AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A PENNSYLVANIAN
What use it is to dream about old books |
And such like rubbish when the flour's all gone |
And me and his poor children have not got |
A decent thing to wear, I do not see. |
Now there's Epaminondas' pants. If I |
Have patched them once, I've patched them forty times |
Until the stuff's so thin the thread won't hold |
And yet he goes a-sneaking through the house |
His eyes half shut, his thoughts intent upon |
Elysium or some other place, and can |
Not see the boy's ashamed to turn his back |
Toward any one. No wonder that I scold |
But 'tain't a bit of use. He pays no more |
Attention than a post. I might as well |
Be pouring water in the Hellespont. |
He all the while that soft and sheepish smile |
Will wear upon his face and count the flies |
Along the wall until I stop to get |
My breath, and then he walks away without |
A word. I get so mad, it makes me feel |
As if I were Erymneus. 'Tother day |
When I for fully half an hour had been |
A-telling him about the ham we want, |
He stared and slowly said, “Yes, Critias, |
The cycle system must be right.” I up |
And snatched the basin of hot water that |
I had to wash the dishes with and poured |
The slops upon his old bald head. He wiped |
His face and muttered, “When the thunders cease, |
Then comes the rain.” He'll be the death of me, |
I know. |
My Mother
The Spartan mothers in the days of old, |
So runs the story, were entire content |
To see their sons who forth to battle went |
Return with maims and wounds, were they but bold; |
Or slain, if that no mark of shame they bore |
To show they faltered when they met the foe; |
Such gifts these Grecian mothers could bestow— |
Such sacrifices as a crown they wore. |
My mother wears a crown of greener bay, |
And offers better gifts by far than they, |
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