YANKEE, n. In Europe, an American.
In the Northern States of our Union, a New Englander.
In the Southern States the word is unknown.
(See DAMNYANK.)
YEAR, n. A period of three hundred
and sixty-five disappointments.
YESTERDAY, n. The infancy of youth, the youth
of manhood, the entire
past of age.
But yesterday I should have thought me
blest
To stand high-pinnacled
upon the peak
Of middle life
and look adown the bleak
And unfamiliar foreslope to the West,
Where solemn shadows all the land invest
And stilly voices,
half-remembered, speak
Unfinished prophecy,
and witch-fires freak
The haunted twilight of the Dark of Rest.
Yea, yesterday my soul was all aflame
To stay the shadow
on the dial’s face
At manhood’s noonmark! Now,
in God His name
I chide aloud
the little interspace
Disparting me from Certitude, and fain
Would know the dream and vision ne’er
again.
Baruch Arnegriff
It is said that in his last illness
the poet Arnegriff was attended at different times
by seven doctors.
YOKE, n. An implement, madam,
to whose Latin name, jugum, we owe one of the
most illuminating words in our language —
a word that defines the matrimonial situation with
precision, point and poignancy. A thousand apologies
for withholding it.
YOUTH, n. The Period of Possibility,
when Archimedes finds a fulcrum, Cassandra has a following
and seven cities compete for the honor of endowing
a living Homer.
Youth is the true
Saturnian Reign, the Golden Age on earth
again, when figs are grown on thistles,
and pigs betailed with
whistles and, wearing silken bristles,
live ever in clover, and
cows fly over, delivering milk at every
door, and Justice never
is heard to snore, and every assassin
is made a ghost and,
howling, is cast into Baltimost!
Polydore Smith