"SLY BALLADES IN HARVARD CHINA. By E. S. M. Boston: A. Williams & Co., Old Corner Bookstore." "Sly Ballades in Harvard China" is a volume belonging to the school of Harvard writers which has produced "The Little Tin Gods on Wheels" and "Rollo's Tour to Cambridge." Nevertheless, these verses have a character of their own; their humor is aptly termed "sly." The subjects chosen are always unpretending, the metres used are appropriate and handled with a pleasant facility, and the execution of nearly every piece is felicitous and successful. The book throughout is pervaded with the genuine college spirit of our day in treating of all social subjects - a mild Horatian cynicism of a modern tinge. And yet the chief praise we can give to the volume is to say that it is thoroughly readable; it is not dull as so many of the attempts of college writers at social satire are apt to be. The following is headed "A Practical Question:"
"Darkly the humorist
Muses on fate;
Ghastly experiment
Life seems to him,
Subject for merriment
Sombre and grim.
Is it his doom, or is't
Something be ate?"
"Et Tu, Berghe!" is very wittily put:
"And art thou, Berghe, so firmly set
Against domestic strife
As to correct with stripes the man
Who disciplines his wife?
Such action does not of thy creed
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