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Halloween

Pixie, kobold, elf, and sprite
All are on their rounds to-night,-
In the wan moon's silver ray
Thrives their helter-skelter play.

Fond of cellar, barn,or stack,
True unto the almanac,
They present to credulous eyes
Strange hobgoblin mysteries.

Cabbage-stomps-straws wet with dew-
Apple-skins, and chestnuts too,
And a mirror for some lass,
Show what wonders come to pass.

Doors they move, and gates they hide,
Mischiefs that on moon-beams ride
Are their deeds, and, by their spells,
Love records its oracles.

Don't we all, of long ago,
By the ruddy fireplace glow,
In the kitchen and the hall,
Those queer, cooflike pranks recall?

Eery shadows were they then-
But to-night they come again;
Were we once more but sixteen,
Precious would be Halloween.

Notes

Coof is an old scots dialect word meaning a stupid fellow: dolt, lout. Hence cooflike -- like a lout
Some have interpreted cooflike as calf-like and hence child-like but the stronger oafish meaning seems more appropriate.

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Comments


  • I-Like-Rhymes Moderators member
    October 30, 2007

    Edit | Reply
    A cheerful rhyme about what (to an old fuddy duddy like me) has become an annual pain.
    The simple cooflike (calf-like) antics of youth are now just a memory. Perhaps, as Benton says, it would be different if I were once more 16!