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            <title>The Yellow Book: An Illustrated Quarterly, Volume 3 October 1894</title>
            <title type="YBV3_dalmon_parson"/>
            <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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               <date>2019</date>
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            <publisher>Yellow Nineties 2.0</publisher>
            <pubPlace>Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities</pubPlace>
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                  <author>C.W. Dalmon</author>
                  <title>Parson Herrick's Muse</title>
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                     <publisher>John Lane</publisher>
                     <pubPlace> London </pubPlace>
                     <publisher>Copeland &amp; Day</publisher>
                     <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
                     <date>October 1894</date>
                     <biblScope>Dalmon, Charles William. "Parson Herrick's Muse." <emph
                           rend="italic">The Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 3, October 1894, pp. 241-42. <emph
                           rend="italic">Yellow Book Digital Edition</emph>, edited by Dennis Denisoff and
                        Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>,
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               verbal and visual printed material, including non-referential physical elements such as
               bindings, page layouts, and ornaments. We view any text as the outcome of collaborative
               processes that have specific manifestations at precise historical moments.
               The Yellow Nineties Online publishes facsimile editions of a select collection of fin-de-
               siècle aesthetic periodicals, together with paratexts of production and reception such as
               cover designs, advertising materials, and reviews. This historical material is enhanced
               by two kinds of peer-reviewed scholarly commentary: biographies of the periodicals’
               contributors and associates; and critical introductions to each title and volume by
               experts in the field. All scholarly material on the site is vetted by the editor(s) and peer-
               reviewed by them and/or an international board of advisors. The site as a whole is peer-
               reviewed by NINES (Networked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic
               Scholarship). Contributors to the site retain personal copyright in their material. The
               site is licensed with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0
               license. Both primary and secondary materials, including all visual images, are marked
               up in TEI- (Textual-Encoding Initiative) compliant XML (Extensible Markup
               Language). To ensure maximum flexibility for users, magazines are available on the site
               as virtual objects (facsimiles) in FlipBook form; in HTML for online reading; in PDF for
               downloading and collecting; and in XML for those who wish to review and/or adapt our
               tag sets. In order to make ornamental devices, such as initial letters, head- and tail-
               pieces, searchable, we have developed a Database of Ornament in OMEKA, and linked it
               to the relevant pages of each magazine edition. As a dynamic structure, a scholarly
               website is always in process; Phase One of The Yellow Nineties Online (2010-2015) is
               completed and Phase Two (2016-2021) is underway.</p>
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            <head>
               <title level="a">Parson Herrick's Muse</title>
            </head>
            <byline>By <docAuthor>
                  <ref target="#CDA">C. W. Dalmon</ref>
               </docAuthor>
            </byline>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>THE parson dubs us, in our cups,</l>
               <l>"A tipsy, good-for-nothing crew !"</l>
               <l>It matters not—it may be false ;</l>
               <l>It matters not—it may be true.</l>
               <l>But here's to parson Herrick's Muse !</l>
               <l>Drink to it, dear old comrades, please !</l>
               <l>And, prithee, for my tombstone choose</l>
               <l>A verse from his "Hesperides."</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>The parson's rich, but we are poor ;</l>
               <l>And we are wrong, but he is right—</l>
               <l>Who knows how much his cellar holds,</l>
               <l>Or how he goes to bed at night ?</l>
               <l>But here's to parson Herrick's Muse !</l>
               <l>Drink to it, dear old comrades, please !</l>
               <l>And, prithee, for my tombstone choose</l>
               <l>A verse from his "Hesperides."</l>
            </lg>
            <fw type="catchword">The</fw>
            <pb n="278"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">242</fw> Parson Herrick's Muse</fw>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>The landlord shall our parson be ;</l>
               <l>The tavern-door our churchyard gate ;</l>
               <l>And we will fill the landlord's till</l>
               <l>Before we fill the parson's plate !</l>
               <l>But here's to parson Herrick's Muse !</l>
               <l>Drink to it, dear old comrades, please !</l>
               <l>And, prithee, for my tombstone choose</l>
               <l>A verse from his "Hesperides."</l>
            </lg>
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