. The Hovey book, describing the English ancestry and American descendants of Daniel Hovey of Ipswich, Massachusetts. ranite of ivlew Hampshire Is made part of them till death. Mr. Hoveys Stein Song, the most popular college song inexistence, has a lilt and a swing to it that satisfies the collegeyouth as few songs do. The music was written by FredericField Bullard. The words are as follows:— A STEIN SONG. Give a rouse, then, in the Maytime For a life that knows no fear!Turn night-time into day-timeWith the sunlight of good cheer!For its always fair weatherWhen good fellows get togetherWith a


. The Hovey book, describing the English ancestry and American descendants of Daniel Hovey of Ipswich, Massachusetts. ranite of ivlew Hampshire Is made part of them till death. Mr. Hoveys Stein Song, the most popular college song inexistence, has a lilt and a swing to it that satisfies the collegeyouth as few songs do. The music was written by FredericField Bullard. The words are as follows:— A STEIN SONG. Give a rouse, then, in the Maytime For a life that knows no fear!Turn night-time into day-timeWith the sunlight of good cheer!For its always fair weatherWhen good fellows get togetherWith a stein on the table and a good song ringing clear. When the wind comes up from Cuba And the birds are on the our hearts are patting jubaTo the banjo of the spring,Then theres no wonder whetherThe boys will get together,With a stein on the table and a cheer for everything. For were all frank-and-twenty When the spring is in the air, And weve faith and hope a-plenty. And weve life and love to spare; And its birds of a feather When we all get together. With a stein on the table and a heart without a /^^^ y/^y AND HIS DESCENDANTS. ^J^ For we know the world is glorious And the goal a golden thing,And that God is not censoriousWhen his children have their fling;And life slips its tetherWhen the boys get together,With a stein on the table in the fellowship of spring. Mr. Hovey was intensely human. He worshipped comrade-ship, loyalty, brotherhood, with a profound faith that is an in-spiration. Sham and hypocrisy irked him beyond his alma mater he gave his frankest loyalty and love. Thefollowing lines are characteristic of his jubilant spirit, whichknew no bounds:— HANOVER WINTER-SONG. Ho, a song by the fire! (Pass the pipes, fill the bowl!) Ho, a song by the fire! —With a Skoal! . . For the wolf wind is whining in the doorways. And the snow drifts deep along the road. And the ice-gnomes are marching from their Norways, And the great white cold walks ab


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidhoveybookdes, bookyear1913