -
    That's what he'd like to know!

    I come, but as the swallow dips,
    Just touching with her feather-tips
    The shining wave below,
    To sit with pleasure-murmuring lips
    And listen to the flow
    Of Elmwood's sparkling Hippocrene,
    To tread once more my native green,
    To sigh unheard, to smile unseen, -
    That's what I'd have you know.

    But since the common lot I've shared
    (We all are sitting "unprepared,"
    Like culprits in a row,
    Whose heads are down, whose necks are bared
    To wait the headsman's blow),
    I'd like to shift my task to you,
    By asking just a thing or two
    About the good old times I knew, -
    Here's what I want to know.

    The yellow meetin' house - can you tell
    Just where it stood before it fell
    Prey of the vandal foe, -
    Our dear old temple, loved so well,
    By ruthless hands laid low?
    Where, tell me, was the Deacon's pew?
    Whose hair was braided in a queue?
    (For there were pig-tails not a few,) -
    That's what I'd like to know.

    The bell - can you recall its clang?
    And how the seats would slam and bang?
    The voices high and low?
    The basso's trump before he sang?
    The viol and its bow?
    Where was it old Judge Winthrop sat?
    Who wore the last three-cornered hat?
    Was Israel Porter lean or fat? -
    That's what I'd like to know.

    Tell where the market used to be
    That stood beside the murdered tree?
    Whose dog to church would go?
    Old Marcus Reemie, who was he?
    Who were the brothers Snow?
    Does not your memory slightly fail
    About that great September gale? -
    Whereof one told a moving tale,
    As Cambridge boys should know.

    When Cambridge was a simple town,
    Say just when Deacon William Brown
    (Last door in yonder row),
    For honest silver counted down,
    His groceries would bestow? -
    For those were days when money meant
    Something that jingled as you went, -
    No hybrid like the nickel cent,
    I'd have you all to know,

    But quarter, ninepence, pistareen,
    And fourpence hapennies in between,
    All metal fit to show,
    Instead of rags in stagnant green,
    The scum of debts we owe;
    How sad to think such stuff should be
    Our Wendell's cure-all recipe, -
    Not Wendell H., but Wendell P., -
    The one you all must know!

    I question - but you answer not -
    Dear me! and have I quite forgot
    How fivescore years ago,
    Just on this very blessed spot,
    The summer leaves below,
    Before his homespun ranks arrayed
    In green New England's elmbough shade
    The great Virginian drew the blade
    King George full soon should know!

    O George the Third! you found it true
    Our George was more than double you,
    For nature made him so.
    Not much an empire's crown can do
    If brains are scant and slow, -
    Ah, not like that his laurel crown
    Whose presence gilded with renown
    Our brave old Academic town,
    As all her children know!

    So here we meet with loud acclaim
    To tell mankind that here he came,
    With hearts that throb and glow;
    Ours is a portion of his fame
    Our trumpets needs must blow!
    On yonder hill the Lion fell,
    But here was chipped the eagle's shell, -
    That little hatchet did it well,
    As all the world shall know!



Extra Info:
July 3, 1875


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