The Free lance. (State College, Pa.) 1887-1904, May 01, 1901, Image 28

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE FRESHMAN’S DREAM.
What do I see on the window-sill
Where the moon-light strikes so clear?
What are those strange little white-bodied things
That grimace and mock and leer?
They frighten me with their uncouth forms,
And their ghostly, menacing, looks—
What, can it be that there I see
Mathematical imps, from my books?
Over the plain of my moon-lit bed
They come trooping silently;
They gloat and grin, as pale and thin,
They balefully gasse on me.
I tremble and strain ’neath the counterpane,
As they form in many a ring;
Then they whirl and prance through a meaningless dance,
And while they are dancing, they sing:
“We are algebra-imps, trigonometry-elves,
Calculus-sprites, and spooks
Of innumerable lines, terms, functions and signs
You have crippled and killed in your books."
Now I awake, but imps, elves, sprites and spooks
Are gone from bed and sill;
Yet I hear their song as they flit along—
A song that bodes me ill.
“We will have our revenge, you blundering fbol"—*
The chorus redoubles in force—
“You’ll ‘fail to pass,’ you’ll be ‘dropped from your class,’
You’ll flunk in every course!"