A THING that often 'pears to me At night, and which I'd like to see Jest as, By George! it used to be, Is our old lumber wagon. The wheels was made by wheelwright Rice, Whose wheelwright work was extry nice; He also spliced the crossbar twice Of that same lumber wagon. We made the body part ourselves, From boards that once was buttery shelves, White pinethe pride of woodland elves A classy lumber wagon. 'Twas ironed up by blacksmith Drew, Whose eye and iron both was true, And I was 'lowed to paint it blue Our old blue lumber wagon. It had no strange "fifth wheel" to vex Our eyes, and make us stretch our necks, The kingbolt went right through the ex Of our old lumber wagon. It had no tailboard, rigged to swing, No seat on which to smoke and sing, No brake, no shoe, no anything 'Twas jest a lumber wagon. But when 'twas loaded up with muck, My! how them grease-fed wheels would chuck; It "talked" like Jim Kiniry's truck Our one-horse lumber wagon. Oh! if my feelings might prevail 'Twould stand inside my office rail, And never be for rent or sale Our old blue lumber wagon. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE NEW ARRIVAL by GEORGE WASHINGTON CABLE FIFTY FAGGOTS by PHILIP EDWARD THOMAS TO A SNOWFLAKE by FRANCIS THOMPSON DAWN by GEORGE LAWRENCE ANDREWS LINES WRITTEN AT GENEVA by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES SAVONAROLA BROWN, SELECTION by HENRY MAXIMILIAN BEERBOHM THE GERMAN BAND by EARL DERR BIGGERS THANKSGIVING FOR VICTORY by ROBERT BURNS OUR OLD CENTER-TOWN VERMONT MEETINGHOUSE by DANIEL LEAVENS CADY |