THE UNSAINTING OF KAVIN.

By Bliss Carman

Saint Kavin was a gentleman,

He came from Tipperary;

And woman was the only thing

That ever made him scary.

For Kavin was a tender youth,

And he was very simple;

He feared the wiles of maiden smiles,

And fainted at a dimple.

But when Kathleen at seventeen

Came down the street one morning,

The luck of man came over him

And took him without warning.

Afraid to meet a foolish fate

By green sea or by dry land,

He fled away without delay

And sought a desert island.

But even there he felt despair;

For happiness is only

The hope of doing something else;

And he was very lonely.

He vowed to lead a life of prayer

Because that he had lost her;

And every time he thought of her

He said a Pater noster.

Yet hard it is for man to change

The less love for the greater;

And every time he reached Amen,

He must go back to Pater.

And so he grew a year or two

Disconsolate and holy,

While friends he'd known long since had grown

Papas and roly-poly.

Until one day, one blessed day,

A-moping like a Hindoo,

He saw Kathleen in mournful mien

A-passing by his window.

He threw away his rosary,

His Paters and his Aves;

For love is stronger than the wind

That wafts a thousand navies.

The holy man went forth to war,

But not against the devil.

He led the maid within for shade,

And treated her most civil.

He gave her cakes, he gave her wine,

He set his best before her;

And then invited her to dine —

Thenceforth — with her adorer.

Her little head went round for joy;

She tried to kick the rafter:

So Kavin was a saint no more,

And happy ever after.