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1861–1937

PART FIRST.

Albert Bigelow Paine

Where the light laughs in through the tree-tops And sports with the tangled glade, In the depths of an Afric forest My earliest scenes were laid.

In a bower that was merry with smilax From the grimace of no-where, I woke I was born on the first day of April And they called me a jungle joke.

And the voices of birds were about me — And the beat and the flutter of wing; While morning returned at the trumpet Of Tusky, our elephant king.

My nurse was a crooning old beldame Who gazed in the palms of my hands And vowed I was destined to travel In many and marvellous lands.

But little I heeded her croaking, For I gamboled the whole day long, And swung by my tail from the tree-top, Or joined in the jungle song.

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PART FIRST. · Albert Bigelow Paine · Poetry Cove