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1849–1916

A CUP OF TEA.

James Whitcomb Riley

I have sipped, with drooping lashes, Dreamy draughts of Verzenay; I have flourished brandy-smashes In the wildest sort of way;

I have joked with “Tom and Jerry” Till wee hours ayont the twal’ — But I've found my tea the very Safest tipple of them all!

‘ Tis a mystical potation That exceeds in warmth of glow And divine exhilaration All the drugs of long ago —

All of old magicians’ potions — Of Medea's filtered spells — Or of fabled isles and oceans Where the Lotos-eater dwells!

Though I've reveled o'er late lunches With blasé dramatic stars, And absorbed their wit and punches And the fumes of their cigars —

Drank in the latest story, With a cock-tail either end,— I have drained a deeper glory In a cup of tea, my friend.

Green, Black, Moyune, Formosa, Congou, Amboy, Pingsuey — No odds the name it knows — ah! Fill a cup of it for me!

And, as I clink my china Against your goblet's brim, My tea in steam shall twine a Fragrant laurel round its rim.

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A CUP OF TEA. · James Whitcomb Riley · Poetry Cove