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Service

The comfort of the customer, and Service are our aim;
We love to please the public (if it ain't a losing game);
For courtesy's our motto and politeness is our goal;
We want the public's confidence in the Store that Has a Soul.

Oh, honesty and chivalry express our sentiment —
Provided they will pay us never less than 12%.
We love to please the public, and there isn't any phrase
We won't assemble gladly if we're certain that it pays.

Good Wishes

If the Desires love you, Philocles, and myrrh-breathing Persuasion and the lovely flower-gathering Graces, you will hold Diodorus in your arms, lovely Dorotheus shall sing before you, Callicrates shall sit at your knee, Dion shall warm your drinking-cup holding it carefully in his hand, Uliades shall remove its cover, Philo shall kiss you, Thero shall chatter to you and you shall touch the breast of Eudemos.
If the gods give you these joys, O fortunate one, you will add a spice to the Roman feast!

Ambition

I must no longer now admire
The coldnesse which possest
Thy snowy Breast,
That can by other Flames be set on Fire;
Poor Love to harsh Disdain betray'd
Is by Ambition thus out-weigh'd.

Hadst thou but known the vast extent
Of Constant Faith, how farre
'Bove all that are
Born slaves to Wealth, or Honours vain ascent;
No richer Treasure couldst thou finde
Than hearts with mutual Chains combin'd.

But Love is too despis'd a name,
And must not hope to rise
Above these ties.

Fire!

Unhappy lovers, drinkers of mingled wine, you who know the flame of love, I call upon you to pour on my heart cold water, water cooled with snow — I dared to look at Dionysius!
Fellow-slaves, put out the fire before it reaches my heart.

Easter Sonnet

To-day mankind our Lord are glorifying
Who came long centuries ago
That by his freely sacrificial dying
He might his holy purpose show.
A dark cloud veiled him in that crucifying,
And in his heart was utter woe,
That heart where love of man was ever trying
To win man's victory here below.
But all in vain — fields still in fight are trodden
And with red blood the furrows still are sodden
In war's abomination.
In my still heart the gloomy thought I cherish:
How many Saviours must be born and perish
Ere comes love's domination?