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Many students are doubtless unaware of the great improvement made in the department of co-operative boarding since the days when Thayer Commons' Hall, which formerly stood near the Law School, and is now used as a stable on Holmes Field, was the headquarters of the Harvard Dining Association. The following poem, descriptive of associates connected with this old hall, was read at the dinner of the Directors of Memorial, and is published at their request, and by the permission of the author, Mr. L. B. Fiske, '73.
We meet to-night to celebrate
A year of work together,
The labors done, the victories, won
'Mid fair and stormy weather.
And as we meet with jovial cheer
And kindly greet each other,
We find we have assembled here
One Board around another !
Great oaks from little acorns grew,
As has been often shown-
And our Association too,
Progressive growth has known.
And memory with Janus face
While still the present viewing,
Looks backward to another place
Remembered scenes renewing.
For I who once in Commons' Hall
The frugal feast was sharing,
With pleasure now those days recall
That time with this comparing.
Sometimes while sitting in my place,
The waiter's pleasure waiting,
Half dreamingly those scenses I trace
Their joys and sorrows rating-
Memorial's walls come crowding in,
Sinks down the lofty ceiling,
The pictures vanish, there within
Four blank-white walls revealing.
The tables narrow, crowd the chairs,
Vanish the dusky faces,
Instead of Sambo unawares
The Bridgets take their places.
The tables with the joints are graced,
From sheep or oxen burly,
Each carves-or hacks to suit his taste-
He fares best who comes early.
Of knife and tongue-ah! what a din.
Within these walls contracted
Full many a stirring scene has been
'Twixt soph, and fresh. enacted.
A taunt, a word would oft suffice,
The cane some freshman sported,
Some pointed joke that in a trice
Was back again retorted.
And then perchance a biscuit flew
Presaging fiercest battle,
The maids in waiting quick withdrew
Like thunder frightened cattle
Oh, hotly raged the contest then
Each side the storm maintaining,
Till war his visage smoothed again
And Peace resumed her reigning.
Sometimes without the Commons' door
The organ-grinder screeches,
Sometimes we hear the learned lore
Of the great Daniel's speeches!
One morn, behold, some joker sad
Had placed a sign-board stating
That "Feed for Horses" could be had
With boarding there or baiting!
We saw the joke and called it good,
By students' standard testing,
But Time, in an avenging mood,
Sometimes brings truth from jesting.
Or is it "Irony of Fate"
That takes the themes we jest with
And makes the truth discovered late
Sometimes to be expressed with?
How e'er that be, I often see,
As Holmes' broad field I enter,
The very wall within whose hall
So many memories centre.
But there no more the student feeds
Brain nutriment demanding,
For patiently the well groomed steeds
Within their stalls are standing.
So time has done and done with all,
So glory fades and flowers,
But long may fair Memorial Hall
Resist Time's changing powers.
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