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     type="book"
     image="a.3-1846.texas.1.tif"
     id="a.3-1846.texas"
     metatype="web.book"
     workcode="3-1846">
    
    <ramheader>
        <filedesc>
            <titlestmt>
                <title>Jan Van Hunks (1912)</title>
                <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                
                
            </titlestmt>
            <editionstmt>
                <edition>1</edition>
                <copyright>Printed for private circulation.</copyright>
            </editionstmt>
            <extent/>
            
            
            <notesstmt/>
            <sourcedesc>
                <citnstruct>
                    <title>Jan Van Hunks</title>
                    <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                    <imprint>
                        <printer/>
                        <publisher>T. Watts Dunton</publisher>
                        <city>London</city>
                        <date>1912</date>
                        <pagination>[1]-[24]</pagination>
                        <collation/>
                    </imprint>
                    <provenance>
                        <location>Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas
                        at Austin</location>
                        <recnum/>
                        <note/>
                    </provenance>
                    <physicaldesc>
                        <binding>
                            <cover/>
                            <endpapers/>
                            <note/>
                        </binding>
                        <paper/>
                        <watermark/>
                        <note>Edition limited to thirty copies.</note>
                    </physicaldesc>
                </citnstruct>
            </sourcedesc>
        </filedesc>
        <encodingdesc/>
        <profiledesc>
            <commentaries>
                <head>Commentary</head>
                <section type="intro">
                    <head>Introduction</head>
                    <p>This is the Texas copy of  T. J. Wise's1912 private printing of DGR's ballad.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistcomp">
                    <head>Textual History: Composition</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistrev">
                    <head>Textual History: Revision</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="prodhist">
                    <head>Production History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="recepthist">
                    <head>Reception History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="icon">
                    <head>Iconographic</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="printhist">
                    <head>Printing History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="pictorial">
                    <head>Pictorial</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="historical">
                    <head>Historical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="literary">
                    <head>Literary</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="translation">
                    <head>Translation</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="autobio">
                    <head>Autobiographical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="biblio">
                    <head>Bibliographic</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
            </commentaries>
        </profiledesc>
        <revisiondesc/>
    </ramheader>
    <text>
        <front>
            <page n="[1]" image="a.3-1846.texas.1.tif"/>
            <titlepage>
                <doctitle>
                    <titlepart type="main">
                        <hi rend="c">JAN VAN HUNKS</hi>
                    </titlepart>
                </doctitle>
            </titlepage>
            <epage/>
            <page n="[2]" image="a.3-1846.texas.2.tif"/>
            <pageheader>
                <note>blank page</note>
            </pageheader>
            <epage/>
            <page n="[3]" image="a.3-1846.texas.3.tif"/>
           <titlepage>
               <doctitle>
                   <titlepart type="submain">
                       <hi rend="c">THE BALLAD<lb/>OF<lb/>
                  </hi>
                   </titlepart>
                   <titlepart type="main">
                       <hi rend="c">JAN VAN HUNKS</hi>
                   </titlepart>
               </doctitle>
               <docauthor>BY<lb/>
               <hi rend="c">DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI</hi>
            </docauthor>
               <docimprint>
               <hi rend="sc">London</hi>:<lb/>
               <hi rend="c">PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION ONLY</hi>
               <lb/>1912</docimprint>
           </titlepage>
            <epage/>
            <page n="[4]" image="a.3-1846.texas.4.tif"/>
            <pageheader>
                <note>blank page</note>
            </pageheader>
            <epage/>
        </front>
        <body>
            <div0 anchor="0.1" type="ballad" n="1">
                  <page n="[5]" image="a.3-1846.texas.5.tif"/>
            <divheader>
                    <title>
                        <hi rend="center">
                            <hi rend="c">THE BALLAD</hi>
                     <lb/>
                            <hi rend="c">OF</hi>
                     <lb/> 
                            <hi rend="c">Jan Van Hunks.</hi>
                        </hi>
                    </title>
                </divheader>
                <lg n="1" type="sexain">
                    <l n="1">
                  <hi rend="sc">Full</hi> of smoke was the quaint old room</l>
                    <l n="2" indent="1">And of pleasant winter heat;</l>
                    <l n="3">Whence you might hear the hall-door slap,</l>
                    <l n="4" indent="1">And the wary shuffling of feet</l>
                    <l n="5">Which from the carpeted floor stepped out</l>
                    <l n="6" indent="1">Into the ice-paved street.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="2" type="sexain">
                    <l n="7">Van Hunks was laughing in his paunch;</l>
                    <l n="8" indent="1">Ten golden pieces rare</l>
                    <l n="9">Lay in his hand; with neighbour Spratz</l>
                    <l n="10" indent="1">He had smoked for a wager there;</l>
                    <l n="11">He laughed, and from his neighbour's pipe</l>
                    <l n="12" indent="1">He looked into his neighbour's chair.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="6" image="a.3-1846.texas.6.tif"/>
                <lg n="3" type="sexain">
                    <l n="13">Even as he laughed, the evening shades</l>
                    <l n="14" indent="1">Rose stealthily and spread,</l>
                    <l n="15">Till the smoky clouds walled up the sun</l>
                    <l n="16" indent="1">And hid his shining old head,</l>
                    <l n="17">As though he too had his evening pipe</l>
                    <l n="18" indent="1">Before he tumbled to bed.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="4" type="sexain">
                    <l n="19">Van Hunks still chuckled as he sat:</l>
                    <l n="20" indent="1">It caused him an inward grin,</l>
                    <l n="21">When he heard the blast shake shutter and blind</l>
                    <l n="22" indent="1">With its teeth-chattering din,</l>
                    <l n="23">To fancy the many who froze without</l>
                    <l n="24" indent="1">While he sat thawing within.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="5" type="sexain">
                    <l n="25">His bowl restuffed, again he puffed:</l>
                    <l n="26" indent="1">No noise the stillness broke</l>
                    <l n="27">Save the tread of feet here and there in the street</l>
                    <l n="28" indent="1">And the church-bell's hourly stroke;</l>
                    <l n="29">While silver-white through the deepening dusk</l>
                    <l n="30" indent="1">Up leaped the rapid smoke.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="7" image="a.3-1846.texas.7.tif"/>
                <lg n="6" type="sexain">
                    <l n="31">&#8220;For thirty years,&#8221; the Dutchman said,</l>
                    <l n="32" indent="1">&#8220;I have smoked both night and day;</l>
                    <l n="33">I've laid great wagers on my pipe</l>
                    <l n="34" indent="1">But never had once to pay,</l>
                    <l n="35">For my vapouring foes long ere the close</l>
                    <l n="36" indent="1">Have all sneaked sickly away.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="7" type="sexain">
                    <l n="37">&#8220;Ah! would that I could find but one</l>
                    <l n="38" indent="1">Who knew me not too well</l>
                    <l n="39">To try his chance against me</l>
                    <l n="40" indent="1">After the evening bell,</l>
                    <l n="41">Even though he came to challenge me</l>
                    <l n="42" indent="1">From the smoking-crib of Hell!&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="8" type="sexain">
                    <l n="43">His breath still lingered on the air</l>
                    <l n="44" indent="1">And mingled with the smoke,</l>
                    <l n="45">When he was aware of a little old man</l>
                    <l n="46" indent="1">In broidered hosen and tocque,</l>
                    <l n="47">Who looked as though from a century's sleep</l>
                    <l n="48" indent="1">That instant he had woke.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="8" image="a.3-1846.texas.8.tif"/>
                <lg n="9" type="sexain">
                    <l n="49">Small to scan was the little old man,</l>
                    <l n="50" indent="1">Passing small and lean;</l>
                    <l n="51">Yet a something lurked about him,</l>
                    <l n="52" indent="1">Felt strongly though unseen,</l>
                    <l n="53">Which made you fear the hidden soul</l>
                    <l n="54" indent="1">Whose covering was so mean.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="10" type="sexain">
                    <l n="55">What thunder dwelt there, which had left</l>
                    <l n="56" indent="1">On his brow that lowering trace,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="57">What lightning, which could kindle so</l>
                    <l n="58" indent="1">The fitful glare on his face,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="59">Though the sneering smile coursed over his lips,</l>
                    <l n="60" indent="1">And the laughter rose apace?</l>
                </lg>                
                <lg n="11" type="sexain">
                    <l n="61">With cap in hand the stranger bowed</l>
                    <l n="62" indent="1">Till the feather swept his shoe:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="63">&#8220;A gallant wish was yours,&#8221; he said,</l>
                    <l n="64" indent="1">&#8220;And I come to pleasure you;</l>
                    <l n="65">We're goodly gossips, you and I,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="66" indent="1">Let us wager and fall to.&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="9" image="a.3-1846.texas.9.tif"/>
                <lg n="12" type="sexain">
                    <l n="67">The Dutchman stared. &#8220;How here you came</l>
                    <l n="68" indent="1">Is nothing to me,&#8221; he said;</l>
                    <l n="69">&#8220;A stranger I sought to smoke withal,</l>
                    <l n="70" indent="1">And my wish is seconded;</l>
                    <l n="71">But tell me, what shall the wager be,</l>
                    <l n="72" indent="1">By these our pipes essay'd?&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="13" type="sexain">
                    <l n="73">&#8220;Nay now,&#8221; the old man said, &#8220;what need</l>
                    <l n="74" indent="1">Have we for a golden stake?</l>
                    <l n="75">What more do we ask but honour's spur</l>
                    <l n="76" indent="1">To keep our hopes awake?</l>
                    <l n="77">And yet some bond 'twixt our goodwills</l>
                    <l n="78" indent="1">Must stand for the wager's sake.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="14" type="sexain">
                    <l n="79">&#8220;This be our bond:&#8212;two midnights hence</l>
                    <l n="80" indent="1">The term of our strife shall be,</l>
                    <l n="81">And whichsoe'er to the other then</l>
                    <l n="82" indent="1">Shall yield the victory,</l>
                    <l n="83">At the victor's hest must needs accept</l>
                    <l n="84" indent="1">His hospitality.&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="10" image="a.3-1846.texas.10.tif"/>
                <lg n="15" type="sexain">
                    <l n="85">&#8220;Done, done!&#8221; the Dutchman cried, &#8220;Your home,</l>
                    <l n="86" indent="1">I'd reach be it far or near;</l>
                    <l n="87">But in my good pipe I set my trust,</l>
                    <l n="88" indent="1">And 'tis you shall sojourn here;</l>
                    <l n="89">Here many a time we'll meet again</l>
                    <l n="90" indent="1">For the smokers' welcome cheer.&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="16" type="sexain">
                    <l n="91">With that, they lit their pipes and smoked</l>
                    <l n="92" indent="1">And never a word they said;</l>
                    <l n="93">The dense cloud gathered about them there</l>
                    <l n="94" indent="1">High over each smoke-crowned head,</l>
                    <l n="95">As if with the mesh of some secret thing</l>
                    <l n="96" indent="1">They sat encompassèd.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="17" type="sexain">
                    <l n="97">But now when a great blast shook the house,</l>
                    <l n="98" indent="1">The Dutchman paused and spoke:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="99">&#8220;If aught this night could be devised</l>
                    <l n="100" indent="1">To sweeten our glorious smoke,</l>
                    <l n="101">'Twere the thought of the outcast loons who freeze</l>
                    <l n="102" indent="1">'Neath the winter's bitter yoke.&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="11" image="a.3-1846.texas.11.tif"/>
                <lg n="18" type="sexain">
                    <l n="103">The stranger laughed: &#8220;I most have watched</l>
                    <l n="104" indent="1">The dire extremes of heat,</l>
                    <l n="105">Ay, more than you, I have seen men quail,</l>
                    <l n="106" indent="1">And found their sufferings sweet.</l>
                    <l n="107">Fit gossips, you and I! But hark!</l>
                    <l n="108" indent="1">What sound comes from the street?&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="19" type="sexain">
                    <l n="109">To the street the chamber-windows stood,</l>
                    <l n="110" indent="1">With shutters strongly barred.</l>
                    <l n="111">There came a timid knock without</l>
                    <l n="112" indent="1">And another afterward;</l>
                    <l n="113">But both so low and faint and weak</l>
                    <l n="114" indent="1">That the casement never jarred.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="20" type="sexain">
                    <l n="115">And weak the voice that came with the knock:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="116" indent="1">&#8220;My father, lend your ear!</l>
                    <l n="117">'Twas store of gold that you bade me wed</l>
                    <l n="118" indent="1">But the wife I chose was dear;</l>
                    <l n="119">Now she and my babes crave only bread:</l>
                    <l n="120" indent="1">O father, pity and hear!&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="12" image="a.3-1846.texas.12.tif"/>
                <lg n="21" type="sexain">
                    <l n="121">Van Hunks looked after the feathered smoke:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="122" indent="1">&#8220;What thing so slight and vain</l>
                    <l n="123">As pride whose plume is torn in the wind</l>
                    <l n="124" indent="1">And joy's rash flight to pain?&#8221;</l>
                    <l n="125">Then loud: &#8220;Thou mind'st when I bade thee hence,</l>
                    <l n="126" indent="1">Poor fool, go hence again!&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="22" type="sexain">
                    <l n="127">There came a moan to the lighted room,</l>
                    <l n="128" indent="1">A moan to the frosty sky:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="129">&#8220;O father, my loves are dying now,</l>
                    <l n="130" indent="1">Father, you too must die.</l>
                    <l n="131">Oh! on your soul, by God's good grace,</l>
                    <l n="132" indent="1">Let not this dread hour lie!&#8221;</l>
                </lg>                
                <lg n="23" type="sexain">
                    <l n="133">&#8220;Gossip, well done!&#8221; quoth the little old man;</l>
                    <l n="134" indent="1">And in a silvery spire,</l>
                    <l n="135">Like a spider's web up leaped his smoke</l>
                    <l n="136" indent="1">A-twisting higher and higher;</l>
                    <l n="137">And still through the veil his watchful eye</l>
                    <l n="138" indent="1">Burned with a fell desire.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="13" image="a.3-1846.texas.13.tif"/>
                <lg n="24" type="sexain">
                    <l n="139">A woman's voice came next to the wall:</l>
                    <l n="140" indent="1">&#8220;Father, my mother's died,</l>
                    <l n="141">'Twas three months since that you drove her forth</l>
                    <l n="142" indent="1">In the bitter Christmastide:</l>
                    <l n="143">How could I care for your proffered gold</l>
                    <l n="144" indent="1">And quit my mother's side?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="25" type="sexain">
                    <l n="145">&#8220;For two months now I have begged my bread;</l>
                    <l n="146" indent="1">Father, I can no more:</l>
                    <l n="147">My mother's deaf and blind in her grave,</l>
                    <l n="148" indent="1">But her soul is at Heaven's door;</l>
                    <l n="149">And though we're parted on this side death,</l>
                    <l n="150" indent="1">We may meet on the further shore.&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="26" type="sexain">
                    <l n="151">Van Hunks laughed up at the scudding smoke:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="152" indent="1">&#8220;Ay, go what way you will!</l>
                    <l n="153">Of folly and pride, in life or death,</l>
                    <l n="154" indent="1">Let a woman take her fill!</l>
                    <l n="155">My girl, even choose this road or that,</l>
                    <l n="156" indent="1">So we be asunder still!&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="14" image="a.3-1846.texas.14.tif"/>
                <lg n="27" type="sexain">
                    <l n="157">&#8220;Gossip, well done!&#8221; the old man shrieked,</l>
                    <l n="158" indent="1">&#8220;And mark how her words come true!&#8221;</l>
                    <l n="159">The smoke soared wildly around his head</l>
                    <l n="160" indent="1">In snakes of knotted blue;</l>
                    <l n="161">And eke at heart of the inmost coil,</l>
                    <l n="162" indent="1">Two fiery eyes shone through.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="28" type="sexain">
                    <l n="163">Above the hearth was a carven frame</l>
                    <l n="164" indent="1">Where seven small mirrors shone;</l>
                    <l n="165">There six bright moon-shapes circled round</l>
                    <l n="166" indent="1">A centre rayed like a sun;</l>
                    <l n="167">And ever the reflex image dwelt </l>
                    <l n="168" indent="1">Alike in every one.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="29" type="sexain">
                    <l n="169">No smokers' faces now appeared,</l>
                    <l n="170" indent="1">But lo! by magic art,</l>
                    <l n="171">Seven times one squalid chamber showed</l>
                    <l n="172" indent="1">A grave's dull counterpart;</l>
                    <l n="173">For there two starving parents lay</l>
                    <l n="174" indent="1">With their starved babes heart to heart.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="15" image="a.3-1846.texas.15.tif"/>
                <lg n="30" type="sexain">
                    <l n="175">Then changed the scene. In the watery street,</l>
                    <l n="176" indent="1">'Twixt houses dim and tall,</l>
                    <l n="177">Like shaggy dogs the pollards shake</l>
                    <l n="178" indent="1">Above the dark canal;</l>
                    <l n="179">And a girl's thin form gleamed through the night,</l>
                    <l n="180" indent="1">And sank; and that was all.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="31" type="sexain">
                    <l n="181">And then the smoker beheld once more</l>
                    <l n="182" indent="1">Seven times his own hard face;</l>
                    <l n="183">Half-dazed it seemed with sudden sights,</l>
                    <l n="184" indent="1">But showed no sign of grace;</l>
                    <l n="185">And seven times flashed two fiery eyes</l>
                    <l n="186" indent="1">In the mirror's narrow space.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="32" type="sexain">
                    <l n="187">The hours wore on and still they sat</l>
                    <l n="188" indent="1">Mid the vapour's stifling cloud;</l>
                    <l n="189">The one towards sudden stupor sank,</l>
                    <l n="190" indent="1">While the other laughed aloud.</l>
                    <l n="191">Alas for the shrinking blinking owl,</l>
                    <l n="192" indent="1">The vulture over him bowed!</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="16" image="a.3-1846.texas.16.tif"/>
                <lg n="33" type="sexain">
                    <l n="193">'Twas the second night of the wager now,</l>
                    <l n="194" indent="1">And the midnight hour was near,</l>
                    <l n="195">That glance like a kindled cresset blazed:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="196" indent="1">&#8220;Ho! gossip of mine, what cheer?&#8221;</l>
                    <l n="197">But the smoke from the Dutchman's pipe arose</l>
                    <l n="198" indent="1">No longer swift and clear.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="34" type="sexain">
                    <l n="199">The door-bell rang: &#8220;Peace to this house!&#8221;&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="200" indent="1">'Twas the pastor's voice that spoke.</l>
                    <l n="201">Above Van Hunks's head still curled</l>
                    <l n="202" indent="1">A fitful flickering smoke,</l>
                    <l n="203">As the last half-hour ere full midnight</l>
                    <l n="204" indent="1">From the booming clock-tower broke.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="35" type="sexain">
                    <l n="205">The old man doffed his bonnet and cringed</l>
                    <l n="206" indent="1">As he opened the chamber door;</l>
                    <l n="207">The priest cast never a glance his way,</l>
                    <l n="208" indent="1">But crossed the polished floor</l>
                    <l n="209">To where the Dutchman's head on his breast</l>
                    <l n="210" indent="1">Lolled with a torpid snore.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="17" image="a.3-1846.texas.17.tif"/>
                <lg n="36" type="sexain">
                    <l n="211">&#8220;Mynheer, your servant sought me out;</l>
                    <l n="212" indent="1">He says that day and night</l>
                    <l n="213">You have sat&#8212;&#8212;.&#8221; He shook the smoker's arm,</l>
                    <l n="214" indent="1">But shrank in sudden fright;</l>
                    <l n="215">The arm dropped down like a weight of lead,</l>
                    <l n="216" indent="1">The face was dull and white.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="37" type="sexain">
                    <l n="217">And now the stranger stood astride,</l>
                    <l n="218" indent="1">And taller he seemed to grow,</l>
                    <l n="219">The pipe sat firm in his sneering lips,</l>
                    <l n="220" indent="1">And with victorious glow</l>
                    <l n="221">Like dancing figures around its bowl</l>
                    <l n="222" indent="1">Did the smoke-wreaths come and go.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="38" type="sexain">
                    <l n="223">&#8220;Nay, nay,&#8221; he said, &#8220;our gossip sits</l>
                    <l n="224" indent="1">On contemplation bent;</l>
                    <l n="225">On son and daughter afar, his mind</l>
                    <l n="226" indent="1">Is doubtless all intent;</l>
                    <l n="227">Haply his silence breathes a prayer</l>
                    <l n="228" indent="1">Ere the midnight hour be spent.&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="18" image="a.3-1846.texas.18.tif"/>
                <lg n="39" type="sexain">
                    <l n="229">&#8220;And who art thou?&#8221; the pastor cried</l>
                    <l n="230" indent="1">With quaking countenance.</l>
                    <l n="231">&#8212;&#8220;A smoke-dried crony of our good friend</l>
                    <l n="232" indent="1">Here rapt in pious trance.&#8221;</l>
                    <l n="233">And his chuckle shook the vaporous sprites</l>
                    <l n="234" indent="1">To a madder, merrier dance.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="40" type="sexain">
                    <l n="235">&#8220;Hence, mocking fiend, I do know thee now.&#8221;</l>
                    <l n="236" indent="1">The pastor signed the cross.</l>
                    <l n="237">But the old man laughed and shrieked at once,</l>
                    <l n="238" indent="1">As over turret and fosse</l>
                    <l n="239">The midnight hour in the sleeping town</l>
                    <l n="240" indent="1">From bell to bell did toss.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="41" type="sexain">
                    <l n="241">&#8220;Too late, poor priest!&#8221; In the pastor's ear,</l>
                    <l n="242" indent="1">So rang the scornful croak.</l>
                    <l n="243">With that, a swoon fell over his sense;</l>
                    <l n="244" indent="1">And when at length he woke,</l>
                    <l n="245">Two pipes lay shattered upon the floor,</l>
                    <l n="246" indent="1">The room was black with smoke.</l>
                </lg>
                <ornlb>* * * * *</ornlb>
                <epage/>
                <page n="19" image="a.3-1846.texas.19.tif"/>
                <lg n="42" type="sexain">
                    <l n="247">That hour a dreadful monster sped</l>
                    <l n="248" indent="1">Home to his fiery place;</l>
                    <l n="249">A shrieking wretch hung over his back</l>
                    <l n="250" indent="1">As he sank through nether space.</l>
                    <l n="251">Of such a rider on such a steed</l>
                    <l n="252" indent="1">What tongue the flight shall trace?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="43" type="sexain">
                    <l n="253">The bearer shook his burden off</l>
                    <l n="254" indent="1">As he reached his retinue:</l>
                    <l n="255">He has flung him into a knot of fiends,</l>
                    <l n="256" indent="1">Red, yellow, green and blue:</l>
                    <l n="257">&#8220;I have brought a pipe for my private use,</l>
                    <l n="258" indent="1">Go trim it, some of you!&#8221;</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="44" type="sexain">
                    <l n="259">They have sliced the very crown from his head,</l>
                    <l n="260" indent="1">Worse tonsure than a monk's&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="261">Lopped arms and legs, stuck a red-hot tube</l>
                    <l n="262" indent="1">In his wretchedest of trunks;</l>
                    <l n="263">And when the Devil wants his pipe</l>
                    <l n="264" indent="1">They bring him Jan Van Hunks.</l>
                </lg>
            </div0>
            <epage/>
        </body>
        <back>
            <div0 anchor="back.1" type="colophon" n="2">
                <page n="[20]" image="a.3-1846.texas.20.tif"/>
                <p>
                    <hi rend="center">
                        <hi rend="sc">London:</hi>
                  <lb/>
                        Printed for <hi rend="c">T. WATTS-DUNTON</hi>, the Pines,<lb/>
                        Putney Hill, S.W.<lb/>
                        <hi rend="i">Edition limited to Thirty Copies.</hi>
                    </hi>
                </p>
                <epage/>
            </div0>
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    </text>
</ram>
