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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


EARLY DAYS IN VERMONT by DANIEL LEAVENS CADY

First Line: I'VE READ THE SETTLERS, BLESS THEIR SOULS
Last Line: TO BORROW JEST A CARPET TACK.
Subject(s): BORROWERS & LENDERS; FARM LIFE; VERMONT; LOANS; AGRICULTURE; FARMERS;

I'VE read the settlers, bless their souls,
Would take an iron pan or pot
And go and borrow living coals,
And fetch 'em home alive and hot;
Jest think of coming through the woods,
With beasts a-following on your path,
And nothing but a can of coals
Between you and a panther's wrath!

But what I started out to say
Is, that in newly settled earth,
You're borrowing something every day
And lending, too, for all you're worth;
It gets to be a habit soon,
Like that unthrifty city streak,
Of hocking whatsoe'er you have
With Uncle Abraham every week.

In them dependent days, I s'pose,
That what he saw and didn't own,
Upset a settler's eyes and nose
And instantly he "forced a loan"
Of footstove, emptyings, hetchel, swifts,
A bearmeat sirloin, sampler, sled,
And e'en the copper coins they laid
Upon the eyelids of the dead.

They borrowed runnet, milk and tub,
And kettle, paddle, lye and corn;
They borrowed mug and apple shrub
And shot and gun and powderhorn;
A parish wedding meant a shower
Of strictly drummed-up benefits,
For to and fro the spoused ones went
A-borrowing griddle, grease and grits.

But, as the man who owns two pigs
Abjures his socialistic views,
So settler Smart and settler Spriggs,
A-getting wealthy, oft refused
To lend their chattels, goods and wares
To settlers Squawman, Dub and Slack,
Till now it takes about a week
To borrow jest a carpet tack.



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