How A Fair One No Hope To His Highness Accorded

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She has slid down the channels
  Of history's annals
  Disguised as the child of a king,
  But that is a glib
  And iniquitous fib,
  For she never was any such thing:
  They called her the Fair One with Golden Locks,
  And it's true she had lovers who swarmed in flocks,
  But the rest is ironic;
  Her business chronic
  Was selling hair-tonic
  By bottle and box!

  From the dawn till the gloaming
  She used to sit combing
  Her hair in a languorous way.
  And her suitors would stop
  To look into the shop,
  And stand there the rest of the day.
  She filled them with mute, but with deep despair,
  For she never glanced up, with a smile, to where
  They stood about, crushing
  Each other, and blushing:
  She simply kept brushing
  Her beautiful hair.

  But a prince who was passing,
  Engaged in amassing
  Some facts on American life,
  Was suddenly struck
  By the fact that his luck
  Might give him that girl for a wife!
  His rashness he didn't attempt to excuse,
  He entered the shop and he stated his views.
  Remarking,
  "My jewel,
  I'm confident you will
  Not wish to be cruel
  Enough to refuse.

  "Most winsome of creatures,"
  He told her, "your features
  Have led me to candidly say
  That no other beside
  Would I have for a bride:
  We'll be married a week from to-day!
  I belong to a long and a titled line,
  And the least of your wishes I won't decline;
  Next month I will usher
  My wife into Russia:--
  Sweet comber and brusher,
  Consider you're mine!"

  She looked at him squarely,
  Considered him fairly,
  Her glance was as keen as a knife,
  Then she turned up her nose,
  And, with icy repose,
  She answered: "Well, not on your life!
  You're not on the paper the only blot!
  Do you think I come twelve in a parcel--what?
  Me pose as your dearie?
  Oh, go and chase Peary!
  You're making me weary.
  Now git!"

  (He got!)

  The crowd that had waited
  Outside was elated
  So much by the prince's mischance,
  That they greeted with jeers
  And ironical cheers,
  The end of his little romance.
  They said: "Did it hurt when the ground you hit?"
  They searched for some mark where the prince had lit,
  And as he looked colder,
  They only grew bolder,
  And tapped on his shoulder
  With: "Tag! You're It!"

  The lengthy discussion
  That sensitive Russian
  Compiled on the U. S. A.
  Was read by the maid,
  As she carelessly played
  With her beautiful hair one day.
  "The talk you hear in that primitive land,"
  He wrote, "nobody can understand."
  "Somebody who guffed him,"
  She said, "has stuffed him,
  And easily bluffed him
  To beat the band!"


  The Moral: The people across the brine
  Are exceedingly strong on Auld Lang Syne,
  But they're lost in the push when they strike a gang
  That is strong on American new line slang!

© Guy Wetmore Carryl