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A Life's Story, In Poetry. Other Poems cover

A Life's Story, In Poetry. Other Poems

Chapter 19: THE RUINED HOME.
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About This Book

A first-person poetic memoir traces a long life from childhood into advanced age, following the speaker through apprenticeship, various manual trades, migration and settlement, home‑building, and the daily labor that sustains family life. Episodes of technological change, economic hardship, fire, illness, and bereavement punctuate the narrative while concrete details of workshops, mills, and tools underscore a craftsman’s practical perspective. The wider collection mixes tones and forms, offering satirical and reflective pieces, domestic and seasonal verses, and occasional topical poems including an argument in favor of woman's suffrage.

THE RUINED HOME.


Behold that house on Pleasant street,
  Just let us enter there;
All arrangements so complete,
  Appropriate and fair.
Music in Adjoining room
  So grateful to the ear;
Fragrant flowers in fullest bloom
  And beauty doth appear.

Choice books there on the table lie,
  Wisdom for great and small;
The pantry with its full supply;
  There're pictures on the wall.
The father comes at closing day,
  The mother greets with joy,
The laughing children 'round him play
  He pets his toddling boy.

Peace pervades that happy place,
  Where all is bright and free;
Its loving inmates go and come,
  In sweetest harmony.
Grief has blighted that fair bloom,
  The work of cursed rum,
The fetid breath of the saloon
  Has to that dwelling come.

A thump is heard against the door,
  The children flee away;
They wish to see his face no more
  While whiskey rules the day.
The faithful wife opens the door,
  The husband staggers in,
He stumbles prostrate on the floor,
  Borne down by rum and gin.

While helping him unto his bed—
  Oh! who could tell us why—
He clenched his fist and struck her head
  And gave a blackened eye.
His bank deposits slip away
  To the rumsellers till,
Whose business is from day to day
  The drunkards' graves to fill

Piano gone by sheriff's sale,
  The music hushed and still;
The mother's sigh, the daughter's wail
  Now the apartments fill.
The pictures gone from off the wall,
  The carpets from the floor,
To meet necessity's stern call,
  Keep hunger from the door.

The daughter's jewels all are gone
  Unto the broker's fled;
Her choicest clothing one by one,
  To buy their daily bread.
Vultures in human form await
  To make this maid their game
Should hunger, want and cruel fate
  Crowd out all sense of shame.

Oh! this horrid ghastly wound,
  The work of cursed rum;
Oh! can a healing balm be foundation   
  This side the world to come.