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. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK: FIT 3. THE BAKER'S TALE by CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON WAR DEAD by PATRICK JOHN MCALISTER ANDERSON THE STEAM-ENGINE: CANTO 6. ON THE CORK PACKET, 1837 by T. BAKER IN THE GALLERY by WILLIAM ROSE BENET THE COYOTE CHORUS by ANNE BIRDSALL THE FRENCH REVOLUTION by WILLIAM BLAKE BLACK BUTTE by PAUL SOUTHWORTH BLISS IN MEMORIAM: J. MACMEIKIN; DIED APRIL 1883 by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: JACQUELINE, COUNTESS OF HOLLAND by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |