My Books.

    By Henry Austin Dobson



    They dwell in the odour of camphor,
    They stand in a Sheraton shrine,
    They are "warranted early editions,"
    These worshipful tomes of mine;--

    In their creamiest "Oxford vellum,"
    In their redolent "crushed Levant,"
    With their delicate watered linings,
    They are jewels of price, I grant;--

    Blind-tooled and morocco-jointed,
    They have Zaehnsdorf's daintiest dress,
    They are graceful, attenuate, polished,
    But they gather the dust, no less;--

    For the row that I prize is yonder,
    Away on the unglazed shelves,
    The bulged and the bruised octavos,
    The dear and the dumpy twelves,--

    Montaigne with his sheepskin blistered,
    And Howell the worse for wear,
    And the worm-drilled Jesuits' Horace,
    And the little old cropped Molière,

    And the Burton I bought for a florin,
    And the Rabelais foxed and flea'd,--
    For the others I never have opened,
    But those are the books I read.



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