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hen our hopes to grey ashes are kindled, We are fain of thee still, we are fain; In this Piljian's Projiss of Woe, in This Wale of white shadders and damp, O Roge all a-blowin' and growin', We open our Gamp! ADAM _After W. W._ An adventure of the Author's, and one designed to show that grievances may be met with in the cottages of the humblest, and may take the most unexpected forms. When in my white-washed walls confined Till eve her freedom brings, I often turn a musing mind To think awhile of things, And thus about the noontide glow To-day my thoughts recalled Old Adam, whom I once did know, A dear old thing, though bald. A village Gravedigger was he With Newgate fringe of grey, The only man that one could see At work on Saturday! For on those evenings (which provide A due release to toil) He shovelled wearily, and plied His task upon the soil. Therein a sorrow Adam had, And when he knew me well He told this tale, and made me sad, Which now to you I tell. For once my feet did chance to stray Across the old churchyard, And Adam sighed, and paused to say 'It's werry, werry hard.' I marvelled much to hear him sigh, And when he paused again, 'Come, come, you quaint old thing,' said I, 'Why thus this tone of pain?' In silence Adam rose, and gained A seat amid the stones, And thus the veteran complained, The dear old bag of bones. 'Down by the wall the Village goes, How horrid sounds their glee, On Saturdays they early close, They have their Sundays free; 'And here, on this depressing spot, I cannot choose but moan That I, a labouring man, have not An hour to call my own. 'The Blacksmith in his Sunday things, The Clerk that leaves his till, Can give their thoughts of labour wings, And frolic as they will. 'To me they--drat 'em!--never give A thought; they wander by, An irritation while they live, A nuisance when they die. 'If there be one that needs lament The way these folks behave, 'Tis he whose holidays are spent In digging someone's grave, 'For when a person takes and dies, On Monday t
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