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The Old School-Chum
by [?]


He puts the poem by, to say
His eyes are not themselves to-day!

A sudden glamour o’er his sight–
A something vague, indefinite–

An oft-recurring blur that blinds
The printed meaning of the lines,

And leaves the mind all dusk and dim
In swimming darkness–strange to him!

It is not childishness, I guess,–
Yet something of the tenderness

That used to wet his lashes when
A boy seems troubling him again;–

The old emotion, sweet and wild,
That drove him truant when a child,

That he might hide the tears that fell
Above the lesson–“Little Nell.”

And so it is he puts aside
The poem he has vainly tried

To follow; and, as one who sighs
In failure, through a poor disguise

Of smiles, he dries his tears, to say
His eyes are not themselves to-day.