My Castle

Ballads

By Horatio Alger, Jr. 1875

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Ballads By Horatio Alger
Grand'ther Baldwin's Thanksgiving
St. Nicholas
Barbara's Courtship
The Confession
Rose in the Garden
Phoebe's Wooing
The Lost Heart
John Maynard
Friar Anselmo
In the Church at Stratford-on-Avon
Mrs. Browning's Grave at Florence
My Castle
Apple-Blossoms
Summer Hours
June
Little Charlie
The Whippoorwill and I
Carving a Name
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.



MY CASTLE.

I have a beautiful castle,
  With towers and battlements fair;
And many a banner, with gay device,
  Floats in the outer air.

The walls are of solid silver;
  The towers are of massive gold;
And the lights that stream from the windows
  A royal scene unfold.

Ah! could you but enter my castle
  With its pomp of regal sheen,
You would say that it far surpasses
  The palace of Aladeen.

Could you but enter as I do,
  And pace through the vaulted hall,
And mark the stately columns,
  And the pictures on the wall;

With the costly gems about them,
  That send their light afar,
With a chaste and softened splendor
  Like the light of a distant star!

And where is this wonderful castle,
  With its rich emblazonings,
Whose pomp so far surpasses
  The homes of the greatest kings?

Come out with me at morning
  And lie in the meadow-grass,
And lift your eyes to the ether blue,
  And you will see it pass.

There! can you not see the battlements;
  And the turrets stately and high,
Whose lofty summits are tipped with clouds,
  And lost in the arching sky?

Dear friend, you are only dreaming,
  Your castle so stately and fair
Is only a fanciful structure,--
  A castle in the air.

Perchance you are right. I know not
  If a phantom it may be;
But yet, in my inmost heart, I feel
  That it lives, and lives for me.

For when clouds and darkness are round me,
  And my heart is heavy with care,
I steal me away from the noisy crowd,
  To dwell in my castle fair.

There are servants to do my bidding;
  There are servants to heed my call;
And I, with a master's air of pride,
  May pace through the vaulted hall.

And I envy not the monarchs
  With cities under their sway;
For am I not, in my own right,
  A monarch as proud as they?

What matter, then, if to others
  My castle a phantom may be,
Since I feel, in the depths of my own heart,
  That it is not so to me?

Gone to the War
Where is my Boy To-night?
A Soldier's Valentine
Last Words
Song of the Croaker
King Cotton
Out of Egypt
The Price of Victory
I. Fair Harvard, Dear Guide of Our Youth's Golden Days
II. As We Meet in Thy Name, Alma Mater, Tonight
III. Fair Harvard, The Months Have Accomplished Their Round
IV. there's a Fountain of Fable, Whose Magical Power
Bi-Centennial Ode
For the Consecration of a Cemetery

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